justicar means A representative and enforcer of the king or ruler's justice. Lexicurio rates it Sui generis — a strength score of 89 out of 100.
justicar is pronounced /ˈd͡ʒʌst.ɪ.kɑɹ/.
Why “justicar” is a great word
JUSTICAR — [Noun] A high-ranking medieval official who served as the sovereign's direct representative and enforcer of justice, wielding combined judicial and administrative authority. From Late Latin *justitiarius* and *justiciarius* ("justiciar, judge"), from Latin *justitia* ("justice"). An antiquated spelling of 'justiciar'. Unlike a "judge," who primarily interprets law from a bench, or a "sheriff," whose authority is bound to a shire, a justicar was the king's own itinerant hand, unifying law and crown. It is the silhouette of a mailed rider on a muddy road, the unsealed writ in a provincial hall, and the cold weight of a royal seal settling a dispute—the embodiment of a centralizing will reaching out to tame a fractured realm.
noun
- A representative and enforcer of the king or ruler's justice.“Spaceport Official: I wanted to be a justicar when I was young. Every asari does I guess.”