pleader

[ UK /plˈiːdɐ/ ]
NOUN
  1. a lawyer who pleads cases in court
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How To Use pleader In A Sentence

  • For when I consider how short were the laws of ancient times, and how they grew by degrees still longer, methinks I see a contention between the penners and pleaders of the law; the former seeking to circumscribe the latter, and the latter to evade their circumscriptions; and that the pleaders have got the victory. Leviathan
  • *. jelly, That the judgment of repleader is general, viz. qucd partes replacitent, • and the parties mud begin again af the. Reports of cases adjudged in the Court of King's bench; with some special cases in the courts of Chancery, Common pleas and Exchequer, alphabetically digest under proper heads;
  • The legislator’s place is thus usurped by the sophist, the false reasoner, in deliberative assemblies; that of the judge by the rhetorician or pleader; the medical adviser is supplanted by the purveyor of luxuries, and the gymnastic teacher by the adorner of the person. Antony
  • That they should appeal against the abuse of obtaining and publishing monitories, and lodge an interpleader against the sentence of the judge of first instruction, who had condemned the matron to capital punishment; Celebrated Crimes (Complete)
  • The surplus was initially paid into court by the mortgagee pursuant to an interpleader order.
  • That may or may not say something about English pleaders, English advocates, and English jurors.
  • But in old Edinburgh all were piled one on the top of another -- the Parliament House within sight of the shops, the great official and the poor artificer under the same roof: and round that historical spot over which St. Giles's crown rose like the standard of the city, the whole community crowded, stalls and booths of every kind encumbering the street, while special pleaders and learned judges picked their steps in their dainty buckled shoes through the mud and refuse of the most crowded noisy market-place, and all the great personages of Edinburgh paced the "plainstanes" close by at certain hours, unheeding either smell or garbage or the resounding cries of the street. Royal Edinburgh Her Saints, Kings, Prophets and Poets
  • His manner too, in spite of the probable eirenic scope of his work, is that of a special pleader for paganism who uses all the resources of dialectic and rhetoric, all the artifices of wit and sarcasm to make his opponents seem ridiculous. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 3: Brownson-Clairvaux
  • Where the parties ihail commence anew opon repleader, f. n8.p. •? Reports of Cases in the Reigns of Hen: VIII.
  • So if the excisable good in question were alleged to be brandy, how would the pleader plead the nature of those goods?
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