释义 |
jurisprudential, a.|-ˈdɛnʃəl| [f. L. jūrisprūdēntia + -al1.] Of or pertaining to jurisprudence; rarely of persons: jurisprudent B.
1775C. Johnston Pilgrim ii. x. 255 Three civil professions called liberal..the sacerdotal, the juris-prudential, and the medical; or, as they are called here, the Gown, the Long⁓robe, and the Faculty. 1819Blackw. Mag. IV. 750/1 The doctor cannot be suspected of having any jurisprudential learning himself. 1852S. Bailey Disc. Var. Subj. 100 It [relevant] had long been a jurisprudential word in Scotland. 1884W. S. Lilly in Contemp. Rev. Feb. 251 The great jurisprudential ideas which we find in the literature of the decadent Empire. Hence jurispruˈdentialist, a writer on jurisprudence, a legal practitioner. jurispruˈdentially adv., in relation to jurisprudence.
1802–12Bentham Ration. Judic. Evid. ix. iii. vii, As to the jurisprudentialist, his most common state is, perhaps, a sort of middle state between the two [impostor and dupe]. 1828Examiner 737/1 Viewing it jurisprudentially. |