jurist in Czech

jurist <n.> advokát Entry edited by: B2 jurist právní Entry edited by: B2 jurist <n.> právník Entry edited by: B2 jurist <n.> soudce Entry edited by: B2

Sentence patterns related to "jurist"

Below are sample sentences containing the word "jurist" from the English - Czech Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "jurist", or refer to the context using the word "jurist" in the English - Czech Dictionary.

1. MESEREAU: The judge was an outstanding jurist.

2. Titus Accius was a Roman jurist and knight.

3. Benthamism.—Jeremy Bentham, an English jurist and reformer, b

4. For the jurist, money is a medium of payment.

5. Patrick Devlin was an outstanding judge and brilliant jurist.

6. The resourceful jurist formed a plan to recover his own laurels.

7. In the 19 th century, the German jurist Savigny created the.

8. Cesare Lombroso (1835–190 was an Italian anthropologist, criminologist and jurist.

9. Derek Bok is a famous higher educationist, jurist and socialist of America.

10. He is a learn jurist , who has written several books on civil law.

11. Dole: american jurist and first governor of the Territory of Hawaii ( 1900 - 1903 ).

12. During the 19th century jurist and philosopher Gian Domenico Romagnosi lived in Carate.

13. Salmon Portland Chase was an American politician and jurist in the Civil War era.

14. Sir Roger Manwood (1525–1592) was an English jurist and Lord Chief Baron of the Exchequer.

15. Aurists Words made after changing First letter with any other letter in aurist jurist purist

16. Many of the cases are responsa, in which the jurist is answering a legal enquiry.

17. Besides, the Belgium distinguished jurist R . C . van Caenegem is another important scholar in this research area.

18. The episode dwelling on jurist Robert Bork succeeded, for example, despite dominance by Al Franken and Sen.

19. The jurist is therefore able to suggest that the testator intended those sums also to be released.

20. It is notable too that this liberal interpretation is proposed by the jurist, and merely adopted from him by the emperor.

21. The "free seas" advocated by Hugo Grotius, a Dutch jurist, in 1609 never in practice extended quite to the high-tide mark.

22. In this role he is mentioned in the Peira, a compendium of legal decisions compiled by the noted jurist Eustathios Rhomaios.

23. Averroes (or Ibn Rushd) was a prominent Andalusian Arab philosopher, thinker, doctor and jurist of the 12th century (1126-1198)

24. He dismissed both Ulpian the jurist because he was a righteous man and Silvinus the rhetorician, whom he had appointed tutor to Alexander.

25. Worse still are cases in which only the jurist seems to be in doubt as to what kind of disposition is involved.

26. The representatives of the Company then called Hugo Grotius, a jurist of the Dutch Republic, to draft a defence of the seizure.

27. That USA jurist Pound points out, society is hit by in modern commerce most public wealth is to be composed of contract.

28. The Brougham took its name from Henry Peter Brougham,* a Scottish jurist and British statesman who designed the carriage and made it fashionable

29. The conservative Supreme Court jurist refers on page 22, for example, to the "legalistic argle-Bargle" the court majority uses as its rationale

30. This post was established by the Article 5 of Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Iran in accordance with the concept of the Guardianship of the Islamic Jurist.

31. Albert Hendrik "Benk" Korthals (born 5 October 1944) is a retired Dutch politician of the People's Party for Freedom and Democracy (VVD) and jurist.

32. Alcalde - a mayor or chief magistrate of a Spanish town judge, jurist, justice - a public official authorized to decide questions brought before a court of justice city manager, mayor - …

33. Benthamism Jeremy Bentham an English jurist and reformer, born at Houndsditch, London, 15 February, 1748; died in London 6 June, 1832, was of middle-class parentage

34. ‘Two suppressed poems of this period oppose Benthamite reform.’ noun A person who supports the philosophical system of utilitarianism proposed by the English philosopher and jurist Jeremy Bentham.

35. Hugo Grotius (1583-16, a great Dutch jurist and thinker, was not only one of the fathers of modern international law , but also the author of an influential natural law philosophy.

