Adjudicated
to pr-nounce or decree by judicial sentence.
to settle or determine (an issue or dispute) judicially.
to sit in judgment (usually followed by upon).
contemporary examples
in fact, opposing sides of the issue are still clinging to the same flawed arguments as they were when crawford was adjudicated.
why judge posner changed his mind on voter id laws richard l. hasen october 22, 2013
moral questions of responsibility, however, cannot be adjudicated by statistics.
new report cites half-a-million war related dead in iraq brian van reet october 22, 2013
and since most of that debt is issued under foreign law, not italian law, disputes will be adjudicated by foreign courts.
euro crisis: reheated megan mcardle february 26, 2013
clark, the first jewish american league umpire, adjudicated baseball for three decades.
home runs, frozen ropes, and some wild cards in best baseball books robert birnbaum april 10, 2014
in court he was adjudicated a “predator”—a legal label he will wear for life.
autism and child p-rnography: a toxic combination eustacia cutler august 4, 2013
historical examples
as has generally happened when foreign potentates have adjudicated on british interests, his verdict was wholly hostile to us.
the development of the european nations, 1870-1914 (5th ed.) john holland rose
in this situation can the t-tle to the vessel be adjudicated by american courts?
the life of john marshall volume 4 of 4 albert j. beveridge
i’ve adjudicated these things for years to voices not in the same cl-ss as yours.
stingaree e. w. (ernest william) hornung
at the may meeting of 1765 the first felony case was adjudicated.
montreal 1535-1914, volume ii (of 2) william henry atherton
every man who came within their range of vision was duly examined and adjudicated.
the shadow arthur stringer
verb
when intr, usually foll by upon. to give a decision (on), esp a formal or binding one
(intransitive) to act as an adjudicator
(transitive) (chess) to determine the likely result of (a game) by counting relative value of pieces, positional strength, etc
(intransitive) to serve as a judge or arbiter, as in a compet-tion
v.
1700, from latin adjudicatus, past participle of adjudicare (see adjudge). related: adjudicated; adjudicating.
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to pr-nounce or decree by judicial sentence. to settle or determine (an issue or dispute) judicially. to sit in judgment (usually followed by upon). contemporary examples the icj adjudicates on disputes between states and its rulings are binding. serbia and croatia’s competing genocide claims adam lebor march 10, 2014 historical examples not in the judicial […]
- Adjudication
an act of adjudicating. law. the act of a court in making an order, judgment, or decree. a judicial decision or sentence. a court decree in bankruptcy. contemporary examples instead of rushing the adjudication process, parole would be more appropriate. john negroponte on isis: ‘there are difficult choices ahead’ eleanor clift august 22, 2014 the […]
- Adjudicative
to pr-nounce or decree by judicial sentence. to settle or determine (an issue or dispute) judicially. to sit in judgment (usually followed by upon). historical examples i don’t think that the adjudicative proceeding had been completed. warren commission (11 of 26): hearings vol. xi (of 15) the president’s commission on the -ss-ssination of president kennedy […]
- Adjudicator
to pr-nounce or decree by judicial sentence. to settle or determine (an issue or dispute) judicially. to sit in judgment (usually followed by upon). contemporary examples if it p-ssed muster with an adjudicator, it would be put on at the local playhouse. angelina jolie’s new muse: the rise of jack o’connell, star of the wwii […]
- Adjugate
(def 1).