courtrooms in English

noun
1
the place or room in which a court of law meets.
We do not have the luxury of the system, which can provide instant access to litigants, in terms of courtrooms , judges and jury panels.
noun

Use "courtrooms" in a sentence

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

1. You will enter most Courtrooms from the rear

2. Courtroom Technology The Southern District of New York’s Courtrooms are equipped with technology that facilitate judicial proceedings

3. 16 Students also went on job shadows; visited prisons, jails, courtrooms, and forensics laboratories; and undertook community-service projects.

4. In many jurisdictions, cameras are not allowed in Courtrooms in order to prevent distractions and preserve privacy

5. Since 1955, NYSBA has fought many battles on behalf of Broadcasters including opening New York’s courtrooms to broadcast television

6. The Banning Justice Center is located in southeast Riverside County and is a three level building that houses six courtrooms: Departments B101, B201, B301, B302, B303 and B304

7. Until July 2, 2021, Traffic Arraignments in Courtrooms 1A, 1B, and Eviction Hearings in Courtroom 11B will be heard at the Columbus Convention Center; more information here.

8. The Expert Group had focused on such issues as pre-trial delays, translation problems, availability of courtrooms, prolonged trials, excessive motions, the prosecutor's heavy burden of proof, and the role of defence in an adversarial system

9. ‘In Alexandrian courtrooms a defendant was permitted to speak for a certain regulated time.’ ‘In the third century BC, the famous Greek mathematician Archimedes issued a challenge to the Alexandrian mathematicians, headed by Eratosthenes.’ ‘It was a tabletop monument to Greek and Alexandrian …

10. Amenable is a legacy of Anglo-French and derives ultimately from Latin minari, meaning "to threaten." Since 1596, English speakers have been using it in courtrooms and writings of law with the meaning "answerable," as in "citizens Amenable …

11. Thereafter, Sarah Blanshei notes, "the shift from a personalized,vendetta-basedview of crime and punishmentto a more abstract communal concept was Abortedand did not regain strengthfor centuries."9 Settling disputes privately was a common way of emptying overcrowded prisons and courtrooms,particularlyof those who could afford the concords and