"Endictment" is a word in ENGLISH
See Indictment.
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It was a particularly tough football game, and nerves were on edge. The home team had been the victim of three or four close calls, and they were now trailing the visitors by a touch-down and a field goal. When the official called yet another close one in the visitors' favor, the home quarterback blew his top.How many times can you do this to us in a single game?" he screamed. "You were wrong on the out-of-bounds, you were wrong on that last first down, and you missed an illegal tackle in the first quarter." The official just stared. The quarterback seethed, but he suppressed the language that might get him tossed from the game. "What it comes down to," he bellowed, "is that you STINK!" The official stared a few more seconds. Then he bent down, picked up the ball, paced off 15 yards, and put the ball down. He turned to face the steaming quarterback. The official finally replied, "And how do I smell from here?"
In English criminal law. The ofTense of listening under walls or windows, or the eaves of a house, to hearken …
Read the complete definitionTo accuse; to indict. See Implead.
Read the complete definitionSee Indict.
Read the complete definitionSee Iwdictmbwt
Read the complete definitionCharged ln an indictment with a criminal offense. See Indictment
Read the complete definitionAn indictment is an ac-cusation in writing found and presented by a grand jury, legally convoked and sworn, to the …
Read the complete definitionA proceeding in the nature of a prosecution for some offens against the government, instituted and prosecuted, really or nominally, …
Read the complete definitionThe state of belng poisoned; the condition produced by the ad-mlnlstratlon or introduction lnto the human system of a poison. …
Read the complete definitionLicentiousness; an offense against the public economy, when of an an open and notorious character; as by frequenting houses of …
Read the complete definitionIn a profane manner. A technical word in Indictments for the stat-utory offense of profanity. See Updegraph v. Com., 11 …
Read the complete definitionA term sometimes em-ployed to describe verbiage inserted in a pleading or indictment, over and above what is necessary to …
Read the complete definitionThis term ls commonly used ln indictments for larceny, (“take, steal, and carry a way,") and denotes the commission of …
Read the complete definition