CIVILIAN vs CIVIL: NOUN
- A person who is not an active member of the military, the police, or a belligerent group in a conflict.
- A person who is not an employee of the government.
- A specialist in Roman or civil law.
- One whose pursuits are those of civil life, not military or clerical; especially, a non-military inhabitant of a garrisoned town.
- One who is skilled in the Roman or civil law; a professor or doctor of civil law.
- A student of the civil law at a university.
- One who, despising the righteousness of Christ, did yet follow after a certain civil righteousness, a justitia civilis of his own.
- A covenanted civil servant in British India.
- One skilled in the civil law.
- A person following the pursuits of civil life, especially one who is not an active member of the military, the police, or a belligerent group.
- A person who does not belong to a particular group or engage in a particular activity.
- One skilled in civil law.
- A student of civil law at a university or college.
- A nonmilitary citizen
- N/A
CIVILIAN vs CIVIL: ADJECTIVE
- Of, relating to, or being a civilian or civilians.
- That which is not related to the military, police or other uniformed profession
- Associated with civil life or performed by persons who are not active members of the military
- Associated with or performed by civilians as contrasted with the military
- Applying to ordinary citizens
- Being in accordance with or denoting legally recognized divisions of time.
- Of ordinary citizens or ordinary community life as distinguished from the military or the ecclesiastical.
- Of or relating to citizens and their interrelations with one another or with the state.
- Of, relating to, or befitting a citizen or citizens.
- (of divisions of time) legally recognized in ordinary affairs of life
- Not rude; marked by satisfactory (or especially minimal) adherence to social usages and sufficient but not noteworthy consideration for others
- Of or in a condition of social order
- Of or occurring within the state or between or among citizens of the state
- Of or relating to or befitting citizens as individuals
- Sufficiently observing or befitting accepted social usages; polite: : polite.
- Applying to ordinary citizens as contrasted with the military
- Behaving in a reasonable or polite manner.
- Having to do with people and government office as opposed to the military or religion.
- See under Year.
- See under War.
- Same as Civil action.
- The whole body of the laity or citizens not included under the military, maritime, and ecclesiastical states.
- The substitution of business principles and methods for the spoils system in the conduct of the civil service, esp. in the matter of appointments to office.
- All service rendered to and paid for by the state or nation other than that pertaining to naval or military affairs.
- That given to a person injured, by action, as opposed to a criminal prosecution.
- See under List.
- Subject to government; reduced to order; civilized; not barbarous; -- said of the community.
- Relating to the rights of private individuals and legal proceedings concerning these rights as distinguished from criminal, military, or international regulations or proceedings.
- Pertaining to a city or state, or to a citizen in his relations to his fellow citizens or to the state; within the city or state.
- Performing the duties of a citizen; obedient to government; -- said of an individual.
- Having the manners of one dwelling in a city, as opposed to those of savages or rustics; polite; courteous; complaisant; affable.
- Pertaining to civic life and affairs, in distinction from military, ecclesiastical, or official state.
- Relating to rights and remedies sought by action or suit distinct from criminal proceedings.
- An action to enforce the rights or redress the wrongs of an individual, not involving a criminal proceeding.
- The architecture which is employed in constructing buildings for the purposes of civil life, in distinction from military and naval architecture, as private houses, palaces, churches, etc.
- See under Death.
- See under Engineering.
- See under Law.
CIVILIAN vs CIVIL: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Pertaining to or characteristic of a civilian.
- Characteristic of a citizen, as opposed to a courtier, soldier, etc.; not gay or showy; sober; grave; somber.
- Courteous; obliging; well bred; affable; often, merely or formally polite; not discourteous.
- Intestine; not foreign: as, civil war.
- Reduced to order, rule, and government; not in a condition of anarchy; controlled by a regular administration; exhibiting some refinement of customs and manners; not savage or wild; civilized: as, civil life; civil society.
- Specifically, relating to the commonwealth as secularly organized for purposes of peace: opposed to ecclesiastical, military, or naval; relating to the citizen in his relations to the commonwealth as thus organized, or to his fellow-citizens: as, civil rights; or, in particular, relating to property and other rights maintainable in law at the owner's suit: opposed to criminal: as, civil actions, civil courts, civil remedies.
