释义 |
nounPlural juries ˈdʒʊəriˈdʒʊri 1A body of people (typically twelve in number) sworn to give a verdict in a legal case on the basis of evidence submitted to them in court. 陪审团(宣誓根据法庭提交的证据对案件予以裁定的一组人,一般由十二人组成) the jury returned unanimous guilty verdicts 陪审团一致裁定被告有罪。 Example sentencesExamples - Any previous conviction or driving ban could then be revealed to the court after the jury returned a verdict.
- The judge accepted that submission and directed the jury to return a verdict of not guilty.
- One can simply say the jury returned a verdict that there was a business of trafficking in drugs.
- After an hour and a half of deliberation, the jury returned the guilty verdict yesterday.
- She was formally discharged by the court following the jury's unanimous verdict.
- Put in simplest terms, the jury returned majority verdicts before the judge allowed them to do so.
- One of the things that amazed me was after 60 plus days of hearing evidence, the jury returned the verdict in six hours.
- After deliberating for just over two and a half hours the jury returned a unanimous verdict of guilty of manslaughter.
- An inquest jury returned a verdict that he had been unlawfully killed.
- The coroner accordingly left that verdict to the jury, and the jury returned a unanimous verdict of unlawful killing.
- The jury returned guilty verdicts on two counts of indecent assault and one of common assault.
- For two days, he waited in the corridor and rooms of Teesside Crown Court while the jury considered its verdicts.
- Last week, at the subsequent inquest, the jury returned a verdict of unlawful killing.
- A Chelmsford Crown Court jury on Thursday returned a unanimous not guilty verdict.
- Yesterday at Salisbury Crown Court the jury returned a majority verdict of guilty.
- An inquest jury at Lincoln Crown Court recorded a verdict yesterday that the tragedy had been an accident.
- The court has not sought to doubt the factual basis upon which the jury reached its verdicts.
- Is there any evidence upon which a jury properly instructed could return a verdict of guilty?
- In May 1999 the Applicant was acquitted by the unanimous verdict of a jury at Wood Green Crown Court.
- On this basis, the jury were quite entitled to return a verdict of guilty on count 2.
- 1.1 A body of people selected to judge a competition.
(比赛、竞赛中的)评判团,评审委员会 Example sentencesExamples - At the end of the summer school a jury selects the most successful team.
- All juries will be selected online from new system developed by Yahoo.
- Those of us who have played in juries or competitions open ourselves up to evaluation and, in fact, desire the insight these experiences provide.
- In addition to his work at the Museum of Modern Art, Barr served on the advisory boards of other museums and the juries of art competitions.
- From now on street musicians will be judged by a jury at an annual festival, and the melodically challenged will be banished.
- Over 500 entries were screened by four juries consisting of three judges each, which speaks to the growing strength of the film and television industry in Alberta.
- The contest will be judged by a partial jury for entertainment value.
- The jury selected by the organisers may include members from within their ranks.
- Every three years, a jury selects a person considered to be the most promising director in Ontario.
- Special prizes will be granted to winners selected by an expert jury in early December.
- These are books that juries have selected as finalists for the ultimate Pulitzer Prize.
- The jury judges the promotional campaign on strategy, creativity, and effectiveness.
- The jury has selected the film under the non-feature film category, say the producers.
Synonyms group, advisory group, team, body, committee, council, board, commission
verbjuries, jurying, juriedˈdʒʊəriˈdʒʊri [with object]North American Judge (an art or craft exhibition or exhibit) 〈主北美〉鉴定,评审(艺术品、工艺品展览会或展品) the exhibition was juried by a nationally acclaimed artist he had a painting in the juried exhibition Example sentencesExamples - Handcrafted items left on this day sometimes are juried by a craft selection committee who examine workmanship and salability.
- She said a committee juried the artists into the show to assure excellence and she was very pleased with the quality.
- His platinum work has been displayed in numerous solo exhibitions and juried exhibitions.
- This was the first juried exhibition I entered, and my entry, a sculptural painting, was awarded ‘Best of Show.’
- These are juried awards, which means two or three jurors are given all of the books submitted by publishers within one category.
- At the Kings Mountain Art Fair, view juried arts and crafts in a redwood forest above Woodside.
- You provide referrals to other juried businesses whose expertise is outside your realm of experience.
