Scratching at his screen
Any and all judge should be able to do this. The proper term is a "Neutral and Detached Magistrate" (magistrate or judge). This simply means that the judge or magistrate should have no personal interest or gains in the case at hand.
Not at this time. We (the people) are trying to get one voted in. We need people to contact the Judge Exec and your Magistrate and let them know you want one. There is a State ordinance 224.30-050 http://www.lrc.KY.gov/KRS/224-30/CHAPTER.HTM but most county officials don't know about it.
Judge is present tense.
The possessive form of the noun judge is judge's.Example: The sound of the judge's gavel is still ringing in my ears.
The possessive form of the noun judge is judge's.Example: The sound of the judge's gavel is still ringing in my ears.
Judge Taylor hears a strange noise during the night when someone is trying to break into his house. He later learns that it was Heck Tate, the sheriff, who was breaking in to warn him about potential danger during the Tom Robinson trial.
"Did you hear that noise?" -or- "Did you not hear that noise I just heard?"
Past: Heard (e.g. I heard a noise) Present: Hear/hears (e.g. I hear a noise, She hears a noise) Future: Will hear (e.g. I will hear a noise)
You will hear them making a noise. Or you can just inspect them.You will hear them making a noise. Or you can just inspect them.
The judge in "To Kill a Mockingbird" is Judge Taylor. He presides over the trial of Tom Robinson in the novel.
Robert Love Taylor - judge - died in 1987.
Robert Love Taylor - judge - was born in 1899.
Taylor
Judge Taylor
Judge Taylor has a shotgun on his lap to protect himself and his family from potential threats. He is aware of the racial tension in the town and wants to be prepared to defend his household if necessary.
The simile that the author uses to describe Judge Taylor is "like a sleepy old shark."
Dogs angle their heads when they don't quite hear a noise, or understand precisely what a noise means, in an attempt to hear it more thoroughly.