- Pertaining to the state in general; pertaining to organized society as represented by government.
- More specifically, the municipal law of the Roman empire, the phrase jus civile (civil law) being used in Roman law for those rules and principles of law which were thought to be peculiar to the Roman people, in contradistinction to those which were supposed to be common to all nations (jus gentium). By English and American legal authors civil law is now commonly used to signify the whole system of Roman law, of which the principal source is the collection made by the Emperor Justinian, consisting of the Digest, Code, and Novellæ Constitutiones. Sometimes the term is also applied to the unwritten law of the principal nations of continental Europe, especially of Germany, which is based on the Roman law. Some authors speak in the latter case of modern civil law. The civil law is the basis also of the law of Scotland, Spanish America, Louisiana, and Quebec.
- Not rude
CIVILIAN vs CIVIL: RELATED WORDS
- Civic, Civilized, Urban, Citizen, Private, Clerical, Civvies, Secular, Nongovernmental, Political, Peaceful, Nonmilitary, Military, Civil, Noncombatant
- Courteous, Government, Governmental, Damages, Secular, Marital, Secession, Fratricidal, Political, Matrimonial, Criminal, Polite, Civic, Civilized, Civilian
CIVILIAN vs CIVIL: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Civic, Civilized, Urban, Citizen, Private, Clerical, Civvies, Secular, Nongovernmental, Political, Peaceful, Nonmilitary, Military, Civil, Noncombatant
- Courteous, Government, Governmental, Damages, Secular, Marital, Secession, Fratricidal, Political, Matrimonial, Criminal, Polite, Civic, Civilized, Civilian
CIVILIAN vs CIVIL: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- If you are a civilian resident, your civilian facility pays your salary.
- In Germany, servicemembers are tried exclusively under civilian law in civilian courts.
- Army leaders evaluate Army Civilian job performance using procedures prescribed under civilian personnel policies.
- If no civilian oversight board exists, copy of any policies or procedures for handling civilian complaints.
- Police, DSS, and military reported to civilian authorities but periodically acted outside civilian control.
- Civilian Pay Cap Waiver memorandum and submits it to your civilian personnel office.
- In the case of Civilian Chaplaincy, Civilian institutions may have different requirements.
- DOD Civilian with a Department of the Army retired civilian ID card.
- Families of DOD Civilian and DA Civilian employees who become reportable casualties.
- You should be at rank Civilian and title Civilian.
- Attorney General may bring a civil action to recover the civil penalty prescribed pursuant to this subdivision.
- Civil Rights Division has abandoned much of the traditional civil rights enforcement work it once pursued.
- The civil enforcement section requires each Party to make civil judicial procedures concerning IPR enforcement available.
- Cameron Quinn, Office for Civil Rights and Civil Liberties, Department of Homeland Security and Mr.
- DOJ focuses more on systemic civil rights litigation under the civil rights statutes it enforces.
- Civil Service Commission under Civil Service Rule I which contained the identical prohibition.
- The Civil Division dockets all pleadings in foreclosures, money judgments, garnishments and other miscellaneous civil actions.
- All civil actions filed in the District are subject tomediation under these Local Civil Rules.
- Civil Liberties and Civil Rightsto be administered at home on two separate dates.
- All civil juries, and most civil matters are continued.
CIVILIAN vs CIVIL: QUESTIONS
- What are the Australian civilian Corps Regulations 2011?
- Is China building a vast civilian surveillance network?
- What are the requirements for advanced civilian schooling?
- Are there civilian contractors in the security field?
- What happens to ICE detainees in civilian detention?
- Can civilian detention officer serve arrest warrant?
- Does the Army need civilian cyberspace professionals?
- Are civilian police considered 'legitimate military targets'?
- What was the first civilian oceanographic satellite?
- Does Additional Protocol I protect civilian journalists?
- What is the environmental impact of civil engineering?
- What civil rights did the Reconstruction Acts give?
- Which states abolished slavery before the Civil War?
- How did technological innovations affect the Civil War?
- Was the Civil War unnecessary and unconstitutional?
- Is the Civil Rights Commission politically gridlocked?
- Which dynasty created the Civil Service examination?
- Which court decisions define American Civil Liberties?
- What are the civil service retirement requirements?
- What was the civil uprising phase of the Syrian Civil War?