MIAWSIE, photographed in February 2007

Legitimate expectation

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This is where the text in the section goes.

Let's create a bulleted list:

  • Bulleted list item
  • Numbered list item
  • This is the first item.
  • This is the second item.
  • This is the third item. What happens when I want to create a sub-list?
    • I DO IT LIKE THIS YOOO
    • AND AGAIN CUZ I AM
      • ANNOYING
      • FREE TO LIVE MAH LYFE.
  1. Now yo momma gunna help ya countz
  2. THIS IS NUMBER TWO.
  3. THIS IS NUMBER THREE.
  4. 123 SO EASYYYY
    1. USE NUMBERS IF YOU WANNA REFER BACK TO THE SAME NUMBER. else, use bullets.

This is a sub-section

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This is a sub-sub-section

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Illegality in administrative law

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In XYZ v ABC, the judge said:

I think that the defendant deserves to go to prison for a very, very long time.

BOLD BOLD&ITALICS

Underline Superscript

Irrationality

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The Old Supreme Court of Singapore

Another sub-section

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This is the sentence that requires a reference. Always put the reference after a punctuation, not before.[1]

This is a sentence that uses exactly the same reference (i.e. even the page number) as the first one.[2].

This is a US case.[3]

I can create a link to another Wikipedia article like this: Law in Singapore

This is a book.[4]

This is a piece of legislation.[5]

Notes

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Put this special markup:

  1. ^ The citation goes here.
  2. ^ R v North and East Devon Health Authority, ex parte Coughlan [1999] EWCA Civ 1871, [2001] Q.B. 213, Court of Appeal (England and Wales).
  3. ^ Marbury v. Madison 5 U.S. 137 (1803), Supreme Court (United States).
  4. ^ Peter Leyland; Gordon Anthony (2009), "Wednesbury Unreasonableness, Proportionality, and Equality", Textbook on Administrative Law (6th ed.), Oxford: Oxford University Press, p. 284–312, ISBN 978-0-19-921776-2.
  5. ^ Internal Security Act (Cap. 143, 1985 Rev. Ed.) ("ISA"), s. 7(1); Constitution of the Republic of Singapore (1985 Rev. Ed., 1999 Reprint), Art. 12(1).