Adjective
lawful (comparative more lawful, superlative most lawful)
- (law) Conforming to, or recognised by the laws of society.
- Synonyms: just, legal, legitimate, licit
- Antonyms: nonlawful, unlawful, illicit
Lawful money is always a land asset and can only be issued by an actual land jurisdiction government — not a corporation.
2024 February 7, Philip Haigh, “Railway's fragile resilience”, in RAIL, number 1002, page 3:The laws are controversial. Forcing someone to work during a lawful strike is a major step. It was always likely to inflame a situation, and so it proved with LNER. ASLEF's counter-tactic came as a five-day walkout, which would have been the longest stoppage for many years had LNER not withdrawn its plan.
- Operating according to some law or fundamental principle.
1776, Jeremy Bentham, “A Short Review of the Declaration”, in John Lind, An Anſwer to the Declaration of the American Congress, London: Thomas Cadell, page 121:Or would they have it believed, that there is in their ſelves ſome ſuperior ſanctity, ſome peculiar privilege, by which theſe things are lawful to them, which are unlawful to all the world beſides?
2014, George Ortega, Free Will: Its Refutation, Societal Cost and Role in Climate Change Denial:[…] so that the person's actions are merely the inevitable product of lawful causes stemming from prior events […]
- (roleplaying games) Of a character: having an alignment which makes them tend to follow the laws and conventions of society.
- Coordinate terms: chaotic, neutral
Translations
operating according to some law or fundamental principle