- Applications are juried by a minimum of two music industry professionals.
- The event is a juried show with 150 artists who show original artwork ranging in media from jewelry to ceramics to watercolor.
- And jurying a show for The Art League must be one of the most challenging tasks that a juror in our area faces.
PhrasesA decision has not yet been reached on a controversial subject. 悬而未决 the jury is still out on whether self-regulation by doctors is adequate 关于医生的自我监督管理是否得当的问题仍然悬而未决。 Example sentencesExamples - However, the jury is out on whether (the digital strategy) will work.
- Well, I think the jury is out on a number of issues in the mix, but overall of course I support our troops.
- I'd say the jury is out on whether we should fight it or not.
- I think the jury is out on that one, but it is certainly a striking sound and it does have a certain beauty.
- But from the comments made by shareholders talking in groups after the meeting and the market performance since, it is clear the jury is out on the new strategy.
- Danon's own admission that the jury is out on his mobile and wireless telephony target does little to convince the sceptics that he or the company can make in-roads into a sector it only recently abandoned.
- I think the jury is out on that, but I do think Gail is right.
- One or perhaps two are positioned to manage it - but the jury is out.
- ‘Shock therapy’ economics did not save Argentina, and the jury is out on Russia.
- Therefore the jury is out on what I will do about it.
OriginLate Middle English: from Old French juree 'oath, inquiry', from Latin jurata, feminine past participle of jurare 'swear' (see juror). Rhymescurie, de jure, fioriture, fury, houri, Jewry, Manipuri, Missouri, moory, Newry, tandoori, Urey adjective ˈdʒʊəriˈdʒʊri Nautical (of a mast or other fitting) improvised or temporary. 〔航海〕(桅杆等)临时的,应急的;备用的;暂时的 we need to get that jury rudder fixed 我们需要把备用舵安装好。 Example sentencesExamples - Having succeeded in rigging jury masts and putting the vessel to rights, sail was made.
- They set up a jury rig, and sailed to Barbados, taking six weeks.
Synonyms temporary, provisional, interim, pro tem, short-term, working, makeshift, improvised, emergency, impromptu, rough and ready
OriginEarly 19th century: independent usage of the first element of early 17th-century jury-mast 'temporary mast', of uncertain origin (compare with jury-rigged). nounˈdʒʊriˈjo͝orē 1A body of people (typically twelve in number) sworn to give a verdict in a legal case on the basis of evidence submitted to them in court. 陪审团(宣誓根据法庭提交的证据对案件予以裁定的一组人,一般由十二人组成) the jury returned unanimous guilty verdicts 陪审团一致裁定被告有罪。 Example sentencesExamples - One can simply say the jury returned a verdict that there was a business of trafficking in drugs.
- One of the things that amazed me was after 60 plus days of hearing evidence, the jury returned the verdict in six hours.
- The judge accepted that submission and directed the jury to return a verdict of not guilty.
- Yesterday at Salisbury Crown Court the jury returned a majority verdict of guilty.
- In May 1999 the Applicant was acquitted by the unanimous verdict of a jury at Wood Green Crown Court.
- A Chelmsford Crown Court jury on Thursday returned a unanimous not guilty verdict.
- She was formally discharged by the court following the jury's unanimous verdict.
- After deliberating for just over two and a half hours the jury returned a unanimous verdict of guilty of manslaughter.
- The court has not sought to doubt the factual basis upon which the jury reached its verdicts.
- On this basis, the jury were quite entitled to return a verdict of guilty on count 2.
- The coroner accordingly left that verdict to the jury, and the jury returned a unanimous verdict of unlawful killing.
- An inquest jury returned a verdict that he had been unlawfully killed.
- An inquest jury at Lincoln Crown Court recorded a verdict yesterday that the tragedy had been an accident.
- The jury returned guilty verdicts on two counts of indecent assault and one of common assault.
- Last week, at the subsequent inquest, the jury returned a verdict of unlawful killing.
- For two days, he waited in the corridor and rooms of Teesside Crown Court while the jury considered its verdicts.
- Any previous conviction or driving ban could then be revealed to the court after the jury returned a verdict.
- Is there any evidence upon which a jury properly instructed could return a verdict of guilty?
- After an hour and a half of deliberation, the jury returned the guilty verdict yesterday.
