The answer to the " three of the following terms are associated with the development of the english legal system, " "A common law, B petit jury, C grand jury, D exchequer""
The answer is D Exchequer
the difference is the Louisiana constitution was based off of the french legal system and the U.S constitution was based off of the English legal system
Système judiciaire
Napoleon
the United States; English
Legal can mean a variety of things depending on context, a "legal obligation" means you are legally obligated to perform a certain action. "Legally" can be used to describe the legal implications of something. "The legal system", describes a system in which laws are described. Lawful
The U.S. Constitution is the thrust behind the US legal system. But generally the U.S. legal system, being a former colony of Britain, is based on English common law. The only exception is the state of Louisiana which uses the Napoleonic (French) code.
Only the metric system (SI - International System of Units) is scientific and legal around the world. The English system is obsolete.
The legal system in Papua New Guinea is based on the common and English law.
No it is not. It is the metric system invented by the French which based on powers of ten. And it is the Empirical system, not the English system.
English legal tradtion
Legal English borrows heavily from Latin language and phrases. The Romans had established a legal system that was transcribed in Latin.
Quite possibly be the Normans after the invasion of England by William the conquerer (Guillaume le conquérant) in 1066. he became William the 1st after his crowning the 25th of December 1066.Interestingly French still exists in the English legal system as "law French" phrases such as "voir dire" and "mortmian" are examples.