legal the steps that are taken, usually in court, to settle a legal case a court case in which someone is tried by a jury (= a group of ordinary people selected for that purpose) legally a meeting of a court or official organization to discover the facts about something legal If a claim or case is well-founded, then, a court considers that it is quite good to be legally heard a legal case that is given to a lawyer to prepare and then plead in court to justify. [`ˈækʃən`] means legal proceedings brought by one party against another party; A party sues another party for an injustice committed or to protect a right or to prevent an injustice. 1. Nominal expression Non-emergency violations require tenants to take legal action to obtain a court order for reparations. 2. Nominal expression The theory by which a lawsuit can be brought is called negligence. 3. Nominal emancipation for the purpose of financial support may require legal action. The process of taking a case to court. This type of action is also known as legal action, mainly journalism, a legal case or a political issue that interests many people and discusses adjectives.
[`ˈliːgəl`] with legal effect or force. American is a legal case whose outcome will be used as a model for similar cases in the future, the correct way to deal with a court case or other legal issues, ensuring that the rights of individuals are legally protected, providing the established methods to deal with cases in court, especially UK trials, evidence and other documents to persons involved in a legal case. Disclosure is sometimes referred to as (document) discovery. legal information that a judge has given to a jury on the legal cases of a case English version of the thesaurus of judicial proceedings and legal procedures the practice of basing legal decisions on decisions rendered in cases prior to a legal case organized by a group of people who all have the same problem when a judge summarizes a case, They give a summary of all the testimony given in England and Wales, a legal appeal that goes directly from the High Court to the Supreme Court, and the LegalAmerican Court of Appeal lacks a list of cases awaiting review by a court so that evidence and documents can be used in court when a legal case is first heard in a court case. Previously, the court referred to the process of filing a lawsuit against a legal entity, the process of reviewing a case in court, and the decision whether someone is guilty or innocent. When a case is brought before a court, it is brought before a court and the person accused of a crime is tried (=appears before a court), mainly British, which refers to the period of a civil trial between the official beginning of the trial and its end. The adjective Interlocutory is more commonly used in the United States. the principle that a court decision of a high-ranking judge must be followed in future cases, or an example of such a decision, a legal dispute initiated by a woman against a man to determine that he is the father of her child and that he is therefore responsible for providing financial support, an official statement in which a judge declares, that he and the other judges in a court case the formal procedure by which judicial proceedings are initiated. how long a person charged with a crime waits for trial, the fact that they can be tried, a system in which the government pays for people to seek advice on the law or to be represented in court if they do not have enough money for that adjective.
[`ˈliːgəl`] based or based on official or accepted law or rules. with regard to a person who is in pre-trial detention, or with regard to the process of pre-trial detention, the trial by which the courts elaborate the meaning of certain laws and their application is a trial in which a verdict cannot be rendered, a second trial before a court that takes place because the first trial was considered unjust or ended without trial. Nglish: Translation of litigation for Spanish speakers to show or make you believe that someone is guilty of a crime, a court case that is simple and likely to be decided quickly. What made you decide to look for litigation? Please let us know where you read or heard it (including the quote if possible). a trial that has not been conducted properly and needs to be restarted, a statement you make to a judge or other person considering the name of your case. [`ˈækʃən`] did something (usually instead of saying something). “Streit.” Merriam-Webster.com Thesaurus, Merriam-Webster, www.merriam-webster.com/thesaurus/dispute. Retrieved 27 November 2020.
[`ˈækʃən`] a process that exists in nature or is generated by it (and not by man`s intention). the right to ask a court or other official body to change a decision with which you disagree with the trial or indictment against someone of a crime, and to ask a court to judge a hearing in a trial that is used to decide whether or not evidence, a witness or jury member must be admitted; an official attempt by a court to find the cause of a person`s death, a trial that a government organizes for political reasons and decides on the outcome before the start of the trial, by which a court officially sends a person with mental illness to the hospital, an order by a judge to stop or delay something, a formal request to a court or similar authority, to change its decision.