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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Juryman

Juryman \Ju"ry*man\, n.; pl. Jurymen. One who is impaneled on a jury, or who serves as a juror.

Wiktionary
juryman

n. One who is impaneled on a jury, or who serves as a juror.

WordNet
juryman

n. someone who serves (or waits to be called to serve) on a jury [syn: juror, jurywoman]

Usage examples of "juryman".

I very much doubt whether the average juryman has your intimate knowledge of the argot of the underworld.

Prosecutors, witnesses, officials, policemen, detectives, undetected, pressmen, barristers, loafers, clerks, cadgers, jurymen.

At the very hour that the jurymen were being discharged and steps taken for a retrial, we had the murderer locked in my room in a cheap lodging-house off Chestnut Street.

Prosecutors, witnesses, officials, policemen, detectives, undetected, pressmen, barristers, loafers, clerks, cadgers, jurymen.

Staff-Officers, Officers of State, Workmen of the Factory, Citizens, Advocates, Jurymen, Grenadiers, Peasants, Travellers, Servants, etc.

The oath which jurymen have to take to execute them to the letter has caused several to be interpreted in a manner absolutely contrary to the intention of the legislators, thus placing the judges in a difficult predicament.

Guppy, throwing on the admiring Mrs. Snagsby the regular acute professional eye which is thrown on British jurymen.

And they presented me with a loaded cane With which I struck Jack McGuire Before he drew the gun with which he killed The Prohibitionists spent their money in vain To hang him, for in a dream I appeared to one of the twelve jurymen And told him the whole secret story.

The names of the jurymen who were to be called on to serve at the assize had been published.

If he had given any utterance to his, and they were prophetic, they would have been these: "I see Barsad, and Cly, Defarge, The Vengeance, the Juryman, the Judge, long ranks of the new oppressors who have risen on the destruction of the old, perishing by this retributive instrument, before it shall cease out of its present use.

Then the jurymen put out their cigarettes and threw them away and returned to the court.

The colonel, the clerk and the old artelshik sided with the merchant, the rest seemed shaky, and the opinion of the foreman began to gain ground, chiefly because all the jurymen were getting tired, and preferred to take up the view that would bring them sooner to a decision and thus liberate them.

As he was approaching the room, the other jurymen were just leaving it to go into the court.

Nekhludoff would have liked to tell all the jurymen about his relations to yesterday's prisoner.

The Jurymen themselves are allowed eighteen francs a day, so that they may attend to their business more leisurely.