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Anonymous Posted 21 years ago
Vocabulary

'fool for a client rule' and 'law review'.

Hello.

I'm very glad to find this place! This is what I'm really looking for... T^T

Anyway, here are the things.

These days, I've dictated "Ally McBeal"- TV soap opera for studying English.

At that movie, I heard that things, "fool for a client rule" , "law review".

Coud I get the meanings of them? Plz, help me.

-young
  

Top answer

I think we need more context, Young. Even though that's one of my favorite shows, I don't remember all the episodes verbatim, and I can't give you a definitive answer. A law review may be a legal journal or it may be a suggestion to amend some legislation, for instance.

  • I think we need more context, Young.
  • Even though that's one of my favorite shows, I don't remember all the episodes verbatim, and I can't give you a definitive answer.
  • A law review may be a legal journal or it may be a suggestion to amend some legislation, for instance.
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3 Answers
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I think we need more context, Young. Even though that's one of my favorite shows, I don't remember all the episodes verbatim, and I can't give you a definitive answer. A law review may be a legal journal or it may be a suggestion to amend some legislation, for instance.

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Hi,

Fool for a client This refers to the aphorism that anyone who represents himself in court has a fool for a client.

Law Review is a legal publication. I understand the most prestigious one is The Harvard Law Review. Law students vie to work on the staff of this, as they usually go on to illustrious careers in the law.
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Ah...it is very helpful to me.

Thank you ,I appreciate you, Clive

-young

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