Zero. The word "Federal" is not at all used in our Constitution. Simply the framers described "Union".
-Bikash
Preamble
Federal and National
Bharat is the Sanskrit word for the Republic of India and was written into the Constitution of India that was adopted by the Constituent Assembly on 26 November 1949.
All India Reporter??
The United States was the first country to adopt a federal system of government (although the word 'federal' never appears in the U.S. Constitution).
The Constitution 94th Amendment Act 2006 made an Amendment for word Bihar (A State Of India) In Article I64 subsituting it by words (Chattisgarh,Jharkhand).
The word "swarajya" was first used in its political sense by Mahatma Gandhi during the Indian independence movement. The acceptance of Hindi as the national language of India was enshrined in the Indian Constitution, with Hindi being designated as the official language of the Republic of India.
Ratified
Indian Constitution is a combination of federal and unitary system. Power is clearly divided between the central and the state government. The central government is more powerful as it has more subjects and cream subjects and in some special cases the the central government can also deal with the subjects mentioned in the state list.
Nope No word exists in the US constitution.
Federalism is one word that describes the relationship (and the division of power) between state governments and the federal government. A more simple answer: A Federalist supports the new constitution. Federalism is used in our government today
its another word for calf( a muscle in your leg) and its used for spices
Yes, the word "Constitution" should be capitalized when referring to a specific constitution, such as the United States Constitution.