Source: The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48
Regulation \Reg`u*la"tion\ (-l?"sh?n), n.
1. The act of regulating, or the state of being regulated.
[1913 Webster]
The temper and regulation of our own minds.
--Macaulay.
[1913 Webster]
2. A rule or order prescribed for management or government;
prescription; a regulating principle; a governing
direction; precept; law; as, the regulations of a society
or a school.
[1913 Webster]
Regulation sword, cap, uniform, etc. (Mil.), a sword,
cap, uniform, etc., of the kind or quality prescribed by
the official regulations.
[1913 Webster]
Syn: Law; rule; method; principle; order; precept. See
Law.
[1913 Webster]
regulation
adj : prescribed by or according to regulation; "regulation army
equipment"
n 1: an authoritative rule [syn: ordinance]
2: a principle or condition that customarily governs behavior;
"it was his rule to take a walk before breakfast"; "short
haircuts were the regulation" [syn: rule]
3: the state of being controlled or governed
4: (embryology) the ability of an early embryo to continue
normal development after its structure has been somehow
damaged or altered
5: the act of bringing to uniformity; making regular [syn: regularization,
regularisation]
6: the act of controlling or directing according to rule;
"fiscal regulations are in the hands of politicians" [syn:
regulating]