词汇 | judicial |
释义 | judicial adjective uk /dʒuːˈdɪʃ.əl/ us /dʒuːˈdɪʃ.əl/ involving a law court: 司法的;审判(上)的 the judicial system司法系统 a judicial enquiry/review司法质询/审查 Court cases, orders & decisions actionable actionably administer admissibility admissible extinguishment extrajudicial extrajudicially fatal accident inquiry federal case pettifogging plea bargain plea bargaining pleading post bail the Webster ruling walk walk freeidiom wardship witness to something Related wordjudicially judicial | American Dictionaryjudicial adjective[ not gradable ] us/dʒʊˈdɪʃ·əl/ relating to or done by courts or judges or the part of a government responsible for the legal system: the judicial branch of government judicial | Business Englishjudicial adjective[ only before noun ] LAWuk /dʒuːˈdɪʃəl/us relating to the legal system: The tax claim is part of a broader judicial investigation into the affairs of the oil group. a judicial system/review/reform a judicial inquiry/process/procedure judicial authority/discretion judiciallyadverb/dʒuːˈdɪʃəli/ An Ombudsman's decision can be judicially reviewed only within three months of it being made. Examples of judicialjudicial I call the relevant facts "law-determining practices" rather than "legal decisions" because the term "decisions" tends to suggest judicial decisions in particular. We expect there will be less corruption in public works contracting in areas where the judicial branch is more efficient and where wealth is higher. The latter is directed at curbing the political as opposed to the judicial criteria for appointments. Both per capita wealth and this alternative measure of judicial efficiency exhibited statistically significant coefficients. The only missing link in the story so far is of course the expressive content of judicial decisions. In so doing it questions the logic and justification for exclusive reliance on judicial interpretation of a bill of rights. The emphasis is ' executive and judicial ', and his account focuses on the administrative duties of the council and its development over the sixteenth century. But what the documents and records of judicial precedents do reveal is that ordinary people filed an extraordinarily large number of lawsuits. Legislative supremacy is unhelpful because the alternative to judicial invalidation of statutes is judicial r ulemaking. Yet, there continues to be a lack of judicial and governmental commitment to deal with those cases recommended for prosecutions. Government was however blocked by judicial and parliamentary mechanisms which meant it could not command the necessary resources, notably parliamentary time. The text of the constitutions was merely the tip of an iceberg of common law, legislative compromise, judicial decision, and extra-governmental practice. Several reflect critically on prosecution rates and judicial reactions. We attempted to include a measure of judicial independence, which we hypothesize should be negatively related to levels of corruption for intuitively obvious reasons. Nominally a city from 1540, possessing its own judicial sessions from 1618, it nevertheless lacked proper corporate government throughout this period. These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors. |
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