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licensure

[ lahy-suhn-sher, -shoor ]

noun

  1. the granting of licenses, especially to engage in professional practice.


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yvlog History and Origins

Origin of licensure1

First recorded in 1840–50; license + -ure
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

“Provisional licensure would allow candidates with offers of employment contingent on bar passage to retain them,” the deans wrote.

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“Individuals who are found to have engaged in this type of prohibited and unethical behavior will find it difficult if not impossible to secure licensure with the State Bar of California.”

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“I have to choose whether or not to violate the ethics of my licensure to do my job, and that’s not fair.”

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The right to bear arms is so powerful that a defendant can parlay a run-of-the-mill illegal weapons charge into a full-on assault against a state’s entire concealed carry licensure system.

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Because in Florida, when you lose your civil rights, you don’t just lose the right to vote—you lose the right to get state licensure.

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