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juror

/joor-er, -awr/US // ˈdʒʊər ər, -ɔr //UK // (ˈdʒʊərə) //

陪审员,陪审团成员,陪審員,陪伴者

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : one of a group of persons sworn to deliver a verdict in a case submitted to them; member of a jury.
    • : one of the panel from which a jury is selected.
    • : one of a group of people who judge a competition.
    • : a person who has taken an oath or sworn allegiance.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • As Senators, who serve as jurors, consider whether the then-President incited the mob that overtook the Capitol, yesterday’s first day of presentations left those of us watching closely with plenty of reason to shake.

  • A new plan laying out how San Diego’s federal court will select jurors is drawing criticism from law professors, social scientists, local attorneys and community organizations.

  • The new plan, the groups argue, still doesn’t do enough to ensure that the community will be reflected in potential juror pools.

  • They provided several recommendations for how the court could expand its pool of potential jurors, which could help increase jury diversity.

  • The jurors also thought his original attorneys did a bad job of defending him at trial.

  • A grand juror in the Ferguson case is suing to be able to explain exactly what went down in the courtroom.

  • There is no perfect juror, just as there is no such thing as a perfect witness.

  • The juror is said to have invoked common sense in the face of the statutes as codified by the State of Illinois.

  • Even so, at least one juror apparently balked at convicting a man for violating wildlife protection laws by protecting wildlife.

  • “We really want to know about that day,” another juror said.

  • What any special juror knows from any other source is not relevant there to procure conviction.

  • The one put to me in my official capacity as juror, is this: "Did Greatheart aid the woman?"

  • Reader, you are empannelled as a juror to try a plain case and bring in an honest verdict.

  • The ordinary juror tends to be sceptical as to the good faith of the defence of insanity.

  • It is almost needless to say that the son of the non-juror and his immediate posterity were staunch Jacobites, one and all.