jury

See also: Jury

English

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈdʒʊəɹi/, /ˈdʒɝi/
(file)
  • Rhymes: -ʊəɹi

Etymology 1

From Middle English jure, from Anglo-Norman juree, from Medieval Latin iūrāta, from Latin iūrō (I swear or take an oath).

The Jury an 1861 painting of a British jury

Noun

jury (plural juries)

  1. (law) A group of individuals chosen from the general population to hear and decide a case in a court of law.
    • "And so the jury and he approached, as if this were a time of peace instead of one of the greatest world disturbances ever known in history, the question whether the prosecution had proved to the jury’s satisfaction that George Joseph Smith was guilty of murder. The jury were the shield which stood between him and death, unless, to the jury’s satisfaction, he was proved to be guilty. Yet while they were the shield of the man accused, they were also the Sword of the State; and if the man were proved guilty, they were the servants of the State to punish him. Their respective functions were these: he the judge, had to settle the law, and the jury must take the law from him. The jury were judges of fact."
      1952: James Avery Joyce: Justice At Work: (this edition Pan 1957) Page 92. commenting on R v Smith [1915] 84 LJKB 2153 (1914-15 All ER 262 CCA)
  2. A group of judges in a competition.
  3. (theater, slang) The audience attending the first night of a performance, whose reaction may determine whether it succeeds or fails.
    • 1828, The New Monthly Magazine (page 418)
      The jury which decides on the first night usually seals the fate of the season.
    • 1971, George Jean Nathan, The Entertainment of a Nation: Or, Three-sheets in the Wind (page 130)
      The widespread idea that before a first-night the audience, dressed to the nose, dines en masse at the Colony and proceeds elegantly to the scene in Hispanos is as fabulous as that which imagines it assembles at Lindy's delicatessen in yesterday's shirt and moves on to the theatre in garbage wagons. And no less spurious is the theory that, in either case or in both together, the jury is possessed of a remarkably rich acumen in the matter of theatrical values.
Meronyms
Derived terms
Descendants
Translations

Verb

jury (third-person singular simple present juries, present participle jurying, simple past and past participle juried)

  1. To judge by means of a jury.

Etymology 2

Early 1600s. Perhaps ultimately from Old French ajurie, from Latin adiūtō.

Adjective

jury (not comparable)

  1. (nautical) For temporary use; applied to a temporary contrivance.
    jury mast; jury rudder
Derived terms

Translations


Dutch

Pronunciation

  • (file)
  • IPA(key): /ˈzjyri/, [ˈʒyːri]
  • Hyphenation: ju‧ry

Noun

jury f (plural jury's, diminutive jury'tje n)

  1. jury

French

Etymology

Borrowed from English jury.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ʒy.ʁi/

Noun

jury m (plural jurys)

  1. jury

Further reading


Norman

Etymology

Borrowed from English jury.

Noun

jury m (plural jurys)

  1. (Jersey, law) jury

Norwegian Bokmål

Etymology

Borrowed from English jury.

Noun

jury m (definite singular juryen, indefinite plural juryer, definite plural juryene)

  1. (law, in competitions also) a jury

References


Norwegian Nynorsk

Etymology

Borrowed from English jury.

Noun

jury m (definite singular juryen, indefinite plural juryar, definite plural juryane)

  1. (law, in competitions also) a jury

References


Polish

Etymology

Borrowed from French jury.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ʐɨˈrʲi/

Noun

jury n (indeclinable)

  1. jury (a group of judges in a competition)
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