eunomy means equal law, or a well-adjusted constitution of government. Lexicurio rates it Sui generis — a strength score of 87 out of 100.
eunomy is pronounced /ˈjuːnəmi/.
Why “eunomy” is a great word
EUNOMY — [Noun] A state of good order and just laws, a well-adjusted constitution of government. From the Greek eu- ("good, well") + -nomy (from Greek nomos, "law, custom"). Unlike "anarchy," which denotes a vacuum of governance, or "dysnomia," which specifies a reign of bad laws, eunomy is the harmonious calibration of structure and equity. It is the precise spacing of trees in a public avenue, the predictable arc of a just verdict, and the collective trust in the bridge beneath their feet—a civic dream of measured calm, forever poised against the encroaching noise.
Etymology
From eu- + -nomy.
noun
- Equal law, or a well-adjusted constitution of government.“Notwithstanding that well-poized constitution and equal law, or, in the expressive language of Greece, that eunomy of the Corinthian state, which Pindar has, apparently with justice, celebrated”