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1 trial
[ˈtraɪəl] noun1) an act of testing or trying; a test:إخْتِبارThe disaster was a trial of his courage.
2) a legal process by which a person is judged in a court of law:مُحاكَمَهTheir trial will be held next week.
3) a (source of) trouble or anxiety:مِحْنَهMy son is a great trial (to me).
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2 Judicial and Legal System
The 1976 Constitution and 1982 revisions provide for three fundamental courts, each with different functions, as well as other special courts, including a military court. The three principal courts are the Constitutional Court, Supreme Court of Justice, and Supreme Court of Administration. The Constitutional Court determines whether legislative acts (laws) are legal and constitutional. In addition, it ascertains the physical ability of the president of the Republic to perform duties of office, as well as to determine the constitutionality of international agreements. Ten of this court's members are selected by the Assembly of the Republic.The Supreme Court of Justice, the highest court of law, heads the court system and tries civil and criminal cases. It includes first courts to try cases and courts of appeal. The Supreme Court of Administration examines the administrative and fiscal conduct of government institutions. All matters concerning judges, including the power to discipline judges whose conduct does not comply with the law, are overseen by the Higher Council of the Bench and the Superior Council of the Administrative and Fiscal Courts. There is also an Ombudsman, elected for a four-year term by the Assembly of the Republic, who serves as chief civil and human rights officer of the country. This officer receives 3,000-4,000 complaints a year from citizens who dispute acts of the judicial and legal system.Portugal's system of laws is based on Roman civil law and has been shaped by the French legal system. Unlike common law in the American and British legal systems, Portugal's system of laws is based on a complete body of law so that judicial reason is deductive. Legal precedent, then, has little influence. Portuguese judges are viewed as civil servants simply applying the law from codes, not as a judiciary who interpret law. While the post-1974 judicial and legal system is freer and fairer than that under the Estado Novo dictatorship, it has received criticism on the grounds of being very slow, cumbersome, overburdened with cases, and sometimes corrupt. There has been a backlog of untried cases and long delays before trial because of vacant judgeships and inefficient operations.Under Portuguese criminal law, preventive detention for a maximum of four months is legal. Much longer preventive detention terms occur due to the trial backlog. Memories persist of legal abuses under the Estado Novo system, when suspects convicted of crimes against the state could be detained legally for periods of from six months to three years. Media sensationalism and the cited problems of the judicial system exacerbated tensions in recent high-profile trials, including the 2004-05 trial of a child prostitution and pedophile ring, tried in Lisbon, with suspects including a celebrated television personality and a former diplomat.Historical dictionary of Portugal > Judicial and Legal System
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3 on trial
1) the subject of a legal action in court:تَحْت المُحاكَمَهShe's on trial for murder.
2) undergoing tests or examination:تَحْتَ التَّجْرِبَهWe've had a new television installed, but it's only on trial.
