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licit

ADJECTIVE
  1. sanctioned by custom or morality especially sexual morality
    a wife's licit love
  2. authorized, sanctioned by, or in accordance with law
    a legitimate government

How To Use licit In A Sentence

  • Hamed will go on a publicity tour around the States next week before entering training camp on February 16.
  • So the cost of the strikes, politically, is denouncement from a Pakistani government that can’t tolerate a public acknowledgment of its complicity. Talking Reckless | ATTACKERMAN
  • The impression of warmth and comfort and beauty predominated, though he was unable to analyze it; while the simplicity delighted him -- expensive simplicity, he decided, and most of it leftovers from the time her father went broke and died. Chapter XVIII
  • The university is clamping down on media access during his summer booster club tour, and publicity flacks are shielding the most available man in college football.
  • There was a lot of negative publicity surrounding the film.
  • Washington, who believed liquor a particular scourge among blacks, sent felicitations. LAST CALL
  • All the pieces, from casting to production to publicity to marketing have to work.
  • He got a huge amount of publicity and attention. Times, Sunday Times
  • All forms of classical orthodoxy either explicitly reject or reject in principle kenotic theology.
  • As the author repeatedly points out, the pornographic material he seized wasn't simply more explicit than 18-certificate films or top-shelf magazines.
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