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English examination papers
Uploaded: 30.04.2013
Content: 30430092700340.rar 9,77 kB
Product description
English examination papers
1. Make up a dialogue on the situation: verification of documents.
2. Move the sentences using an infinitive.
1. I have never heard the judge speak Latin.
2. The aircraft commander saw that the Minister of Justice came into the cabin, and went down to meet him.
3. The judge noted that the defendant is very pale and asked her to call the doctor.
4. The expert would like to see how the car will travel on the highway.
5. Thief did not feel like a policeman put his hand on his shoulder.
6. It is said that Peter Edwards - the good cop.
7. We seem to know little about the laws on taxes.
8. Last night, we happened upon a police patrol.
9. Parents offender believed that it will end just fine.
10. The lawyer believes that his client be released on bail.
3. Translate the text.
The different sources of law
The phrase «source of law» is used in several different senses. First, this is the literary source, the original documentary source of our information concerning the existence of a rule of law. In this sense the law reports are a source of law, whereas a textbook on tort or contract, or a digest of cases falls into the category of legal literature. Next there are the historical sources of law, the sources - original, mediate, or immediate - from which rules of law derive their content as a matter of legal history. In this sense the writings of Bracton and Coke and the works of other great exponents of English law are sources of law, for they enunciate rules which are now embodied in judicial decisions and Acts of Parliament. In this sense, too. Roman Law and medieval custom are sources of English law, for parts of our law which are now immediately attributable to decisions in particular cases or specific statutory provisions can be traced to a rule of Roman law, and a great deal of the English land law originated in feudal custom.
This sense of the phrase «source of law» can be extended to anything which accounts for the existence of a legal rule from the causal point of view. On the one hand, it may be applied to the Queen in Parliament and Her Majesty's judges as the immediate authors of rules of "law; on the other hand, it may be used to cover public opinion, moral principles, and even those judicial idosyncrasies which some American realists insist should be the true subject - matter of a mature study of law.
Although the historical sources of law are of the greatest importance and interest, they are not considered at length in books on analytical jurisprudence. These works contain elaborate discussions of legislation, precedent, custom, and juristic writings, but they are mainly concerned with sources of law in a third and entirely different sense of the word from that denoted by literary and historical sources. In this sense, «source» means, not a causal origin, direct or remote, but that from which a rule derives its validity as a rule of law.
Additional information
English examination papers
1. Make up a dialogue on the situation: verification of documents.
2. Move the sentences using an infinitive.
1. I have never heard the judge speak Latin.
2. The aircraft commander saw that the Minister of Justice came into the cabin, and went down to meet him.
3. The judge noted that the defendant is very pale and asked her to call the doctor.
4. The expert would like to see how the car will travel on the highway.
5. Thief did not feel like a policeman put his hand on his shoulder.
6. It is said that Peter Edwards - the good cop.
7. We seem to know little about the laws on taxes.
8. Last night, we happened upon a police patrol.
9. Parents offender believed that it will end just fine.
10. The lawyer believes that his client be released on bail.
3. Translate the text.
The different sources of law
The phrase «source of law» is used in several different senses. First, this is the literary source, the original documentary source of our information concerning the existence of a rule of law. In this sense the law reports are a source of law, whereas a textbook on tort or contract, or a digest of cases falls into the category of legal literature. Next there are the historical sources of law, the sources - original, mediate, or immediate - from which rules of law derive their content as a matter of legal history. In this sense the writings of Bracton and Coke and the works of other great exponents of English law are sources of law, for they enunciate rules which are now embodied in judicial decisions and Acts of Parliament. In this sense, too. Roman Law and medieval custom are sources of English law, for parts of our law which are now immediately attributable to decisions in particular cases or specific statutory provisions can be traced to a rule of Roman law, and a great deal of the English land law originated in feudal custom.
This sense of the phrase «source of law» can be extended to anything which accounts for the existence of a legal rule from the causal point of view. On the one hand, it may be applied to the Queen in Parliament and Her Majesty's judges as the immediate authors of rules of "law; on the other hand, it may be used to cover public opinion, moral principles, and even those judicial idosyncrasies which some American realists insist should be the true subject - matter of a mature study of law.
Although the historical sources of law are of the greatest importance and interest, they are not considered at length in books on analytical jurisprudence. These works contain elaborate discussions of legislation, precedent, custom, and juristic writings, but they are mainly concerned with sources of law in a third and entirely different sense of the word from that denoted by literary and historical sources. In this sense, «source» means, not a causal origin, direct or remote, but that from which a rule derives its validity as a rule of law.
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