legislation
/ˌlɛd͡ʒɪsˈleɪʃən/
This term carries a formal, institutional weight, typically associated with government bodies and official legal frameworks. It describes the systemic output of a legislative process rather than a single, specific rule, which would be termed a law or an act. It is frequently used in political and legal discourse to describe the broad scope of regulatory changes or the administrative effort required to codify new standards. Grammatically, this noun is uncountable. It refers to a collective body of laws or a general process, meaning it cannot be pluralized as legislations. To refer to a single legal instrument, one must use a partitive construction such as a piece of legislation or a specific term like a bill or an act.
Refers to the general process of making laws or the collective body of laws enacted by a government.
💬Casual Conversation
I saw new Earth legislation on snacks. Are 'cheesy poofs' really banned?
That's not legislation, Zorg. It's just a health advisory. Stop reading tabloids.
Meanings
Laws, considered collectively, that are enacted by a legislative body.
"The new legislation aims to reduce carbon emissions."