court+of+justice
71Court of Auditors — Official emblem …
72JUSTICE — is a human rights and law reform organisation based in the United Kingdom. It is the British section of the International Commission of Jurists, the international human rights organisation of lawyers devoted to the legal protection of human… …
73court — [n1] yard, garden of building cloister, close, compass, courtyard, curtilage, enclosure, forum, patio, piazza, plaza, quad, quadrangle, square, street; concepts 509,513 court [n2] ruler’s attendants castle, cortege, entourage, hall, lords and… …
74International Court of Justice — the chief judicial agency of the United Nations, established in 1945 to decide disputes arising between nations. [1905 10] * * * French Cour internationale de Justice, byname World Court the principal judicial organ of the United… …
75justice — jus‧tice [ˈdʒʌsts] noun LAW 1. [uncountable] the system by which people are judged in courts of law and criminals are punished: • There are many problems with our criminal justice system. 2. [countable] a judge in a law court: • Justice Sandra O …
76High Court of Justice — (also the High Court) the branch of the legal system in England and Wales that deals mainly with serious civil cases (= ones concerned with the private rights of citizens rather than with crimes). It is divided into the Queen’s Bench, the… …
77justice court — n: justice of the peace court Merriam Webster’s Dictionary of Law. Merriam Webster. 1996 …
78Justice First — Primero Justicia Leader Julio Borges Founded …
79Court — 〈[kɔ:t] m. 6; Sp.; Tennis〉 Spielfeld (bei Tennisturnieren); →a. Centrecourt [engl.] * * * Court [kɔ:t ], der; s, s [engl. court, eigtl. = Hof < afrz. court, ↑ Cour] (Tennis) …
80justice — (n.) mid 12c., the exercise of authority in vindication of right by assigning reward or punishment; also quality of being fair and just, from O.Fr. justice justice, legal rights, jurisdiction (11c.), from L. iustitia righteousness, equity, from… …