Toties quoties in an English law court means-As often as something happens.
Głupi in English is stupid FIXED: in English Głupi means nothing.... In polish it means stupid. lol
It means little brother.....
Pollo means chicken in english.
Mynd means to go in english.
Court Martial means 'Court-Military' or a military trial for a member of the military for a violation of that nation's military rules & regulations.
"Bien court" means "pretty short"
'Courts' is the plural version (masculine) of the adjective 'court' which means 'short' or it could be the plural form of the masculine noun 'court' which means 'court' as in 'tennis court'Regards,TransAction Translators
Literally means 'friend of the court'. That is a person not a party to a case who provides information to the court on a point of law, in an attempt to help the court make a determination on the matter
It means clerk. This is used for court clerks or in legal occupations.
If you have a witness willing to go to court for you, then yes it can be. No witness, means they have deniability, no contract.
The English term 'judicial review' means review by a court of law of actions of a government official or entity or of some other legally appointed person or body or the review by an appellate court of the decision of a trial court
Amici is the plural noun form of the word amicus. An amicus is a Latin term that means friend of the court. It is a non-biased adviser to a court in a specific case.
The English term 'judicial review' means review by a court of law of actions of a government official or entity or of some other legally appointed person or body or the review by an appellate court of the decision of a trial court
The English term 'judicial review' means review by a court of law of actions of a government official or entity or of some other legally appointed person or body or the review by an appellate court of the decision of a trial court
I am english
Affirming the decision of the lower court means that the appeals court concluded that no error was committed during the lower court trial and that the lower court's decision stands.
Oh, dude, translating "ius voco spurius" from Latin to English is like translating "I'll have a grande latte" to Spanish - it's not that complicated. "Ius" means "law," "voco" means "call," and "spurius" means "illegitimate." So, put them all together and you get "I call illegitimate law" or "I name illegitimate law." Easy peasy, right?