- Put in simplest terms, the jury returned majority verdicts before the judge allowed them to do so.
- 1.1 A body of people selected to judge a competition.
(比赛、竞赛中的)评判团,评审委员会 Example sentencesExamples - Over 500 entries were screened by four juries consisting of three judges each, which speaks to the growing strength of the film and television industry in Alberta.
- The jury judges the promotional campaign on strategy, creativity, and effectiveness.
- Special prizes will be granted to winners selected by an expert jury in early December.
- The jury selected by the organisers may include members from within their ranks.
- From now on street musicians will be judged by a jury at an annual festival, and the melodically challenged will be banished.
- Those of us who have played in juries or competitions open ourselves up to evaluation and, in fact, desire the insight these experiences provide.
- These are books that juries have selected as finalists for the ultimate Pulitzer Prize.
- All juries will be selected online from new system developed by Yahoo.
- The contest will be judged by a partial jury for entertainment value.
- At the end of the summer school a jury selects the most successful team.
- In addition to his work at the Museum of Modern Art, Barr served on the advisory boards of other museums and the juries of art competitions.
- The jury has selected the film under the non-feature film category, say the producers.
- Every three years, a jury selects a person considered to be the most promising director in Ontario.
Synonyms group, advisory group, team, body, committee, council, board, commission
verbˈdʒʊriˈjo͝orē [with object]usually be juriedNorth American Judge (an art or craft exhibition or exhibit) 〈主北美〉鉴定,评审(艺术品、工艺品展览会或展品) the exhibition was juried by a tapestry artist Example sentencesExamples - The event is a juried show with 150 artists who show original artwork ranging in media from jewelry to ceramics to watercolor.
- She said a committee juried the artists into the show to assure excellence and she was very pleased with the quality.
- At the Kings Mountain Art Fair, view juried arts and crafts in a redwood forest above Woodside.
- His platinum work has been displayed in numerous solo exhibitions and juried exhibitions.
- And jurying a show for The Art League must be one of the most challenging tasks that a juror in our area faces.
- This was the first juried exhibition I entered, and my entry, a sculptural painting, was awarded ‘Best of Show.’
- Handcrafted items left on this day sometimes are juried by a craft selection committee who examine workmanship and salability.
- Applications are juried by a minimum of two music industry professionals.
- You provide referrals to other juried businesses whose expertise is outside your realm of experience.
- These are juried awards, which means two or three jurors are given all of the books submitted by publishers within one category.
PhrasesA decision has not yet been reached on a controversial subject. 悬而未决 the jury is still out on whether self-regulation by doctors is adequate 关于医生的自我监督管理是否得当的问题仍然悬而未决。 Example sentencesExamples - ‘Shock therapy’ economics did not save Argentina, and the jury is out on Russia.
- But from the comments made by shareholders talking in groups after the meeting and the market performance since, it is clear the jury is out on the new strategy.
- Danon's own admission that the jury is out on his mobile and wireless telephony target does little to convince the sceptics that he or the company can make in-roads into a sector it only recently abandoned.
- I'd say the jury is out on whether we should fight it or not.
- One or perhaps two are positioned to manage it - but the jury is out.
- Well, I think the jury is out on a number of issues in the mix, but overall of course I support our troops.
- However, the jury is out on whether (the digital strategy) will work.
- I think the jury is out on that, but I do think Gail is right.
- Therefore the jury is out on what I will do about it.
- I think the jury is out on that one, but it is certainly a striking sound and it does have a certain beauty.
OriginLate Middle English: from Old French juree ‘oath, inquiry’, from Latin jurata, feminine past participle of jurare ‘swear’ (see juror). adjectiveˈjo͝orēˈdʒʊri Nautical attributive (of a mast or other fitting) improvised or temporary. 〔航海〕(桅杆等)临时的,应急的;备用的;暂时的 we need to get that jury rudder fixed 我们需要把备用舵安装好。 Example sentencesExamples - Having succeeded in rigging jury masts and putting the vessel to rights, sail was made.
- They set up a jury rig, and sailed to Barbados, taking six weeks.
Synonyms temporary, provisional, interim, pro tem, short-term, working, makeshift, improvised, emergency, impromptu, rough and ready
OriginEarly 19th century: independent usage of the first element of early 17th-century jury-mast ‘temporary mast’, of uncertain origin (compare with jury-rigged). |