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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

  • There was a lot of negative publicity surrounding the film.
  • Hamed will go on a publicity tour around the States next week before entering training camp on February 16.
  • 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.
  • The Ahmadiyah were explicitly "warned and ordered" that "as long as they consider themselves to hold to Islam, to discontinue the promulgation of interpretations and activities that are deviant from the principal teachings of Islam, that is to say the promulgation of beliefs that recognize a prophet with all his teachings who comes after the Prophet Muhammad SAW. The Heritage Foundation Papers
  • Its addition in minute amounts to the nucleoprotein tumor fraction, was expected to suppress the formation of the fibrillar halo if nucleic acids rather that the protein were responsible for the nerve growth promoting effect elicited by this fraction. Nobel Lecture The Nerve Growth Factor: Thirty-Five Years Later
  • We all have implicit or unconscious biases that impact our behavior. Christianity Today
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