lex lata
English
    
    
Noun
    
- (law) The law as it is.
- 1997, Lyal S Sunga, The Emerging System of International Criminal Law 
- At that point, little purpose would be served in maintaining categories fashioned so closely to the lex lata that the Code would crystallize traditional technical distinctions.
 
- 2000, Nikolaos K. Tsagourias, The Jurisprudence of International Law 
- This also betrays an interest in transforming world order by approximating lex lata with lex ferenda.
 
- 2002, Netherlands Yearbook of International Law, 2001 
- Lex ferenda serves as a label for something which has at least conceptual existence, as a contrast or opposite to lex lata, the law that exists and obliges the subjects of law to adopt, or to refrain from, certain defined courses of conduct in certain defined circumstances.
 
 
- 1997, Lyal S Sunga, The Emerging System of International Criminal Law 
Latin
    
    Etymology
    
Literally "the law borne", i.e. ratified. Compare lēgislātor (“one who makes laws”); literally, "bearer of the law".
Declension
    
Third-declension noun with a first-declension adjective, singular only.
| Case | Singular | 
|---|---|
| Nominative | lēx lāta | 
| Genitive | lēgis lātae | 
| Dative | lēgī lātae | 
| Accusative | lēgem lātam | 
| Ablative | lēge lātā | 
| Vocative | lēx lāta | 
Antonyms
    
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