Here you will find one or more explanations in English for the word Judicia.
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ExtrajudicialExtrajudicial Ex`tra*ju*di"cial, a.
Out of or beyond the power authority of a court or judge;
beyond jurisdiction; not valid as a part of a judicial
proceeding; as, extrajudicial oaths, judgments, etc., are
null and void. -- Ex`tra*ju*di"cial*ly, adv. ExtrajudicialExtrajudicial Ex`tra*ju*di"cial, a.
Out of or beyond the proper authority of a court or judge;
beyond jurisdiction; not legally required. ``An extrajudicial
opinion.' --Hallam. -- Ex`tra*ju*di"cial*ly, adv. Extrajudicial conveyance
Extrajudicial conveyance Extrajudicial conveyance (Law)
A conveyance, as by deed, effected by the act of the parties
and not involving, as in the fine and recovery, judicial
proceedings.
ExtrajudiciallyExtrajudicial Ex`tra*ju*di"cial, a.
Out of or beyond the power authority of a court or judge;
beyond jurisdiction; not valid as a part of a judicial
proceeding; as, extrajudicial oaths, judgments, etc., are
null and void. -- Ex`tra*ju*di"cial*ly, adv. ExtrajudiciallyExtrajudicial Ex`tra*ju*di"cial, a.
Out of or beyond the proper authority of a court or judge;
beyond jurisdiction; not legally required. ``An extrajudicial
opinion.' --Hallam. -- Ex`tra*ju*di"cial*ly, adv. Injudicial
Injudicial In`ju*di"cial, a.
Not according to the forms of law; not judicial. [R.]
JudicialJudicial Ju*di"cial, a. [L. judicialis, fr. judicium judgment,
fr. judex judge: cf. OF. judicial. See Judge.]
1. Pertaining or appropriate to courts of justice, or to a
judge; practiced or conformed to in the administration of
justice; sanctioned or ordered by a court; as, judicial
power; judicial proceedings; a judicial sale. ``Judicial
massacres.' --Macaulay.
Not a moral but a judicial law, and so was
abrogated. --Milton.
2. Fitted or apt for judging or deciding; as, a judicial
mind.
3. Belonging to the judiciary, as distinguished from
legislative, administrative, or executive. See
Executive.
4. Judicious. [Obs.] --B. Jonson. Judicially
Judicially Ju*di"cial*ly, adv.
In a judicial capacity or judicial manner. ``The Lords . . .
sitting judicially.' --Macaulay.
JudiciaryJudiciary Ju*di"cia*ry (?; 277), a. [L. judiciarius, fr.
judicium judgment: cf. F. judiciare. See Judicial.]
Of or pertaining to courts of judicature, or legal tribunals;
judicial; as, a judiciary proceeding. --Bp. Burnet. Judiciary
Judiciary Ju*di"cia*ry, n. [Cf. LL. judiciaria, F.
judiciaire.]
That branch of government in which judicial power is vested;
the system of courts of justice in a country; the judges,
taken collectively; as, an independent judiciary; the senate
committee on the judiciary.
recall of judicial decisionsRecall Re*call", n. (Political Science)
(a) The right or procedure by which a public official,
commonly a legislative or executive official, may be
removed from office, before the end of his term of
office, by a vote of the people to be taken on the filing
of a petition signed by a required number or percentage
of qualified voters.
(b) Short for
recall of judicial decisions, the right or procedure by
which the decision of a court may be directly reversed or
annulled by popular vote, as was advocated, in 1912, in
the platform of the Progressive party for certain cases
involving the police power of the state.
Meaning of Judicia from wikipedia
-
guineense G.Don
Erythrophleum judiciale Proctor Erythrophleum ordale Bolle Fillaea suaveolens Guill. & Perr.
Mavia judicia Walp.
Mavia judicialis G.Bertol....
- case
contrary to an
imperial constitution.
Treason was one of the
publica judicia, i.e. one of
those crimes in
which any
citizen was
entitled to prosecute...
- Hormazábal Réunion –
Ginon Manthe Scotland –
Georgina Kearney Singapore -
Judicia Nonis Spain –
Cristina Pérez
Cottrell Sri
Lanka – Ann
Monica Tradigo...
- · júdicandi jmponátur quj · jntrá
rerum · agendárum · dies jncoháta ·
judicia · non ·
peregerint · nec de****uras ·
ignoro ·
fraudes · monstróse · agentibus...
- cf. p. 206. "Sede
Vacante and
Conclave of 1287-1288 (Dr. J. P. Adams)".
Judicia Dei
abyssus in A. Theiner,
Caesaris S.R.E. Card.
Baronii Annales Ecclesiastici...
- judicandi] imponátur quj · jntrá
rerum [· agendárum · dies] jncoháta ·
judicia · non · per[egerint · nec] de****uras ·
ignoro ·
fraudes · m[onstrósa ·...
- he was the
author of five
works on
Roman law: De Re Militari,
Publica Judicia, De
Officio Praesidis, Ad
Legem Uicensimam Hereditatum, and De Appellationibus...
- A
quaestio perpetua (also
judicia publica) was a
permanent jury
court in the
Roman Republic. The
first was
established by the lex
Calpurnia de repetundis...
-
Sebastianum Creel, 1645
Defensio Belgarum contra evocationes et
peregrina judicia, etc., Leodii: apud
Sebastianum Creel, 1665
Deductio ex qua clarissimis...
-
Violet Lee ****-Min
Unplaced 1983
Kathie Lee Lee Beng Top 12 1982
Telma Judicia Mary
Nonis Unplaced 1981
Florence Tan
Unplaced 1980 Ann Chua Ai Choo Unplaced...