illicit
71illicit — il•lic•it [[t]ɪˈlɪs ɪt[/t]] adj. 1) law not legally permitted; unlawful 2) disapproved of or not permitted for moral or ethical reasons • Etymology: 1645–55; < L illicitus il•lic′it•ly, adv. il•lic′it•ness, n. syn: See illegal …
72illicit — /ɪˈlɪsət / (say i lisuht) adjective not permitted or authorised; unlicensed; unlawful. {Latin illicitus forbidden} –illicitly, adverb –illicitness, noun …
73illicit — Unlawful; illegal; prohibited or forbidden by law. State v Miller, 60 Vt 90, 92, 12 A 526 …
74illicit — see LEISURE …
75illicit — see elicit …
76illicit major — Fallacy committed when a syllogism has a major term distributed in the conclusion but not in the premise. ‘Some mortals are herbivores; no lions are mortal; therefore no lions are herbivores.’ …
77illicit minor — Fallacy committed in a syllogism when the minor term is distributed in the conclusion but not in the premise in which it occurs. ‘Some lions are friendly; no friendly things roar; therefore no lions roar.’ …
78illicit substances and hallucinations — see drug induced hallucination …
79illicit business — Synonyms and related words: anarchy, anomie, ballot box stuffing, bunco, cardsharping, cheat, cheating, cozenage, criminalism, criminality, diddle, diddling, dishonesty, dodge, fishy transaction, flam, flimflam, fraud, fraudulence, fraudulency,… …
80illicit cohabitation — The living together as man and wife of two persons who are not lawfully married, with the implication that they habitually practice fornication. Thomas v. United States, D.C.Mass., 14 F.2d 228, 229. At common law and by statutes in many states,… …