Entitlement vs Legal - What's the difference?
entitlement | legal |
The right to have something.
Something that one is entitled to.
(politics) A legal obligation on a government to make payments to a person, business, or unit of government that meets the criteria set in law, such as social security in the US.
Relating to the law or to lawyers.
* {{quote-magazine, date=2013-06-08, volume=407, issue=8839, page=55, magazine=(The Economist)
, title= Having its basis in the law.
Being allowed or prescribed by law.
* {{quote-magazine, date=2013-08-23, volume=408, issue=8850, magazine=(The Economist)
, title= (informal) Above the age of consent or the legal drinking age.
(US, Canada) Paper]] in sheets 8½ in × 14 in (215.9 [[millimetre, mm × 355.6 mm).
As a noun entitlement
is the right to have something.As an adjective legal is
legal, lawful.entitlement
English
Noun
(en noun)legal
English
Adjective
(en adjective)Obama goes troll-hunting, passage=According to this saga of intellectual-property misanthropy, these creatures [patent trolls] roam the business world, buying up patents and then using them to demand extravagant payouts from companies they accuse of infringing them. Often, their victims pay up rather than face the costs of a legal battle.}}
Waking life, passage=After 50 years, legal segregation is a distant memory, and race in America is not the unbridgeable chasm it once was. The country has a black president. The sort of comity that King evoked, in which the descendants of slaves and of slave owners “sit down together at the table of brotherhood”, can be found in many places, including the Deep South. The rate of marriage between blacks and whites is rising.}}