Prerogative
In law, a prerogative is an exclusive right bestowed by a government or state and invested in an individual or group, the content of which is separate from the body of rights enjoyed under the general law. It was a common facet of feudal law. The word is derived from Old French prerogative (14c.), M.L. prerogativa "special right", from Latin praerogativa "prerogative, previous choice or election", originally (with tribus, centuria) "100 voters who by lot voted first in the Roman comitia", from praerogativus (adj.) "chosen to vote first."[1]
Topics
gollark: In many cases people would work *better* with less time, mostly in knowledge-work jobs.
gollark: I think it's more of a problem of our political/economic systems being oriented towards "we need jobs/working hours regardless of actual productivity".
gollark: SPECIALIZATION REALLY VERY GOOD!
gollark: ANPRIM BAD!
gollark: I suppose you could phrase it as "lack of goods and services™ restricts happy™", too.
See also
Look up prerogative in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. |
- Individual rights
- Sui juris
- "My Prerogative" (song)
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