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probationer

[ US /pɹoʊˈbeɪʃənɝ/ ]
[ UK /pɹə‍ʊbˈe‍ɪʃənɐ/ ]
NOUN
  1. someone released on probation or on parole
  2. a nurse in training who is undergoing a trial period

How To Use probationer In A Sentence

  • The Department of Corrections uses ‘active’ GPS for about 400 probationers, mostly sex offenders and people who've committed violent crimes.
  • We believe, therefore, that this study provides valuable information on a prevalent and growing domain of adolescent substance abuse treatment, the residential treatment of juvenile probationers.
  • Probationer: “Yes sarge, but Billy himself was seen running away at the time ..” See No Evil…… (at least until the next financial year) « POLICE INSPECTOR BLOG
  • To be included in the study, officers needed to be adult probation officers and carry an active caseload of probationers whom they monitored.
  • Inscribed "Samuel Butler for probationership, December 28th 1868. The Samuel Butler Collection at Saint John's College Cambridge
  • Future research needs to replicate these findings with arrestees in other cities and with other criminal justice populations, such as parolees and probationers.
  • Shaheen also says she was forced to go on night duty, something probationers are not supposed to do.
  • I'm only attached to the Embassy, a sort of probationer, a person of no consequence. DARE CALL IT TREASON
  • Wisconsin upheld a regulation that allowed probation officers to search probationers based on ‘reasonable grounds’ to believe contraband is present.
  • At its frequent rise and fall you would say that they swinge and belabour me after the manner of a probationer, posed and put to a peremptory trial in the examination of his sufficiency for the discharge of the learned duty of a graduate in some eminent degree in the college of the Sorbonists. Five books of the lives, heroic deeds and sayings of Gargantua and his son Pantagruel
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