1705034800
1705034801
obnoxious, evil or harmful; objectionable.
1705034802
1705034803
verdict, decision; judgment; the finding or judgment of the jury on the matter submitted in trial.
1705034804
1705034805
pronounced, passed; given.
1705034806
1705034807
foreman of the jury . The jury is the body of men or women sworn to give a true answer, or verdict, on some matter submitted to them, especially such a body legally chosen to inquire into any matter of fact, and to render a verdict according to the evidence. The number of jurors ranges from 12 to 23. The chairman of the jury is called the foreman.
1705034808
1705034809
culprits, persons accused of, or arraigned for, a crime in court.
1705034810
1705034811
box, the place where the jurors sit.
1705034812
1705034813
against the face of all the facts, acting contrary to all the evidence given.
1705034814
1705034815
the clearest charge . Before allowing the jury to leave the court to go to a secret room to confer over the case, the judge usually summarizes the whole case from the evidence submitted and charges the jury to deliberate carefully over the case, sometimes even suggesting very strongly what verdict is expected.
1705034816
1705034817
reporters, newspaper representatives.
1705034818
1705034819
simultaneous verdict . The usual practice calls for the jurors to retire to another room and there consult together over the verdict. Such consultations may last for hours; some have lasted for days. In this particular instance, the jurors remained where they sat, and without consulting among one another they returned a judgment, a verdict; of Not Guilty . They thus freed both father and son from the accusation of guilt.
1705034820
1705034821
winked at, seemed to overlook; pretended not to see; did not pay attention to.
1705034822
1705034823
manifest iniquity, the great injustice that was so evident; the miscarry of justice that was so clearly shown.
1705034824
1705034825
privily, privately; secretly without letting others know.
1705034826
1705034827
his Lordship’s, the judge’s. Judges are addressed by the title of Lords.
1705034828
1705034829
took wing, spread; became known to all.
1705034830
1705034831
enormously dear, very expensive; tremendously costly.
1705034832
1705034833
insurance offices, business concerns that, for a stipulated consideration, a sum of money called the premium, undertake to indemnify or guarantee another person against loss. According to Lamb, the insurance offices had to stop doing business.
1705034834
1705034835
Why?
1705034836
1705034837
sage, a profoundly wise man.
1705034838
1705034839
Locke, John (1632-1704), the English philosopher, who wrote the “Essay Concerning Human Understanding.”
1705034840
1705034841
consuming, burning; setting afire.
1705034842
1705034843
dress, prepare. You dress a chicken by taking off all of its feathers and cleaning up its insides.
1705034844
1705034845
rude form, primitive, very simple, coarse form.
1705034846
1705034847
gridiron, a barred metal utensil for broiling food over coals.
1705034848
1705034849
spit, slender, pointed rod to hold roasting meat.
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