No, law is an abstract noun. The only verb form of law I can think of is legislate.
The verb form of "law" is "to enact" or "to legislate."
"Law and order" is considered a singular concept, so the verb that follows should be singular.
Legalize
The word "defendant" is a noun, not a verb or adjective. It refers to a person against whom a legal action is brought, typically in a court of law.
The word judge, like many English words, can be either a verb or a noun. If I say, "Don't judge me." I am using it as a verb. If I say, "The judge has ruled in my favor." I am using it as a noun.
The verb form of "law" is "to enact" or "to legislate."
"Law and order" is considered a singular concept, so the verb that follows should be singular.
Benefit can be a verb. We both benefit from the new law changes
Legalise
Legalize
Legislate, used as an intransitive verb. Or, enact.
No. The verb is to enact (establish a law or rule).
The verb of abuse is 'to abuse...' e.g. to abuse the law
The word 'call' may function as both a verb and a noun in English.Examples- "The woman called her brother-in-law." - verb (past)- "You've got a call, Betty." - noun- "I really want to call him now." - verb- "He took the call." - noun
Possibly you are searching for the verb: expunge?
The word "defendant" is a noun, not a verb or adjective. It refers to a person against whom a legal action is brought, typically in a court of law.
The verb of violation is violate.Other verbs are violates, violating and violated.Some examples are:"I will violate my parole"."She violates the terms of her employment"."He needs to stop violating the law"."He violated the rules and cheated".