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1 remand
I [rɪ'mɑːnd] [AE -'mænd]nome dir. rinvio m. a giudizioII [rɪ'mɑːnd] [AE -'mænd]to be on remand — (in custody) essere in custodia cautelare; (on bail) essere in libertà provvisoria dietro cauzione
verbo transitivo dir. rimandare, rinviare [ case]to remand sb. for trial — rinviare qcn. a giudizio
* * *(to send (a person who has been accused of a crime) back to prison until more evidence can be collected.) (rinviare a nuova udienza)* * *remand /rɪˈmɑ:nd/n.1 (leg.) detenzione in attesa di giudizio; custodia cautelare; to be on remand, essere in custodia cautelare2 (leg., USA) ( anche) rinvio ( di una causa civile) al giudice competente ( da parte della corte d'appello)● remand centre, centro di detenzione preventiva.(to) remand /rɪˈmɑ:nd/v. t.1 (leg.) rinviare ( l'imputato, la causa) a giudizio: to remand on bail, rinviare (q.) a giudizio con concessione della libertà provvisoria su cauzione2 (leg., USA) ( anche) rinviare ( una causa civile) al giudice competente ( riferito a un tribunale di grado superiore).* * *I [rɪ'mɑːnd] [AE -'mænd]nome dir. rinvio m. a giudizioII [rɪ'mɑːnd] [AE -'mænd]to be on remand — (in custody) essere in custodia cautelare; (on bail) essere in libertà provvisoria dietro cauzione
verbo transitivo dir. rimandare, rinviare [ case]to remand sb. for trial — rinviare qcn. a giudizio
См. также в других словарях:
remand — re·mand 1 /ri mand/ vb [Anglo French remander, from Middle French, to order back, from Late Latin remandare to send back word, from Latin re back + mandare to order] vt 1: to return (a case or matter) from one court to another esp. lower court or … Law dictionary
remand Law — verb place (a defendant) on bail or in custody, especially when a trial is adjourned. noun a committal to custody. Phrases on remand in custody pending trial. Origin ME (in the sense send back again ): from late L. remandare, from re back +… … English new terms dictionary
remand — Law ► VERB ▪ place (a defendant) on bail or in custody, especially when a trial is adjourned. ► NOUN ▪ a committal to custody. ORIGIN Latin remandare commit again … English terms dictionary
remand — I UK [rɪˈmɑːnd] / US [rɪˈmænd] verb [transitive, usually passive] Word forms remand : present tense I/you/we/they remand he/she/it remands present participle remanding past tense remanded past participle remanded legal to tell someone who has… … English dictionary
remand — [[t]rɪmɑ͟ːnd, mæ̱nd[/t]] remands, remanding, remanded 1) VERB: usu passive If a person who is accused of a crime is remanded in custody or on bail, they are told to return to the court at a later date, when their trial will take place. [be V ed… … English dictionary
Bail — Traditionally, bail is some form of property deposited or pledged to a court in order to persuade it to release a suspect from jail, on the understanding that the suspect will return for trial or forfeit the bail (and be guilty of the crime of… … Wikipedia
Bail bondsman — A bail bond agent, or bondsman, is any person or corporation which will act as a surety and pledge money or property as bail for the appearance of a criminal defendant in court. Although banks, insurance companies and other similar institutions… … Wikipedia
bail — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ conditional, unconditional (both BrE) ▪ police (BrE) VERB + BAIL ▪ apply for (esp. BrE) ▪ allow sb … Collocations dictionary
remand — re|mand1 [rıˈma:nd US rıˈmænd] v [T usually passive] law [Date: 1400 1500; : Old French; Origin: remander, from Late Latin remandare to send back word , from Latin mandare; MANDATE1] 1.) BrE to send someone back from a court of law, to wait for… … Dictionary of contemporary English
Detention of a suspect — The detention of suspects is the process of keeping a person who has been arrested in a police cell, remand prison or other detention centre before trial or sentencing. One criticism of pretrial detention is that eventual acquittal can be a… … Wikipedia
Prisoner characters — A list of all inmates of Wentworth Detention Centre in the television series Prisoner. Note that episode numbers cited are for first and last appearances; many characters had spells where they were absent and subsequently returned. Listed in… … Wikipedia