-
1 judicial
[dʒuː'dɪʃl]1) [inquiry, decision] giudiziariojudicial process — atto di procedura, citazione a comparire
to take judicial proceedings against sb. — intraprendere un'azione legale o un procedimento giudiziario contro qcn
3) (impartial) [ silence] imparziale* * *[‹u'diʃəl](of a judge or court of law: judicial powers; He might bring judicial proceedings against you.) giudiziario, giudiziale* * *judicial /dʒu:ˈdɪʃl/a.1 (leg.) giudiziale; giudiziario: judicial acts, atti giudiziali; judicial decision, decisione giudiziaria; judicial method, metodo giudiziale; judicial power, potere giudiziario2 (fig.) equo; imparziale● judicial activism, attivismo giudiziario □ judicial assembly, corte di giustizia □ the judicial bench, il banco del giudice □ judicial controversy, vertenza giudiziaria □ judicial enquiry (o inquiry), istruttoria; inchiesta giudiziaria □ judicial murder, assassinio legale; condanna a morte di un innocente □ (in GB) judicial precedent, precedente giudiziario □ judicial proceedings, procedimento giudiziario; azione legale □ judicial record, dispositivo della sentenza □ judicial review, controllo giurisdizionale (o giudiziario); (in USA) controllo giurisdizionale ( da parte della Corte Suprema) della costituzionalità delle leggi □ judicial sale, vendita giudiziale (o giudiziaria) □ judicial separation, separazione legale □ judicial system, sistema giudiziariojudicially avv.* * *[dʒuː'dɪʃl]1) [inquiry, decision] giudiziariojudicial process — atto di procedura, citazione a comparire
to take judicial proceedings against sb. — intraprendere un'azione legale o un procedimento giudiziario contro qcn
3) (impartial) [ silence] imparziale
См. также в других словарях:
impartial — impartial, iale, iaux [ ɛ̃parsjal, jo ] adj. • 1576; de 1. in et partial ♦ Qui n est pas partial, qui est sans parti pris. ⇒ juste, neutre. Arbitre, juge impartial. ⇒ équitable. (Choses) Verdict impartial. Un compte rendu, un rapport impartial.… … Encyclopédie Universelle
impartial — [[t]ɪmpɑ͟ː(r)ʃ(ə)l[/t]] ADJ GRADED Someone who is impartial is not directly involved in a particular situation, and is therefore able to give a fair opinion or decision about it. As an impartial observer my analysis is supposed to be objective … English dictionary
impartial — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) adj. nonpartisan; unprejudiced, unbiased, fair; dispassionate, disinterested. See probity, justice, liberality. II (Roget s IV) modif. Syn. unbiased, unprejudiced, disinterested; see equal , fair 1 . See … English dictionary for students
fair and impartial trial — n. A trial or hearing before a court or jury that has no preconceived notions about the matter and that will hear testimony and examine evidence before making a decision. The Essential Law Dictionary. Sphinx Publishing, An imprint of Sourcebooks … Law dictionary
The Lexington Principles on the Rights of Detainees — Infobox document document name = Draft Lexington Principles on the Rights of Detainees date created = September 25, 2008 location of document = Lexington, Virginia, U.S.A. writer = The Lexington Principles Project, Transnational Law Institute,… … Wikipedia
Hamdi v. Rumsfeld — SCOTUSCase Litigants=Hamdi v. Rumsfeld ArgueDate=April 28 ArgueYear=2004 DecideDate=June 28 DecideYear=2004 FullName=Yaser Esam Hamdi and Esam Fouad Hamdi as next friend of Yaser Esam Hamdi, Petitioners v. Donald H. Rumsfeld, Secretary of Defense … Wikipedia
Magistrates of England and Wales — This article is part of the series: Courts of England and Wales Law of England and Wales … Wikipedia
NSA warrantless surveillance controversy — For the related controversy about data mining of domestic call records see NSA call database. National Security Agency logo The NSA warrantless surveillance controversy (AKA Warrantless Wiretapping ) concerns surveillance of persons within the… … Wikipedia
Henry Stump — Infobox Person name = Henry Stump image size = caption = birth date = birth place = death date = 29 October 1865 [“Stump, Henry. An Eyewitness to the Baltimore Riot, 19th April, 1861,” Letter from Henry Stump to Mrs. Mary A. Stump, Maryland… … Wikipedia
United States trust law — Introduction Most law regulating the creation and administration of trusts in the United States is now statutory at the state level. In August 2004, the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws created the first attempt to… … Wikipedia
recuse — re·cuse /ri kyüz/ vt re·cused, re·cus·ing [Anglo French recuser to refuse, from Middle French, from Latin recusare, from re back + causari to give a reason, from causa cause, reason] 1: to challenge or object to (as a judge) as having prejudice… … Law dictionary