释义 |
Definition of accusatorial in English: accusatorialadjective əˌkjuːzəˈtɔːrɪələˌkjuzəˈtɔriəl Law (of a trial or legal procedure) involving accusation by a prosecutor and a verdict reached by an impartial judge or jury. 〔律〕(审判,法律程序)诉讼的;判决的。比较 ADVERSARIAL ,INQUISITORIAL Compare with adversarial, inquisitorial Example sentencesExamples - Continental procedure is quite different, as it is inquisitorial rather than accusatorial.
- So our accusatorial system, as it's called, needs to be I think carefully looked at.
- A criminal trial is an accusatorial and adversarial process.
- The third point is that our adversary system is accusatorial.
- A lot of citizens, and some lawyers, do not know that this is just absolutely fundamental to our legal system, the accusatorial system, and it is a very, very important check on power and on authority.
- But, unless a judge would go on and explain, ‘That is because we have a rather special legal system which is accusatorial.’
- That would be contrary to the whole concept of an accusatorial criminal justice process, in our submission.
- He established an anticorruption commission, supported passage of a new penal code based on the oral accusatorial system, and saw passage of a law that created an independent Supreme Court.
- It sounds a very dubious principle and inconsistent with the accusatorial trial.
- The absence of an accusatorial procedure places an inquisitorial burden upon an inspector.
- Now, I will not take the Court through that whole thing but there is another passage at 445 which speaks about the English provisions as undermining the accusatorial system but that article is, as I say, but one of many.
Rhymesaccessorial, advertorial, ambassadorial, arboreal, armorial, auditorial, authorial, boreal, censorial, combinatorial, consistorial, conspiratorial, corporeal, curatorial, dictatorial, directorial, editorial, equatorial, executorial, gladiatorial, gubernatorial, immemorial, imperatorial, janitorial, lavatorial, manorial, marmoreal, memorial, monitorial, natatorial, oratorial, oriel, pictorial, piscatorial, prefectorial, professorial, proprietorial, rectorial, reportorial, sartorial, scriptorial, sectorial, senatorial, territorial, tonsorial, tutorial, uxorial, vectorial, visitorial Definition of accusatorial in US English: accusatorialadjectiveəˌkjuzəˈtɔriələˌkyo͞ozəˈtôrēəl Law attributive (of a trial or legal procedure) involving accusation by a prosecutor and a verdict reached by an impartial judge or jury. 〔律〕(审判,法律程序)诉讼的;判决的。比较 ADVERSARIAL ,INQUISITORIAL Often contrasted with inquisitorial Example sentencesExamples - A lot of citizens, and some lawyers, do not know that this is just absolutely fundamental to our legal system, the accusatorial system, and it is a very, very important check on power and on authority.
- That would be contrary to the whole concept of an accusatorial criminal justice process, in our submission.
- He established an anticorruption commission, supported passage of a new penal code based on the oral accusatorial system, and saw passage of a law that created an independent Supreme Court.
- So our accusatorial system, as it's called, needs to be I think carefully looked at.
- Continental procedure is quite different, as it is inquisitorial rather than accusatorial.
- The absence of an accusatorial procedure places an inquisitorial burden upon an inspector.
- A criminal trial is an accusatorial and adversarial process.
- Now, I will not take the Court through that whole thing but there is another passage at 445 which speaks about the English provisions as undermining the accusatorial system but that article is, as I say, but one of many.
- The third point is that our adversary system is accusatorial.
- It sounds a very dubious principle and inconsistent with the accusatorial trial.
- But, unless a judge would go on and explain, ‘That is because we have a rather special legal system which is accusatorial.’
|