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4 судебный процесс
1) General subject: action (bring an action against somebody - возбудить дело против кого-либо), law, lawsuit, litigation, quarrel, quarreller, trial, process, suit, legal argument2) Military: court examination3) Law: adjudicatory process, at-trial procedure, bring an action, judicial proceeding, judicial proceedings, law proceeding, law suit, legal suit, legal trial, procedure, proceeding, proceedings, suit at law, tow proceedings, judicial trial, court proceedings, step4) Economy: prosecution5) Diplomatic term: legal procedures6) Business: court battle, enforcement proceedings, instance, legal action, legal procedure, legal process7) leg.N.P. judicial process, legal proceedings -
5 судовий процес
at-trial procedure, cause, enforcement proceedings, judicial proceeding, law proceeding, law suit, litigation, quarrel at law, sequela curia, suit at law, legal suit, legal proceeding, legal proceedings, legal trial -
6 judicium
jūdĭcĭum, ii, n. [judex], a judgment, i. e. a judicial investigation, trial; a judicial sentence (class.).I.Lit.:II.omnia judicia aut distrahendarum controversiarum aut puniendorum maleficiorum causā reperta sunt,
Cic. Caecin. 2:dignitatis meae,
concerning, id. Brut. 1, 1:praetor judicium prius de probro, quam de re fieri maluit,
id. Quint. 2:de alicujus meritis judicia facere,
id. Or. 41, 140:de mea fide,
id. Fam. 11, 29, 2:de se,
Caes. B. G. 1, 41, 2:inter sicarios,
for assassination, Cic. Rosc. Am. 5, 11:adducere causam aliquam in judicium,
id. Opt. Gen. Or. 7, 18:judicio aliquid defendere,
id. Quint. 20, 62:agere,
to settle a dispute, Plin. 9, 35, 58, § 120: ferre, to give his vote; of a judge (different from sententiam ferre, to pass sentence), Cic. Tog. Cand. p. 525 Orell.:exercere,
id. Q. Fr. 2, 16, 3:vocare aliquem in judicium,
to summon before court, id. Balb. 28, 64:judicio quempiam arcessere,
to sue, id. Fl. 6, 14:sistere in judicium,
to set before the court, Dig. 2, 5, 4: dare, to allow, grant a trial, of the prætor who proposes the judges:in Lurconis libertum judicium ex edicto dedit,
Cic. Fl. 35, 88:judicium accipere, suscipere,
to undertake a legal trial, id. Quint. 20, 62; Dig. 5, 3, 7:pati,
to submit to, Cic. Quint. 20, 63:damnatus inani judicio Marius,
Juv. 1, 48. —Transf.A.A court of justice:B.at ille in judicium venit,
Nep. Ep. 8:judicium clauserat militibus armatis,
Quint. 4, 2, 25. —Beyond the legal sphere, a judgment, decision, opinion with regard to any thing:C.meum semper judicium fuit, omnia nostros invenisse per se sapientius quam, etc.,
Cic. Tusc. 1, 1, 1:decima legio per tribunos militum ei gratias egit, quod de se optimum judicium fecisset,
Caes. B. G. 1, 41:judicium facere, quanti quisque sibi faciendus esset,
to judge, decide, Cic. Fam. 13, 29, 1:meo judicio,
in my judgment, according to my opinion, id. Brut. 8, 32; Quint. 9, 3, 59:ex alicujus judicio,
Cic. Rosc. Am. 37, 108: de quo homine vos tanta et tam praeclara judicia fecistis, i. e. by conferring honors on him, id. de Imp. Pomp. 15, 43.—The power of judging, judgment, discernment:D.studio optimo, judicio minus firmo praeditus,
Cic. Or. 7, 24; id. Fam. 9, 6, 4:intellegens,
id. Opt. Gen. Or. 4, 11:subtile,
Hor. Ep. 2, 1, 242:si quid mei judicii est,
if I can judge of it, Cic. Fin. 2, 12, 36:videor id judicio facere,
i. e. with discretion, good judgment, id. Q. Fr. 3, 1, 5, § 18; so Caes. B. G. 5, 27; Cic. Div. 2, 13, 30 dub.:adhibere,
Tac. H. 1, 83:acri judicio perpendere aliquid,
Lucr. 2, 1042.—Judicial harangues, speeches in court:illa mala judicia,
Quint. 10, 1, 70. -
7 검찰
n. prosecutor, plaintiff, person who files a legal action; prosecuting attorney, attorney who manages the accusing side of a legal trial -
8 Fall
