unlawful
unlawful — adjective
1. Describes an action, activity, or situation that goes against the rules of a cou
Describes an action, activity, or situation that goes against the rules of a country's legal system and can therefore lead to punishment by the authorities.
The court ruled that the company's hiring practices were unlawful.
predicative use: ruled that...were unlawful
Judge Adina ruled that the landlord's refusal to rent to Mateo was unlawful discrimination.
attributive use: unlawful discrimination
Hamza was arrested for carrying an unlawful weapon at the airport.
Taiwan's parliament passed a law making it unlawful for firms to share user data without consent.
The hospital's finance director was fired last week for the unlawful use of patient-care funds.
- illegal
the most common everyday word; 'unlawful' sounds more formal and is used more in legal writing
- prohibited
emphasises that a rule or law has explicitly banned something
- criminal
stronger term used for serious offences that carry criminal punishment
- banned
suggests an active decision to forbid something by law or authority
文法句型
unlawful + noun
be + unlawful
it is unlawful to + infinitive
declare/rule/deem something + unlawful
用法筆記
Common in legal documents, court rulings, and formal news reporting. 'Unlawful' is close in meaning to 'illegal', but 'unlawful' is preferred in official legal language, while 'illegal' is more frequent in everyday speech. Minor rule violations such as parking offences are rarely described as 'unlawful'.
常見錯誤
2. Describes actions that go against widely accepted moral standards, even when no
Describes actions that go against widely accepted moral standards, even when no specific law has been broken — for instance, paying workers unfairly low wages while staying within the legal minimum.
Human rights groups called the use of child workers at a Bangladesh textile factory morally unlawful.
morally unlawful — extends beyond legal meaning
The union said a hotel chain's hidden cameras in staff break rooms were morally unlawful.
union said + something was morally unlawful
The historian described the general's actions as unlawful, even by the standards of wartime.
Vivek's grandmother considered it morally unlawful to throw away food while neighbours went hungry.
Ezra argued that the new policy was morally unlawful because it hurt poor families.
文法句型
be + (morally) unlawful
consider/deem something + (morally) unlawful
用法筆記
This sense is almost always accompanied by 'morally' or another word that signals a non-legal meaning. Without such a modifier, readers will interpret 'unlawful' in its legal sense. This moral usage appears mainly in philosophical writing, opinion pieces, and ethical debates.