On the point of the utility of legal dictionaries, I love my legal dictionary. It not only defines terms, but, far more importantly, provides references to cases, that, at a quick glance can quickly jog my memory. In my FedCon exam, I was prompted to the correct answer twice by referring to my dictionary.
An example, by way of illustration, page 383:
Right of contribution The right of an insurer, where an assured has double insurance on a risk, to proportional contribution from the other insurer: Albion Insurance Co Ltd v GIO (NSW) 121 CLR 342; Marine Insurance Act 1909 (Cth) s 86(1) see also
Contribution; Double Insurance
See, useful with the important stuff as well as all those niggly little Latin phrases which, for one like I who has done no Latin since year 11, retard the reading of judgements, such as:
res inter alios acta noncere non debet or
quicquid plantatur solo, solo cedit and who can forget that little ripper
rex quod injustum est facere non potest ????