Governing bodies with the authority to make laws for a political entity such as a state or country. Assemblies of elected representatives who debate and pass legislation.
From Latin 'legislator' meaning 'proposer of a law,' from 'lex, legis' meaning 'law' and 'latus' meaning 'carried' or 'proposed.' The term entered English in the 17th century as democratic institutions developed.
The word 'legislature' literally means 'law-carrier,' reflecting the ancient Roman concept of proposed laws being physically carried before assemblies for approval. Modern legislatures maintain this ceremonial aspect - bills are still formally 'carried' from one chamber to another in many parliaments.
As institutions, legislatures excluded women formally until very recently in most democracies; the word itself carries institutional history of male-only governance, even when now coeducational.
Use when describing current mixed-gender bodies. When referencing historical legislatures, note women's exclusion or token presence where relevant to understanding policy.
["governing bodies","elected assemblies","parliaments"]
Women legislators have fundamentally reshaped governance priorities and policy; their recent and ongoing inclusion reshapes what 'legislature' institutionally means.
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