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magistrate
[maj-uh-streyt, -strit]
noun
a civil officer charged with the administration of the law.
a minor judicial officer, as a justice of the peace or the judge of a police court, having jurisdiction to try minor criminal cases and to conduct preliminary examinations of persons charged with serious crimes.
magistrate
/ ˈmædʒɪˌstreɪt, -strɪt /
noun
a public officer concerned with the administration of law
another name for justice of the peace
the former name for district court judge
Other Word Forms
- magistrateship noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of magistrate1
Word History and Origins
Origin of magistrate1
Example Sentences
The judgement quotes from the statements she gave before her death to the police, the doctors and an executive magistrate.
Days later, a federal magistrate judge said an arrest in Northeast Washington was preceded by the “most illegal search I’ve seen in my life” and described another arrest as lacking “basic human dignity.”
Lord Brocket, who finished fourth on the 2004 series of I'm a Celebrity… Get Me Out of Here!, was due to appear before magistrates in Westminster on Saturday.
The federal magistrate judge ordered him released on a $5,000 bond.
In one of his more sensational court appearances, he tried to arrest a magistrate and police officer during a dispute over public access to a national park.
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