m; -(e)s, kein Pl.1. fall; im Fallschirm: descent; freier Fall PHYS. free fall; sich bei einem Fall verletzen be hurt in a fall; zu Fall bringen cause s.o. to fall; im Kampf: bring down; durch Beinstellen: trip up, zu Fall kommen fall3. fig. downfall; einer Regierung etc.: auch fall, collapse; einer Festung etc.: fall; zu Fall bringen (Regierung etc.) bring down; (Pläne etc.) thwart; (Gesetzentwurf etc.) defeat; zu Fall kommen Person: come to grief; Regierung auch: be brought down; Plan: be wrecked ( oder thwarted); Gesetzentwurf etc.: be defeated; Hochmut—m; -(e)s, Fälle1. case (auch MED., JUR.); (Angelegenheit) auch matter, affair; (Einzelbeispiel) instance; (Vorkommnis) occurrence; der Fall Graf the Graf case; ein Fall von Typhus a typhoid case, a case of typhoid; ein typischer Fall von... a typical case of...; in vielen Fällen in many cases, often; im besten oder günstigsten Fall at best; im schlimmsten Fall at worst; in diesem / im anderen Fall(e) in that ( oder this) case / otherwise; im Falle eines Falles umg. if (the) worst comes to (the) worst; für alle Fälle just in case, to be on the safe side; auf alle Fälle oder auf jeden Fall anyway; (ganz bestimmt) definitely; lass den Schlüssel auf alle Fälle oder in jedem Fall da whatever you do, leave the key behind; auf keinen Fall on no account, under no circumstances; (ganz bestimmt nicht) definitely not; sag es ihm auf keinen Fall don’t tell him whatever you do; ist das der Fall? is that the case (here)?; das ist nicht der Fall that is not the case; das ist auch bei ihm der Fall it’s the same with him; der Fall liegt so the situation is as follows; für den oder im Fall, dass er kommen sollte in case he should come; gesetzt den Fall suppose, supposing, let’s assume; wenn der Fall zutrifft oder wenn das der Fall ist if that is the case; wenn der Fall zutrifft oder wenn es der Fall ist, dass er... if this is a case of his ( oder him) (+ Ger.) das ist von Fall zu Fall verschieden that varies from case to case; das muss man von Fall zu Fall entscheiden auch you have to decide each case on its merits; klarer Fall, dass er das nicht kann umg. it’s obvious he can’t do it; klarer Fall! umg. (oh,) sure!; das ist ganz / nicht ganz mein Fall umg. that’s right up my street / not exactly my cup of tea; er ist genau / nicht ganz mein Fall umg. he’s just / not exactly my type; hoffnungslos2. LING. case; erster / zweiter / dritter / vierter Fall nominative / genitive / dative / accusative case; der fünfte Fall the instrumental case; im Lateinischen: the ablative case; der sechste Fall the prepositional case; (Vokativ) the vocative case; im dritten Fall stehen be in the dative; nach „durch“ steht der vierte Fall „durch“ is followed by the accusative—n; -(e)s, -en; NAUT. halyard* * *das Fall(Segel) halyard;der Fall(Grammatik) case;(Sachverhalt) instance; case;(Sturz) cropper; fall; downfall* * *Fạll I [fal]m -(e)s, ordm; e['fɛlə]1) (= das Hinunterfallen) fallim/beim Fall hat er... — when/as he fell he...
See:→ frei2) (= das Zufallkommen) fall; (fig) (von Menschen, Regierung) downfall; (von Plänen, Gesetz etc) failurezu Fall kommen (lit geh) — to fall
über die Affäre ist er zu Fall gekommen (fig) — the affair was or caused his downfall
zu Fall bringen (lit geh) — to make fall, to trip up; (fig) Menschen to cause the downfall of; Regierung to bring down; Gesetz, Plan etc to thwart; Tabu to break down
4) (von Kurs, Temperatur etc) drop, fall (+gen in)IIm -(e)s, ordm; e1) ['fɛlə](= Umstand)
gesetzt den Fall — assuming or supposing (that)für den Fall, dass ich... — in case I...
für den Fall meines Todes, im Falle meines Todes — in case I die
für alle Fälle — just in case
auf jeden Fall — at any rate, at all events
auf keinen Fall — on no account
auf alle Fälle — in any case, anyway
im günstigsten/schlimmsten Fall(e) — at best/worst
im Falle eines Falles — if it comes to it
wenn dieser Fall eintritt — if this should be the case, if this should arise
2) (= gegebener Sachverhalt) caseein Fall von... — a case or an instance of...
von Fall zu Fall — from case to case, from one case to the next; (hin und wieder) periodically
in diesem Fall(e) will ich noch einmal von einer Bestrafung absehen, aber... — I won't punish you on this occasion, but...
