Biology, asked by Anonymous, 9 months ago

Written constitution​

Answers

Answered by lTheDreamCatcherl
4

When these principles are written down into a single document or set of legal documents, those documents may be said to embody a written constitution; if they are written down in a single comprehensive document, it is said to embody a codified constitution

Answered by MrWho
13

A “Constitution” is any set of rules which are followed by convention in any government or society.

A “Constitution” is any set of rules which are followed by convention in any government or society.Often, traditional rules can be considered as an “unwritten constitution” for a nation.

A “Constitution” is any set of rules which are followed by convention in any government or society.Often, traditional rules can be considered as an “unwritten constitution” for a nation.Suppose you consider a Constitution for a Government as akin to grammar for a language … grammar is a set of rules accepted as setting forth the way a language is used. In the same way, a constitution sets forth the rules which affect the way a government works.

A “Constitution” is any set of rules which are followed by convention in any government or society.Often, traditional rules can be considered as an “unwritten constitution” for a nation.Suppose you consider a Constitution for a Government as akin to grammar for a language … grammar is a set of rules accepted as setting forth the way a language is used. In the same way, a constitution sets forth the rules which affect the way a government works.A constitution, therefore, does not need to deal with minutiae (the number of people in a governing body, etc.) but only with the broad rules of government.

A “Constitution” is any set of rules which are followed by convention in any government or society.Often, traditional rules can be considered as an “unwritten constitution” for a nation.Suppose you consider a Constitution for a Government as akin to grammar for a language … grammar is a set of rules accepted as setting forth the way a language is used. In the same way, a constitution sets forth the rules which affect the way a government works.A constitution, therefore, does not need to deal with minutiae (the number of people in a governing body, etc.) but only with the broad rules of government.A “written Constitution” is a narrower concept, often delving into the minutiae that a traditional unwritten system need not consider.

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