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 judicial [dʒu(:)'diʃəl]   添加此单词到默认生词本
a. 法庭的, 公正的, 审判上的, 司法的

[法] 司法的, 审判上的, 法官的


  1. The workers decided to take judicial proceedings against the company.
    工人们决定对公司正式提起诉讼。
  2. A court judgment, especially a judicial decision of the punishment to be inflicted on one adjudged guilty.
    判决法庭的判决,尤其指对已判决有罪的人加以处罚的法院的刑罚决定


judicial
[ adj ]
  1. belonging or appropriate to the office of a judge

  2. <adj.pert>
    judicial robes
  3. relating to the administration of justice or the function of a judge

  4. <adj.pert>
    judicial system
  5. decreed by or proceeding from a court of justice

  6. <adj.all>
    a judicial decision
  7. expressing careful judgment

  8. <adj.all>
    discriminative censure
    a biography ...appreciative and yet judicial in purpose


Judicial \Ju*di"cial\, a. [L. judicialis, fr. judicium judgment,
fr. judex judge: cf. OF. judicial. See {Judge}.]
1. Pertaining or appropriate to courts of justice, or to a
judge; practiced or conformed to in the administration of
justice; sanctioned or ordered by a court; as, judicial
power; judicial proceedings; a judicial sale. ``Judicial
massacres.'' --Macaulay.

Not a moral but a judicial law, and so was
abrogated. --Milton.

2. Fitted or apt for judging or deciding; as, a judicial
mind; judicial temperament.

3. Belonging to the judiciary, as distinguished from
{legislative}, {administrative}, or {executive}. See
{Executive}.

4. Judicious. [Obs.] --B. Jonson.

  1. With just 3,000 employees, the service is smaller than the New York City Police Department, Morris said, yet its ranks are stationed in every U.S. judicial district from Guam to the Virgin Islands.
  2. Mr. Souter doesn't have any reputation for the kind of conservative judicial activism that aroused fierce opposition to President Reagan's nomination of Robert Bork in 1987.
  3. These are code words of judicial activism, not part of the Eighth Amendment prohibition on "cruel and unusual punishment."
  4. Bork resigned after his nomination to the Supreme Court was rejected by the Senate in the most bitter judicial fight of recent years.
  5. Sen. Kennedy stressed a central point both in the committee room and before the full Senate: The Senate is to assess qualifications; it is not to examine political or judicial philosophy.
  6. Steptoe had sought to force the reporters to testify about their conversations with Butner, who Henry said is bound by judicial ethics to refrain from commenting on court matters.
  7. Under a 1980 federal judicial misconduct law, the complaint prompted an investigation by a special committee of the federal appeals court in Atlanta, which encompasses Florida.
  8. But it is an open question whether these features justify the judicial construction of a federal contract and tort system on top of the anti-discrimination system Congress has put in place.
  9. A judge issued arrest warrants for four soldiers, but none has been handed over to judicial authorities.
  10. Thornburgh's dispute with the ABA was born of an apparent disagreement over discussions he and his aides had with bar officials over changes in the ABA's guidelines on judicial screening.
  11. Last week, President F.W. de Klerk rejected requests to appoint a judicial inquiry commission, saying the allegations could be handled through normal legal procedures.
  12. Under the Indian judicial system, suspects can be held without charge pending the completion of investigations.
  13. MAIN ISSUE: A plan to amend the Constitution to change the ceremonial presidency into an elected one with veto power over spending financial reserves and nominations to senior civil service and judicial positions.
  14. For now, the Miara family is under house arrest pending a Paraguayan judicial ruling.
  15. For example, the court in 1979 said states may require a pregnant, unmarried minor to obtain parental consent to an abortion so long as a judicial bypass option is provided.
  16. Mrs. Aquino said the "pillars of democracy" _ the executive, legislative and judicial branches of the American-style government _ are already in place in the Philippines.
  17. The Journal is off base in suggesting that the Senate, in carrying out its constitutional duty to advise and consent to judicial nominations, should not ask whether the nominee belongs to organizations that discriminate.
  18. Listening to that chorus, there was a moment in which I seriously wondered whether I would get out that night.' Now Mr De Benedetti, like hundreds of others in the scandals, is in a sort of judicial limbo, presumably to face trial at some later date.
  19. Before Florida's parental consent law was declared unconstitutional, 60 teen-agers received judicial permission for an abortion.
  20. The Hague Service Convention, ratified by both the United States and West Germany, provides methods for transmitting judicial and other documents for service abroad.
  21. In the port of Berbera, for example, hundreds of men of the rival Issak clan were rounded up in May 1988, imprisoned, and then taken out at night in groups of five to 50 men to be executed without any judicial process whatsoever.
  22. In 1986 the Bar and the Law Society sought a judicial review of a refusal by Lord Hailsham, then lord chancellor, to award legal aid lawyers a 'fair and reasonable' pay rise.
  23. One week after the El Naranjo deaths, the band killed a judicial policeman from Sinaloa on the highway between the Pacific resort of Mazatlan and the state capital Sinaloa, the attorney general's office said.
  24. The actions represent an unusual public display of politics in judicial decision-making.
  25. That legacy includes an army notorious for its human rights abuses, an ineffectual judicial system, a population with a 65 percent illiteracy rate and a per capita income of $360 a year.
  26. The delegates then voted by ballot for premier, vice chairmen of the state Central Military Commission and top judicial posts.
  27. Citing his own judicial district in Tennessee as an example, Wiseman said only 7 percent of those convicted criminals given probation since 1981 are accused of committing new crimes or violating their probation.
  28. But the judicial experiment of suppressing the truth has turned out to be disastrous overreaching.
  29. Camarinha criticized congress and judicial system officials who earn up to the equivalent of $7,000 a month.
  30. It would repeal an exemption now granted to lawyers for administrative or judicial proceedings.
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