Bí-kok hiàn-hoat tē-2 siu-chèng àn

Bí-kok hèn-huat tē-2 siu-tsìng àn (ing-gú: Second Amendment to the United States Constitution) sī Bí-kok kuân-lī huat-àn [en] tsi it, pīng tī 1791-nî 12-gue̍h 15-ji̍t tsìng-sik thong-kuè. Tē-2 siu-tsìng-àn pó-tsiong Bí-kok tshî-tshìng kuân [en], ia̍h-tio̍h-sī kong-bîn hióng-iú tsìng-tong hông-uī ê kong-bîn kuân-lī [en].[1][2][3][4]

Lāi-iông

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Bí-kok hèn-huat tē-2 siu-tsìng àn tshiú-siá hok-pún, tsâi-tshet tsū 1789-nî ê Bí-kok kuân-lī huat-àn [en]


Tsù-kái

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  1. Constitutional Law. Casenotes. 
  2. Jilson, Cal. American Government: Political Development and Institutional Change. 
  3. Shaman, Jeffrey. "After Heller: What Now for the Second Amendment". Santa Clara Law Review. 2014-01-30 khòaⁿ--ê. 
  4. "US Senate Annotated Constitution". 2014-01-30 khòaⁿ--ê. 

Tsham-khó bûn-hiàn

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Ên-sin ua̍t-to̍k

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Tsham-ua̍t

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Guā-pōo liân-kiat

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Wikiquote ū Second Amendment to the United States Constitution ê ín-iōng-kù.