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1 adjudge sb. to be guilty
• uznat vinným koho
См. также в других словарях:
guilty verdict — Formal pronouncement by jury that they adjudge the defendant guilty of the offense charged … Black's law dictionary
guilty verdict — Formal pronouncement by jury that they adjudge the defendant guilty of the offense charged … Black's law dictionary
adjudge — v. (formal) (M and N; used with an adjective) the court adjudged him (to be) guilty * * * [ə dʒʌdʒ] (formal) (M and N; used with an adjective) the court adjudged him (to be) guilty … Combinatory dictionary
adjudge — [[t]əʤʌ̱ʤ[/t]] adjudges, adjudging, adjudged VERB: usu passive If someone is adjudged to be something, they are judged or considered to be that thing. [FORMAL] [be V ed to inf] He was adjudged to be guilty... [be V ed n] At college he was… … English dictionary
condemn — con·demn /kən dem/ vt 1: to impose a penalty on; esp: to sentence to death 2: to adjudge unfit for use or consumption 3: to declare convertible to public use under the right of eminent domain: take con·dem·nable … Law dictionary
convict — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) v. t. condemn, find guilty, doom. See condemnation, judgment. n. criminal, felon, jailbird, prisoner, captive. See prison.Ant., acquit. II (Roget s IV) n. Syn. prisoner, malefactor, felon, con*; see… … English dictionary for students
convict — con·vict 1 /kən vikt/ vt [Latin convictus past participle of convincere to find guilty, prove, from com with, together + vincer to conquer]: to find guilty of a criminal offense was convict ed of fraud compare acquit con·vict 2 / kän ˌvikt/ … Law dictionary
Edward Coke — This article is about the seventeenth century jurist. For other uses, see Edward Coke (disambiguation). Sir Edward Coke … Wikipedia
sentence — sen·tence 1 / sent əns, ənz/ n [Old French, opinion, judicial sentence, from Latin sententia, ultimately from sentire to feel, think, express an opinion] 1: a judgment formally pronouncing the punishment to be inflicted on one convicted of a… … Law dictionary
judge — 1 / jəj/ vb judged, judg·ing [Old French jugier, from Latin judicare, from judic judex judge, from jus right, law + dicere to decide, say] vt 1: to hear and decide (as a litigated question) in a court of justice judge a case 2: to pronounce after … Law dictionary
determine — de·ter·mine vt mined, min·ing: to make a determination regarding Merriam Webster’s Dictionary of Law. Merriam Webster. 1996. determine I … Law dictionary