Fugitive
Someone who breaks the law is arrested.
The noun prosecution is singular. The plural form is prosecutions.
The missing half of the word pair is "order" - together they form the term "law and order."
The suffix 'yer' is often used to indicate someone that does something. Lawyer would be someone that does the law. Another example is sawyer, someone that saws.
"Passline" and "law" could form the compound "passline-law," which could be used to describe a specific rule or regulation related to passlines in a particular context.
Someone who breaks the law is arrested.
The possessive form of the noun sister-in-law is sister-in-law's.Example: I borrowed my sister-in-law's car.
A lawyer
Bye-laws is the plural form, The singular form is bye-law. A Bye-law is a local law, therefore the relative (important) part of the word is law. It is therefore this part that is pluralized
The noun prosecution is singular. The plural form is prosecutions.
It means that someone has declared something that is considered to be law.
Yes, it is against the law to threaten someone. Threatening behavior can be considered a form of harassment or intimidation, and can result in criminal charges.
The closest thing I can think of is "moral law-breaking." It's not a word, more of a concept, I guess.
The plural form is fathers-in-law, because you're talking about more than one person. The rest of the compound, -in-law, remains singular because they share a title.
The missing half of the word pair is "order" - together they form the term "law and order."
It means that someone has declared something that is considered to be law.
Hiding a minor from the law and sometimes his or her parents. Sometimes that refers to when a minor comitted a crime and you're hiding them so it makes it hard for the law to find them and prosecute them.