36. Kai Ambos (born 29 March 1965) is a German jurist and judge.He who holds the teaching chair at the University of Göttingen in criminal law, criminal procedure, comparative law and international criminal law

37. The admiration of later generations of civil lawyers is shown by the adage nemo bonus íurista nisi bartolista — no one is a good jurist unless he is a Bartolist (i.e. a follower of Bartolus).

38. Bumptiously czajka genkouyoushi xewwex Dicisive, formal, definitive business barometer threaten (v.) rascal setai multicolored printing anuita kawalerzysta entgegen sein windows management instrumentation napor jurist transformer Jess konfliktfyldthed tax base Lamelle (f.) (techn.) indented sleeping bag defective sample detrude partiality

39. Askant in secret Ausleihtheke (f.) goditje Finland vannballast be driven jurist dedicatory electronic state hastverk matica (Medicine) lead poisoning, condition resulting from the absorption of lead into the body (causes anemia, muscle weakness, and nausea) disgrâce introduction irriguer, arroser malo she element Lancer accumulation, gradual

40. Benthamism the philosophy of utilitarianism as first expounded by the British philosopher and jurist Jeremy Bentham (1748--1832) in terms of an action being good that has a greater tendency to augment the happiness of the community than to diminish it Collins Discovery Encyclopedia, 1st edition © HarperCollins Publishers 2005

41. Hanzala, prominent leader of the 63/683 revolt against the Umayyad Caliph in Medina; the literary genre adab al-mufti in which a Muslim jurist issues a legal opinion; ajal, the Arabic term for the predetermined length of one's life; companion to the Prophet and contender for Caliph 'Ali b.

42. We share 5 tips for locating those elusive Ancestresses! “The husband and wife are one, and that one is the husband.” – William Blackstone, English jurist and judgeSuch a quote sounds grating and out-of-place in our twenty-first century society, but it was the legal and cultural reality under which American

43. Included are the useful news-links page on gun issues maintained by the Colorado Shooting Sports Association, the special page on gun controversies at Jurist: The Law Professor’s Network, a bunch of Choicely worded letters to the editor from the Detroit Free Press last summer responding to the NAACP’s suit, and Robert Levy’s Jan

44. It was on the basis of the Twelve Tables that the first legis Actiones (“actions based on the law”) and other legal institutions were developed; they also served as a basis for the first of all works of legal science, the Tripertita of the jurist Sextus Aelius Paetus Catus (2nd century BC), which was at the same time the first literary

45. Abjure (v.) early 15c., Abjuren, "renounce on oath, repudiate, forswear," originally especially "renounce or recant (a heresy) on oath," from Old French abjurer and directly from Latin abiurare "deny on oath," from ab "off, away from" (see ab-) + iurare "to swear," from ius (genitive iuris) "law" (see jurist).

46. Karl Ludwig Lorenz Binding (4 June 1841 – 7 April 1920) was a German jurist known as a promoter of the theory of retributive justice.His influential book, Die Freigabe der Vernichtung lebensunwerten Lebens ("Allowing the Destruction of Life Unworthy of Living"), written together with the psychiatrist Alfred Hoche, was used by the Nazis to justify their T-4 Euthanasia Program.

47. Abjure (v.) early 15c., Abjuren, "renounce on oath, repudiate, forswear," originally especially "renounce or recant (a heresy) on oath," from Old French abjurer and directly from Latin abiurare "deny on oath," from ab "off, away from" (see ab-) + iurare "to swear," from ius (genitive iuris) "law" (see jurist).

48. Adjuration (n.) late 14c., "exorcism," from Late Latin adiurationem (nominative adiuratio) "a swearing to," noun of action from past-participle stem of Latin adiurare "to put (someone) to an oath," from ad "to" (see ad-) + iurare "swear," from ius (genitive iuris) "law," from PIE root *yewes-"law" (see jurist).Originally a term in exorcism (with conjuration); the general sense "a solemn oath