jds Fall sein (inf) — to be sb's cup of tea (inf)
klarer Fall! (inf) — sure thing! (esp US inf), you bet! (inf)
4) (GRAM = Kasus) caseIIIder erste/zweite/dritte/vierte Fall — the nominative/genitive/dative/accusative case
nt -(e)s, -en (NAUT)halyard* * *der1) (an instance or example: another case of child-beating; a bad case of measles.) case2) (a particular situation: It's different in my case.) case3) (a legal trial: The judge in this case is very fair.) case4) (an argument or reason: There's a good case for thinking he's wrong.) case5) ((usually with the) a fact: I don't think that's really the case.) case6) (a form of a pronoun (eg he or him), noun or adjective showing its relation to other words in the sentence.) case7) (an act of falling: a drop in temperature.) drop8) ((a quantity of) something that has fallen: a fall of snow.) fall9) (capture or (political) defeat: the fall of Rome.) fall* * *Fall1<-[e]s, Fälle>[fal, pl ˈfɛlə]mder freie \Fall free fallim freien \Fall in free fall2. (Sturz) fallzu \Fall kommen (geh) to fallAufstieg und \Fall rise and falletw zu \Fall bringen to bring down sth sepein Gesetz zu \Fall bringen to defeat a billjds Pläne zu \Fall bringen to thwart sb's planseine Regierung zu \Fall bringen to bring down [or overthrow] a governmentFall2<-[e]s, Fälle>[fal, pl ˈfɛlə]m1. (Umstand, Angelegenheit) case, circumstance, instanceein hoffnungsloser/schwieriger \Fall sein to be a hopeless/difficult case[nicht] der \Fall sein [not] to be the caseauf alle Fälle in any case; (unbedingt) at all eventsauf keinen [o in keinem] \Fall never, under no circumstancesfür alle Fälle just in casefür den \Fall einer Notlage in case of emergency [or pl emergencies]für den \Fall meines/seines Todes in case I die/he diesfür den \Fall, dass jd etw tut in case sb does sthgesetzt den \Fall, dass... assuming [or supposing] [that]...im äußersten \Fall[e] at the worstim günstigsten/schlimmsten [o ungünstigsten] \Fall[e] at best/worstim \Falle eines \Falles if it comes [down] to itin diesem/dem \Fall in this/that casein so einem \Fall in a case like thatvon \Fall zu \Fall from case to case, as the case may beschwebender \Fall pending case, lis pendensvorliegender \Fall case at issueeinen \Fall übernehmen to take on a caseeinen \Fall verhandeln to hear [or try] a caseseinen \Fall vortragen to plead one's case3. MED caseder erste/zweite \Fall the nominative/genitive case5.* * *der; Fall[e]s, Fälle1) (Sturz) fallzu Fall kommen — have a fall; (fig.) come to grief
jemanden zu Fall bringen — (fig.) bring about somebody's downfall
etwas zu Fall bringen — (fig.) stop something
der Fall einer Stadt — (fig.) the fall of a town
3) (Ereignis, Vorkommnis) case; (zu erwartender Umstand) eventualityfür den äußersten od. schlimmsten Fall, im schlimmsten Fall — if the worst comes to the worst
es ist [nicht] der Fall — it is [not] the case
gesetzt den Fall — assuming; supposing
auf jeden Fall, in jedem Fall, auf alle Fälle — in any case
nicht jemandes Fall sein — (fig. ugs.) not be somebody's cup of tea
4) (Rechtsw., Med., Grammatik) caseder 1./2./3./4. Fall — (Grammatik) the nominative/genitive/dative/accusative case
