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courts of law

n. (court of law English)

Usage examples of "courts of law".

But our courts of law (at least those in English-speaking countries) are devised and organized, perhaps unfortunately, on the principle that testimony not apparently deduced by the syllogistic method from the observation of relevant fact is valueless, and hence woman at the very outset is placed at a disadvantage and her usefulness as a probative force sadly crippled.

I showed concern for his tomatoes, he asked after my son whom he remembered as a visitor to the Courts of Law.

In the second place, the Pope lived in Italy and as the head of a vast political machine, which owned land and serfs and buildings and forests and rivers and conducted courts of law, he was in constant receipt of a great deal of money.

A thousand Whitecloaks quartered in Caemlyn, with their own courts of law, outside Andoran law, iij perpetuity.

A thousand Whitecloaks quartered in Caemlyn, with their own courts of law, outside Andoran law, in perpetuity.

I looked down at the new slave, whom I had decided to call 'Talena', which slave name was also entered on her papers, in the first endorsement, as her first slave name pertinent to these papers, and by means of which she could always be referred to in courts of law as, say, the slave who on such and such a date was known by the name 'Talena.

Your profession requires that when you make an identification, it must be assumed by all courts of law to be both honest and accurate.