Law is a bottomless pit.

Law is a bottomless pit.
"Law is a bottomless pit."—John Arbuthnot

Nolo’s Plain-English Law Dictionary. . 2009.

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  • John Arbuthnot — For other people named John Arbuthnot, see John Arbuthnot (disambiguation). John Arbuthnot Portrait of John Arbuthnot by Godfrey Kneller Born 1667 (baptised on 29, April) Kincardineshire …   Wikipedia

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  • Arbuthnot,John — Ar·buth·not (är bŭthʹnət, ärʹbəth nŏt ), John. 1667 1735. Scottish physician and writer noted for his satirical anti Whig pamphlets published as Law Is a Bottomless Pit (1712) and later retitled The History of John Bull. * * * …   Universalium

  • JohnBull — John Bull n. 1. A personification of England or the English. 2. A typical Englishman.   [After John Bull, a character in Law Is a Bottomless Pit by John Arbuthnot.] * * * …   Universalium

  • JOHN BULL — Dans la littérature et la caricature anglaises, John Bull représente l’Anglais «typique»; on trouve pour la première fois le personnage dans La loi est un puits sans fond... (Law is a Bottomless Pit ..., 1712), l’une des cinq satires politiques… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • alibi — [18] In Latin, alibi means literally ‘somewhere else’. It is the locative form (that is, the form expressing place) of the pronoun alius ‘other’ (which is related to Greek allos ‘other’ and English else). When first introduced into English it was …   The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins

  • John Bull — noun a personification of England or the typical Englishman. Origin C18: a character in John Arbuthnot s satire Law is a Bottomless Pit; or, the History of John Bull (1712) …   English new terms dictionary

  • John Bull — ► NOUN ▪ a personification of England or the typical Englishman. ORIGIN from a character in John Arbuthnot s satire Law is a Bottomless Pit; or, the History of John Bull (1712) …   English terms dictionary

  • alibi — [18] In Latin, alibi means literally ‘somewhere else’. It is the locative form (that is, the form expressing place) of the pronoun alius ‘other’ (which is related to Greek allos ‘other’ and English else). When first introduced into English it was …   Word origins

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