* * *Fall1 m; -(e)s, kein pl1. fall; im Fallschirm: descent;freier Fall PHYS free fall;sich bei einem Fall verletzen be hurt in a fall;zu Fall kommen fall3. fig downfall; einer Regierung etc: auch fall, collapse; einer Festung etc: fall;zu Fall kommen Person: come to grief; Regierung auch: be brought down; Plan: be wrecked ( oder thwarted); Gesetzentwurf etc: be defeated; → HochmutFall2 m; -(e)s, Fälle1. case ( auch MED, JUR); (Angelegenheit) auch matter, affair; (Einzelbeispiel) instance; (Vorkommnis) occurrence;der Fall Graf the Graf case;ein Fall von Typhus a typhoid case, a case of typhoid;ein typischer Fall von … a typical case of …;in vielen Fällen in many cases, often;günstigsten Fall at best;im schlimmsten Fall at worst;in diesem/im anderen Fall(e) in that ( oder this) case/otherwise;im Falle eines Falles umg if (the) worst comes to (the) worst;für alle Fälle just in case, to be on the safe side;auf jeden Fall anyway; (ganz bestimmt) definitely;in jedem Fall da whatever you do, leave the key behind;auf keinen Fall on no account, under no circumstances; (ganz bestimmt nicht) definitely not;sag es ihm auf keinen Fall don’t tell him whatever you do;ist das der Fall? is that the case (here)?;das ist nicht der Fall that is not the case;das ist auch bei ihm der Fall it’s the same with him;der Fall liegt so the situation is as follows;im Fall, dass er kommen sollte in case he should come;gesetzt den Fall suppose, supposing, let’s assume;wenn das der Fall ist if that is the case;das ist von Fall zu Fall verschieden that varies from case to case;das muss man von Fall zu Fall entscheiden auch you have to decide each case on its merits;klarer Fall, dass er das nicht kann umg it’s obvious he can’t do it;das ist ganz/nicht ganz mein Fall umg that’s right up my street/not exactly my cup of tea;2. LING case;erster/zweiter/dritter/vierter Fall nominative/genitive/dative/accusative case;der fünfte Fall the instrumental case; im Lateinischen: the ablative case;der sechste Fall the prepositional case; (Vokativ) the vocative case;im dritten Fall stehen be in the dative;nach „durch“ steht der vierte Fall “durch” is followed by the accusativeFall3 n; -(e)s, -en; SCHIFF halyard* * *der; Fall[e]s, Fälle1) (Sturz) fallzu Fall kommen — have a fall; (fig.) come to grief
jemanden zu Fall bringen — (fig.) bring about somebody's downfall
etwas zu Fall bringen — (fig.) stop something
der Fall einer Stadt — (fig.) the fall of a town
2) (das Fallen) descent3) (Ereignis, Vorkommnis) case; (zu erwartender Umstand) eventualityfür den äußersten od. schlimmsten Fall, im schlimmsten Fall — if the worst comes to the worst
es ist [nicht] der Fall — it is [not] the case
gesetzt den Fall — assuming; supposing
auf jeden Fall, in jedem Fall, auf alle Fälle — in any case
nicht jemandes Fall sein — (fig. ugs.) not be somebody's cup of tea
4) (Rechtsw., Med., Grammatik) caseder 1./2./3./4. Fall — (Grammatik) the nominative/genitive/dative/accusative case
* * *¨-e m.case n.fall n.halyard n.issue n. -
9 case
I [keɪs] noun1) an instance or example:َحالَهa bad case of measles.
2) a particular situation:مَوْقِف، وَضْعIt's different in my case.
3) a legal trial:قَضِيَّهThe judge in this case is very fair.
4) an argument or reason:حُجَّه مُقْنِعَهThere's a good case for thinking he's wrong.
5) ( usually with the) a fact:القَضِيَّه، المَسألَه، المَوْضوعI don't think that's really the case.
6) a form of a pronoun (eg he or him), noun or adjective showing its relation to other words in the sentence.حالَةٌ إعْرابِيَّه (في النَّحْو) II [keɪs] noun1) a container or outer covering:عُلْبَه، حَقيبَهa suitcase.
2) a crate or box:عُلْبَه، صُنْدوقsix cases of whisky.
3) a piece of furniture for displaying or containing things:صُنْدوق، سَقَط، عُلْبَهa bookcase.
