I take exception to your retort. I will make an exception in this instance.
The opposite of exception is inclusion.(In categorization or regulation, the exception is the opposite of the rule.)
do you mean administrative? I could not find administive any where. administrative means relating to the administration of a business, organization, or institution
An Adverb Exception is an adverb that comes in front of the verb.
The Philippine Administrative SystemThe administrative system of the Republic of the Philippines is comprised of a central government and its territorial and political subdivisions, which enjoy local autonomy: the provinces, cities, municipalities and barangays (smallest administrative unit) and the autonomous regions in Muslim Mindanao and the Cordilleras.source's by Google.com
A nifty website called monster.com will let you search for administrative and clerical jobs, and by area as well. That should get you on your way. Good luck!
due cause
Websites for job seekers and recruiters are places where administrative jobs are available to apply for; once filtering search results, administrative jobs are very easy to find.
An example of non-meta-search engine is Google unlike Bing
probable cause
Actually, there are more like 6 exceptions to the warrant requirement. They are: (1)stop and frisk situation--also known as a terry stop (2)when the police have the consent of the individual or someone who also lives in the house (3)when the search involves an automobile (4)when the illegal item is in plain view and the police are on the property pursuant to a proper search warrant (5)when the search is incident to an arrest (6)and when there is an emergency type situation such as in hot pursuit of a suspect or there is the fear that the individual may destroy evidence before a search warrant can be obtained.
Administrative clerical jobs can be found in newspapers and job search sites such as Monster and Career Builder. Clerical jobs can be at lawyer's offices, doctor's offices, and schools.
An exception to the exclusionary rule that permits law enforcement officers to search a motor vehicle based on probable cause but without a warrant. The fleeting-targets exception is predicated on the fact that vehicles can quickly leave the jurisdiction of a law enforcement agency
Exception information filters data to report information that is outside of a normal condition. These conditions, called the exception criteria, define the range of what is considered normal activity or status. An example of an exception report is an Inventory Exception Report is an Inventory Exception Report that notifies the purchasing department of items it needs to reorder. Exception reports help managers save time because they do not have to search through a detailed report for exceptions. Instead, an exception report brings exceptions to the manager's attention in an easily identifiable form. Exception reports thus help them focus on situations that require immediate decisions or actions.
Japan is divided up into administrative districts called prefectures, but Tokyo is an exception. Like Osaka it is a district all by itself. In other words, Tokyo is a 'state'. Another exception is the whole island of Hokkaido in the north, which is also a complete 'state', too.
Unless you live in a country that does not reside under the U.N's jurisdiction then yes. But there are exception of course and loop holes in the law, for example if they have a tip off that there is a person in there kept against their will, they may enter.
The exclusionary rule applies to the evidence allowable in a criminal case. One exception is the "good faith exception" established by the US Supreme Court case, United States v. Leon. This exception provides that in some cases evidence discovered in an otherwise illegal search may be used at trial rather than excluded, provided the search had been made in good faith. This means that if the police honestly believed that the search was legal (even though on further review of the facts it was not), the evidence obtained will not be excluded. This applies to officers' objective, good-faith reliance on a warrant, later found to be defective, issued by a detached and neutral magistrate. (See below link)