Trial in a sentence as a noun

" [1]Do we really want to live in a country where your right to a trial is an empty right?

In fact, the information here may interfere with a trial.

The first, which she made at the outset of the case, was that he was facing 35 years if convicted at trial.

"Yes, I am," said Diffie, in what surely qualified as the biggest understatement of the trial.

This ruling involved Apple's attempt to block Amazon's use of the term "app store" pending trial in this case.

I wrote an article on negotiation when I was a trial attorney that is applicable to most situations.

They've also made a number of bad mistakes that I had identified--often through trial and error--that I had told them about.

Very important: put buttons on these pages leading directly into the free trial, because they will be large entrances into your site.

I encourage her to delete this post and initiate a criminal trial in order to hold the perpetrator accountable.

The process for mixing a password into an ECC key exchange involves a trial-and-error process for finding a valid curve point; a loop runs conducting these trials.

To deal with this issue, the judge got down to fundamentals, with the key language found at page 35 of the opinion: "Much of Oracles evidence at trial went to show that the design of methods in an API was a creative endeavor.

More important: the real anti-intellectualism to look out for is the 'trial of Socrates' kind, not disregarding one form of transmitting knowledge because of your own intellectual curiosity.

Thus, the best a trial judge can do in such a case is to make a fact-specific conclusion about the case immediately being tried, one which would have limited impact in the next case, where the parties could argue the same issue on different facts.

It's no wonder that trials by jury are becoming so vanishingly rare that even the Supreme Court has written that "in todays criminal justice system, the negotiation of a plea bargain, rather than the unfolding of a trial, is almost always the critical point for a defendant.

Forget innocent until proven guilty, we are months away from any trial, only 3 of the 12 defendants are even in custody, yet domains have been seized and businesses destroyed by an 11-point case filing, of which only 2 or 3 points may ever get to trialIf the site owners are found guilty, they could be facing decades in jail.

In particular, the handoff between guest accounts and "real" trial accounts is of paramount importance to my business but is meaningless to customers who have guest accounts until they get to school, at which point they will often discover, to their surprise, that failing to make the decision yesterday to give me their email address now means their cards are totally inaccessible.

If the US is nowhere near being an authoritarian police state, at what point will US become a authoritarian police state?When they have **** lists without any trial, jury or judge?When they keep prisoners in jail indefinitely without a trial?When they torture prisoners?When state officials lie to the public?When state officials lie to public representatives?When the secret police interfere with lawyers communications and interferes with legal cases?When the secret police silence individuals that want to inform about abuse?When the secret police use surveillance for blackmailing?When the state use strip searches and surveillance indiscriminately against the population, including children?When the state implement state censorship?When they use force against peaceful demonstrators?When they utilize military resources against peaceful demonstrators?When they seize bank assets without any trial, any intention of a trial, or even without ever formally serving the individual with criminal papers?Please state what criteria we should use, so we can have a final definition of what an authoritarian police state is.

Trial definitions

noun

the act of testing something; "in the experimental trials the amount of carbon was measured separately"; "he called each flip of the coin a new trial"

See also: test

noun

trying something to find out about it; "a sample for ten days free trial"; "a trial of progesterone failed to relieve the pain"

See also: test tryout

noun

the act of undergoing testing; "he survived the great test of battle"; "candidates must compete in a trial of skill"

See also: test

noun

(law) the determination of a person's innocence or guilt by due process of law; "he had a fair trial and the jury found him guilty"; "most of these complaints are settled before they go to trial"

noun

(sports) a preliminary competition to determine qualifications; "the trials for the semifinals began yesterday"

noun

an annoying or frustrating or catastrophic event; "his mother-in-law's visits were a great trial for him"; "life is full of tribulations"; "a visitation of the plague"

See also: tribulation visitation