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10 bíróság elé állítják
to be brought to a legal trial -
11 bíróság elé kerül
to be brought to a legal trial -
12 съдебен
legal; forensic; judicial; judiciary; court (attr.)съдебен процес legal proceedings, lawsuit, case* * *съдѐбен,прил., -на, -но, -ни legal; forensic; judicial; judiciary; court (attr.); по \съдебенен ред through the court; \съдебенен заседател juror, juryman, member of the jury; \съдебенен процес legal proceedings; lawsuit, case; \съдебенен фарс mock trial; \съдебенна зала courtroom; \съдебенна медицина forensic medicine; \съдебенна палата law courts; \съдебенна разправа law-suit; \съдебенни заседатели jury; \съдебенно заседание a sitting of the court; hearing; \съдебенно преследване prosecution; \съдебенно решение a court order; \съдебенно следствие inquest, examination.* * *forensic ; judicial: съдебен-hall - съдебна зала; legal: съдебен proceedings - съдебен процес, съдебен security - съдебна гаранция; juror - съдебен заседател; action - съдебен процес; adjudgement - съдебно решение; an examining judge - съдебен следовател* * *1. legal;forensic;judicial;judiciary;court (attr.) 2. СЪДЕБЕН процес legal proceedings, lawsuit, case 3. завеждам СЪДЕБЕН процес вж. процес -
13 ответственность по суду
усмотрение суда, судебное усмотрение — legal discretion
Бизнес, юриспруденция. Русско-английский словарь > ответственность по суду
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14 rettergang
* * *subst. legal procedure, legal proceedings subst. court proceedings, court procedure (jus) (forenklet rettergang) summary proceedings -
15 oikeudenkäyntikulut
• legal expenses• trial costs• legal costs• court fees• court costs• costs -
16 contrôle judiciaire
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17 судење
trial, sitting in judgment; legal proceedings -
18 sudlov
legal proceedings, trial -
19 judicium
trial, legal investigation, judgement, decision. -
20 законный брак
См. также в других словарях:
legal trial — index day in court, hearing, inquiry (systematic investigation), prosecution (criminal trial) Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
trial by jury — legal a legal trial in which someone is judged by a jury (= a group of ordinary people chosen for the purpose) … English dictionary
trial by jury — a trial in which the issue is determined by a judge and a jury usually of 12 members whose province is to determine facts in issue * * * trial by jury legal phrase a legal trial in which someone is judged by a jury (=a group of ordinary people… … Useful english dictionary
trial — tri|al1 [ traıəl ] noun *** 1. ) count or uncount the process of examining a case in a court of law and deciding whether someone is guilty or INNOCENT. When a case comes to trial it is brought to a court and the person who has been accused of a… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
trial proceeds — process of a legal trial, procedures of a legal trial … English contemporary dictionary
Legal psychology — involves empirical, psychological research of the law, legal institutions, and people who come into contact with the law. Legal psychologists typically take basic social and cognitive theories and principles and apply them to issues in the legal… … Wikipedia
trial — tri·al n [Anglo French, from trier to try]: a judicial examination of issues of fact or law disputed by parties for the purpose of determining the rights of the parties compare hearing, inquest at trial: in or during the course of a trial Merriam … Law dictionary
Legal education in the United States — generally refers to the education of lawyers before entry into practice. Other types of legal education, such as that of paralegals, of Limited Practice Officers (in Washington), and of the citizenry in general, and of the education of lawyers… … Wikipedia
Trial movies — is a film genre, also commonly referred to as courtroom drama. [ [http://www.afi.com/10top10/crdrama.html American Film Institute, Court Room drama top ten.] ] The American Bar Association s listIn 1989, the American Bar Association rated the… … Wikipedia
Trial by media — is a phrase popular in the late 20th century and early 21st century to describe the impact of television and newspaper coverage on a person s reputation by creating a widespread perception of guilt regardless of any verdict in a court of law.In… … Wikipedia
trial — tri‧al [ˈtraɪəl] noun [countable] 1. LAW a legal process in which a court of law examines a case to decide whether someone is guilty of a crime: • Three former brokers were ordered to stand trial for securities fraud. 2. a process of testing a… … Financial and business terms