Well you can, but you must make it clear that you are not a medical doctor when introducing yourself to patients as Dr. XYZ, otherwise you risk prosecution for impersonating a licensed medical practitioner (and there are cases of this happening, please Google)
After both sides in the case have finished presenting their casss and have 'rested,' both the prosecution and the defense (in criminal cases) or the plaintiff and the defense (in civil trials) present to the judge and/or jury what is known as their "closing argument" in which they summarize their view of the case and try to convince the judge or jury to their point-of-view.
FWOP = For Want (i.e.: lack) of Prosecution. The way the question is worded it sounds as if the defense is filing a motion to dismiss the case - "for want of prosecution." If the judge agrees, it depends entirely on whether they dismiss the case WITH prejudice or WITHOUT prejudice. If it is WITHOUT prejudice the case COULD be opened again by the prosecution. If it is WITH prejudice the case is over and finished and can never be brought again (for THIS particular offense).
It never will be finished.
No. A branch is akin to a goto statement in procedural programming. The code branches off to a new code segment, never to return. A function call is akin to a subroutine in structured programming. When the subroutine is finished, control is returned to the instruction immediately following the function call, just as if the function's code were inline expanded at the call site.
finished - fini, complète
owarimashita = finished
is it finished = nigmar, × ×’×ž×¨
a synonym for finished is done.
The prefix for finished is "un-".
To say "finished" in Swahili, you would use the word "kumaliza".
The present perfect tense of "finish" is "have finished" or "has finished," depending on the subject of the sentence.