Sentences with phrase «know legal stuff»

I knew that English majors don't know legal stuff.

Not exact matches

We knew all the legal, the business stuff, but we didn't really know what makes a good French fry franchisee.»
Here are all the little things you need to know about legal stuff for entrepreneurs.
I can't give specifics of the other people who have had trouble with him other than to say that several people I know personally had him copy stuff from their websites and were considering filing legal action against him (though I don't know if they ever did or not).
We'll cover all of the major legal stuff and point out pitfalls to avoid so that your new business can be a long - lasting success, no matter how you define it.
In addition to knowing your stuff and jumping through new legal profession had clearly formed.
The groundwork of building theory, training litigators, and systematically bringing lesser known cases to build a legal record was often not the stuff of public glory and recognition.
Until the media got hold of the Ford stuff in Ontario, I don't know if the risks were fully understood,» says Jamie Johnson, a lawyer in the City of Edmonton's legal department and Canadian Bar Association municipal law section chairman for Alberta.
Sam Glover: You talked about analyzing legal issues from TV shows, for example, which some lawyers do that and I wonder if that is helpful in sort of branding and raising your profile, but I wonder about it in terms of search engine optimization because people aren't searching for those kinds of legal problems and the kinds of people that come across your post if it goes viral, I mean it sounds awesome to get thousands or hundreds of thousands of hits on a post, but those aren't clients so I wonder how you think about stuff like that, you know kind of going for publicity seeking posts?
Client comments as published in the legal directories and guides include: «A first - class mind and clearly a silk in the making»; «a QC in waiting»; «a very bright, uber - responsive, rising star»; «formidable advocate able to stand up to commercial silks and senior juniors»; «an extremely impressive and effective advocate who gets on top of things extremely fast and is quick on his feet»; «complete grasp of all current developments, strategic input and forceful yet polite cross-examination»; «undoubted star junior who goes well past the extra mile in preparing his cases»; «brilliant, completely committed to the brief; a great all - rounder»; «intellectually very strong»; «very sharp and to the point»; «ringing endorsements from the market»; «impressive and knows his stuff»; «razor sharp legal skills»; «comes up with extremely clever points» with an ability «to handle hearings with utmost self - possession and confidence and produce some first - class advocacy»; «a thorough and thoughtful advocate who has an agreeable but tough courtroom manner»; «very proactive and, once instructed, takes control of a case and pushes it forward to the advantage of the client»; «has the ability to sift through complex legal problems, and present practical legal solutions that not only win you the battles, but also the war»; «very commercial and savvy»; «infectious passion for the law»; «his commitment to his work is outstanding»; «relentless energy and precise attention to detail make him invaluable.»
The Legal 500 cites Aster as a «leading individual» and has said that he has «great technical expertise», «clearly knows his stuff, is friendly, responsive and solution - oriented».
He is noted in the Chambers legal directory as «an expert who clearly knows his stuff» with «a broad licensing practice with regular work advising clients on contentious issues including hearings and reviews.»
Corporate legal departments are happy to use enterprise legal management — also known as «practice management» to lawyers of a certain age — for the unsexy stuff: managing invoices from outside counsel, studying legal budgets to see where the dollars go, tracking regulatory enforcement,...
They both have many years of city centre family legal experience in large commercial firms and wanted to offer an alternative: solicitors who listen and guide, who are not hide bound by big firm procedures, who are approachable and accessible and who are specialist enough to know the law and their stuff but aren't divorce divas.
Sometimes they even say they won't pay for time spent on legal research on the basis that they hire lawyers who should know this stuff.
A witness who says so, may at least get the judge to comment on it, and a stubborn witness who takes legal duty as serious stuff, could conceivably respond that they can not answer it «yes / no».
I don't know exactly what «lay low on stuff in storage means,» but it still sounds like sound legal advice to me - don't dig a deeper hole for yourself.
We knew of people who had adopted domestically, but we were scared about the legal aspects, birth mom / birth dad stuff.
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