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Understanding the Legal Profession

This quiz explores various aspects of the legal profession, including definitions, roles, and variations across different jurisdictions.

1 In ________ and Wales, "lawyer" is used loosely to refer to a broad variety of law-trained persons.

2 [45][46] Some countries go further; in ________, there is no general prohibition on the giving of legal advice.

3 Besides private practice, they can become a prosecutor, government counsel, corporate in-house counsel, ________, judge, arbitrator, law professor, or politician.

4 When was Lawyer formed?

5 This is common in small countries like ________, Japan, and Belgium.

6 Like their Greek contemporaries, early Roman advocates were trained in ________, not law, and the judges before whom they argued were also not law-trained.

7 [86] However, in a large number of countries, a law student must pass a ________ (or a series of such examinations) before receiving a license to practice.

8 In ________, the word "lawyer" only refers to individuals who have been called to the bar or have qualified as civil law notaries in the province of Quebec.

9 [143] The largest voluntary professional association of lawyers in the English-speaking world is the ________.

10 In a few civil law countries, such as ________,[99] the legal profession is not rigorously bifurcated and everyone within it can easily change roles and arenas.

💡 Interesting Facts

  • like the characters in his television series The Practice and Boston Legal, David E. Kelley worked as a lawyer in a Boston law firm.
  • of the sixty delegates to the Oregon Constitutional Convention, (Oregon Territory Seal pictured) thirty-four were farmers, while eighteen were lawyers, including three justices of the Oregon Supreme Court.
  • the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in 1963 that a criminal defendant has a constitutional right to "effective" legal counsel, but "effective" was not defined until Wiggins v. Smith in 2003.
  • the Governors Court in New South Wales had a rule barring ex-convict lawyers from appearing before it, but all of the lawyers in the penal colony were ex-convicts.
  • during the 1960s, Texas lawyer John Ben Shepperd worked to obtain the land for the creation of Lyndon B. Johnson State Park and Historic Site along the Pedernales River.
  • Tom Bauer is a lawyer and politician from Saint Louis, Missouri who was recalled after supporting several redevelopment proposals using eminent domain.
  • lawyer James A. MacAlister was the first president of Drexel University.
  • Swiss lawyer Georges Brunschvig was first to prove The Protocols of the Elders of Zion to be false in court.
  • British lawyer and activist of the Indian independence movement Eardley Norton was instrumental in establishing an UK-chapter of the Indian National Congress.
  • Opoku Ware II, King of the Ashanti people from 1970 to 1999, worked as a building inspector, a surveyor, a lawyer, and an ambassador prior to his enthronement.
  • British actress Glynis Johns appeared in the short-lived 1963 CBS sitcom called Glynis, in which she played a mystery writer, with Keith Andes as her lawyer-husband.