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accusatorial

ADJECTIVE
  1. specifically indicating a form of prosecution in which one is publicly accused of and tried for a crime and in which the judge is not also the prosecutor

How To Use accusatorial In A Sentence

  • You're forty minutes late, Pearl," she said more pityingly than accusatorially. The Metrognome and other Stories
  • According to the function and relation of the prosecutor and the defender, the model of investigation can be put into the Accusatorial Model and Inquisitorial Model.
  • ‘Have you lost weight?’ someone called, accusatorially across the office as I turned from the printer to return to my desk. Alas, a blog » 2006 » February
  • A lot of citizens, and some lawyers, do not know that this is just absolutely fundamental to our legal system, the accusatorial system, and it is a very, very important check on power and on authority.
  • Continental procedure is quite different, as it is inquisitorial rather than accusatorial.
  • Now, I will not take the Court through that whole thing but there is another passage at 445 which speaks about the English provisions as undermining the accusatorial system but that article is, as I say, but one of many.
  • According to the function and relation of the prosecutor and the defender, the model of investigation can be put into the Accusatorial Model and Inquisitorial Model.
  • His voice became dangerously hard and bitingly accusatorial. At The Spaniard's Convenience
  • GRACE: And interestingly, I heard Ted Rowlands I believe earlier say that Mark Geragos was not angry or accusatorial ... CNN Transcript Aug 5, 2004
  • She made it," Owen said, shaking an accusatorial finger at Jennsen still sheltered under Richard's right arm. NAKED EMPIRE
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