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LAW |
Regulation |
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ORDINANCE |
Regulation |
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RULE |
Regulation |
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REGLEMENT |
Regulation. |
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BYLAW |
Local regulation |
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REIGLEMENT |
Rule; regulation. |
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DOSAGE |
Regulation of dose |
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LAWSUIT |
Regulation precedes clothing litigation |
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UNIFORM |
The same regulation wear |
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STEERAGE |
Direction; regulation; management; guidance. |
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MISRULE |
Incompetent government eavesdropped to dodge regulation |
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ORDERLINESS |
Regulation instructions covering written punishment task |
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ENDANGERING |
Getting in harm’s way, Gran needing regulation |
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DISPOSAL |
Ordering; regulation; adjustment; management; government;
direction. |
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REIMPOSES |
Again puts in place (a regulation) after a lapse |
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REINSERTS |
Again puts in place (a regulation) after a lapse |
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SITOLOGY |
A treatise on the regulation of the diet; dietetics. |
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UGLIER |
NATO abandoning regulation ... this could become even more dangerous |
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POLICE |
That which concerns the order of the community; the
internal regulation of a state. |
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REGIMEN |
Any regulation or remedy which is intended to produce
beneficial effects by gradual operation |
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ASSIZE |
To fix the weight, measure, or price of, by an ordinance or
regulation of authority. |
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CONTROLMENT |
The power or act of controlling; the state of being
restrained; control; restraint; regulation; superintendence. |
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OBSERVER |
One who keeps any law, custom, regulation, rite, etc.;
one who conforms to anything in practice. |
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ADJUSTMENT |
The act of adjusting, or condition of being adjusted;
act of bringing into proper relations; regulation. |
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BY-LAW |
A local or subordinate law; a private law or regulation
made by a corporation for its own government. |