Judicial in a sentence as an adjective

He belongs to the right-wing judicial camp that believes the constitution means what it says.

It's not really one of those things that's a matter of judicial interpretation--it's in plain text, black and white.

If you receive one of these you can be compelled to give evidence or documents in secret, without judicial oversight or public scrutiny.

The Senate and the House - especially on the intelligence committees, and on the armed services committees and judicial.

For virtually everyone living in a big city, judicial elections are entirely opaque; city papers don't even cover them.

"The idea that in order to reach the judicial branch, I must ask the executive branch to process my request is antithetical to the separation of powers required by our constitution.

This isn't just an issue of separation of power between branches of government -- citizens are forced through law to hide the existence of this para-judicial system, as if it is a phantom of our minds.

A civic-minded hacker that wanted to improve the criminal justice process in the US could make a large dent in the problem by coming up with something that would help the electorate handle judicial elections.

Apple might well be able to make a case on appeal that it should be allowed to continue to litigate against Lodsys, on grounds that the same issue is likely to come up again and be settled again, thereby evading judicial review.

Takeaway:> "This experience has taught me one very important lesson: without congressional action or a strong judicial precedent, I would _strongly_ recommend against anyone trusting their private data to a company with physical ties to the United States.

Judicial definitions

adjective

decreed by or proceeding from a court of justice; "a judicial decision"

adjective

belonging or appropriate to the office of a judge; "judicial robes"

adjective

relating to the administration of justice or the function of a judge; "judicial system"

See also: juridical juridic

adjective

expressing careful judgment; "discriminative censure"; "a biography ...appreciative and yet judicial in purpose"-Tyler Dennett

See also: discriminative