Legal Vocabulary Terms That Every Law Student Must Know

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  • Опубликовано: 22 дек 2024

Комментарии • 20

  • @jlp2323
    @jlp2323 2 года назад +55

    I'm in 8th grade and I'm trying to get into law school and trying to understand all of the meanings of each term in law before I go into 9th So I could have a good grasp on the law terms before I make it into law school. so thanks you saved me from alot of trouble 👍

    • @JDAdvising
      @JDAdvising  2 года назад +5

      Oh wonderful! We are so happy to hear this! 😊

    • @haileynoel1836
      @haileynoel1836 Год назад +3

      Yeah, I’m in 9th doing the same thing ☺️

    • @CoolPudding7048
      @CoolPudding7048 Год назад +3

      I am also in 8th grade!

    • @Frozen_oni
      @Frozen_oni 8 месяцев назад +2

      I'm also in the 8 th grade. What type of lawyer do want to be.

  • @jamesallen74
    @jamesallen74 Год назад +9

    Nice video. I just wish there was some talk about jury, grand jury. But overall really good video.

    • @JDAdvising
      @JDAdvising  Год назад +1

      Thanks, James! And those are also good terms to know, maybe we can work that into a future video.

  • @davidsoto4394
    @davidsoto4394 2 года назад +6

    I have a question. When law students are studying in law school are the defenitions of inportant words in the casebook or are they in another type of book like a legal dictionary? I have another question. If someone who is currently not a law school student were to borrow a casebook on Criminal Law and a casebook on Tort Law from a public library or a university law library and were to read them without having a legal dictionary next to them to look up the defenitions of words they do not know would the person be able to understand what it says in those or in the casebooks about Criminal Law and Tort Law? Would the person be able to understand what they were reading?
    Disclaimer: This is not legal advice of any kind whatsoever, is not intended to be, was not intended to be, and is not to be interpreted as such and shall not be interpreted as such. I am not a lawyer. I have never and would never claim to be one. Everything that is writen here is and are legitimante questions.

    • @JDAdvising
      @JDAdvising  2 года назад +1

      Hi David! Great question. Some students get Blacks Law Dictionary (but you can also probably use google to find definitions for words you don't understand!). For some of the more modern cases, a person without a law degree would probably be able to understand several of the main points (but may not understand things like procedural history, the importance of the holding or how broad/narrow it is). Some of the older cases that make it into casebooks are harder to read, even for law students with law dictionaries!

  • @armgirl95
    @armgirl95 9 месяцев назад

    Watching you from Armenia. Very helpful material. Thank you!

    • @JDAdvising
      @JDAdvising  9 месяцев назад

      Glad it was helpful!

  • @davidsoto4394
    @davidsoto4394 2 года назад +1

    Excellent video.

  • @levequilloy7669
    @levequilloy7669 8 месяцев назад

    nice video...educational

  • @hodophile3629
    @hodophile3629 2 года назад

    How can I contact you?

    • @JDAdvising
      @JDAdvising  2 года назад

      Hello! All of our contact information can be found here: jdadvising.com/contact/

  • @Honestlylovely
    @Honestlylovely Год назад

    I actually had plan coming out of school but everyone and everybody started inserting themselves in my business

  • @markrobby7136
    @markrobby7136 Год назад +3

    You talk too fast that you literally chew the words. Remember you're speaking to the entire world

    • @lilyung3203
      @lilyung3203 Год назад +8

      This is not too fast. I'm not even native and I understood her fine. Maybe cuz you got bad listening skills.

    • @Metal_Horror
      @Metal_Horror Год назад +3

      I don't hear this. She speaks clearly, at a reasonable speed and volume.