In court cases, the letter "J" typically stands for "Judge." It is often used in legal citations or case law references to denote the judge's name or the role of the judge in a specific case. For example, "J. Smith" would indicate Judge Smith in legal documents.
Juvenile Court Judge, Jailer, Jazz Composer, Jeweler, Journalist and Justice Of The Peace are occupations. They begin with the letter J.
Rocco J. Tresolini has written: 'Justice and the Supreme Court' -- subject(s): United States, Civil rights, Cases, United States. Supreme Court 'Cases in American National Government and politics' -- subject(s): Case studies, Politics and government
Journalism is a school subject. It begins with the letter J.
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jota is actually a letter the letter is j and the j in jota is pronouced like a h so it is like hota
There is no such thing as a Jewish alphabet. If you mean Hebrew, there is no letter for J in Hebrew. In Modern Hebrew, words with the "J" sound are written with the letter for g plus an apostrophe: ג׳
R. J. K. Chapman has written: 'The court as the public conscience' -- subject(s): Cases, Law and legislation, Natural resources, Pollution
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"9 J in the S C" commonly refers to the phrase "9 justices in the Supreme Court," referencing the total number of judges on the highest court in the United States.
The letter before the letter J is I; the letter after the letter J is K.
J. Hillyard Cameron has written: 'The Digest of cases determined in the Court of Queen's Bench from Michaelmas term, tenth George IV, to Hilary term, third Victoria'