That will depend on whether the case is a civil or criminal trial.
In a civil court case the two sides are the defendant and the plaintiff. For a criminal court it will be the defendant (the accused) and the government entity bringing the charges, usually the State or Country.
At the trial court level, the parties are called "plaintiff" for the person making the claim, and "defendant" for the person defending against it.
In a criminal case, the person making the claim is the "prosecutor" or the district attorney in some situations, and the accused is called the "defendant."
At the appeals level after the trial, the sides are called "appellant", for the person making the appeal from the trial court decision, and "respondent" for the person responding to the appeal.
That will depend on whether the case is a civil or criminal trial.
In a civil court case the two sides are the defendant and the plaintiff. For a criminal court it will be the defendant (the accused) and the government entity bringing the charges, usually the State or Country.
The Defense and the Prosecution
Type of Case
Party1
Party2
Party 3
Civil
Plaintiff
Defendant
Criminal
Prosecution
Defense
Family Law / Divorce
Petitioner
Respondent
Petitioner
Applicant
Bankruptcy
Debtor
Joint Debtor
Bankruptcy (adversarial)
Debtor
Plaintiff
Defendant
In criminal court. There is the prosecution and the defense.
Added: In a civil case it is the Plaintiff and the Defendant
The government attorney represents the PROSECUTION. The defendant's attorney represents the DEFENSE.
Prosecution and Defense
-- Prosecution
-- Defense
peaches
Defendant.
a rombus
Biscuits and gravy
And armistice or a truce or a ceasefire are all terms for when troops on both sides agree to stop fighting.
A shape with 1 pair of parallel sides is called a trapezoid. Just in case you mean 2 PAIRS of parallel sides, that is a parallelogram.
I am writing an article about an old criminal case, and need to look up an inmate by name. Where can I look up an inmate by name online?
prosecuting attorney (representing the City, County, State or Federal government)
The person writing the criminal case articles?æis just misspelling his name wrong. Frederick Horenberger is from Boynton Beach, FL in Palm Beach County.?æ.?æ
Above a certain number of sides, a polygon is simply called an n-gon, with the letter "n" representing the number of sides. So, in your case, a 22-gon.
Above a certain number of sides, a polygon is simply called an n-gon, with the letter "n" representing the number of sides. So, in your case, a 25-gon.
Either a Heptagon (the more common name) or a Septagon - both terms are valid.