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LIST OF WORDS
obey the law | admission of evidence |
law of procedure | to uphold a verdict |
investigate | breach of the peace |
investigation | indictment |
deter | an arrest warrant |
pass | conclusive facts |
ignorance of the law | to develop enough evidence |
search | arraignment |
impose a fine | to question a witness |
detect | to take the stand |
law-abiding | a plea bargain |
falsify | to plead guilty |
unbiased | the accused’s plea |
abolish | to drop the charge(s) |
rectify | hearsay evidence |
retribution | the trier of fact |
misconduct | to return a verdict |
deprivation of liberty | mandatory sentence |
trial | to suspend the sentencing procedure |
conviction | probation |
pretrial stage | to serve the term |
questioning of witnesses | admonition of rights |
search | community service |
seizure | imprisonment |
warrant | suspended sentence |
to obtain evidence | lifetime = a life sentence |
prosecuting attorney | parole (n, v) |
pretrial hearing | to be given parole |
preliminary hearing | detention |
to bring charges against a person | corporal punishment |
reach a verdict | capital punishment = death penalty |
sentencing |
Ex. 1. Match the following words with their definitions and learn them.
suspend, parole, search, rectify, allegation, assault, obey, retribution, unbiased, deter, detention, investigate |
1. To do what one is told to do, or act in accordance with.
2. To prevent from acting, especially by the threat of something unpleasant.
3. A physical attack on a person.
4. To free someone before his prison sentence is due to end, on condition that he or she behaves well.
5. A statement, which may or may not be true, that someone has done something wrong.
6. To delay something or stop it from being in effect for a while.
7. The arrest or imprisonment of someone.
8. It is done or produced fairly and without showing prejudice or favoritism.
9. An attempt to find something by looking somewhere.
10. To examine all details in order to find out what happened or what is happening.
11. To change something which is wrong, undesirable so that it is correct or as you with it to be.
12. Punishment which cannot be avoided and which some people believe comes from non-human sources.
Ex. 2. Use your knowledge of root words and word families to decide what the following words probably mean. Give a simple definition for each word.
Example: foregoing (adj) Answer: (FORE + GO + ING) Prefix FORE-often means before in time or position, e. g. foreword = a preface or introductory note at the beginning of a book; forejudge = to judge before (e.g. before hearing the full facts); –ING = typical adjectival form.
Probable meaning: foregoing = which goes before, previous.
1) wrongfully (adv); 2) prerequisite (noun); 3) inviolability (noun); 4) receiving (adj); 5) irreparable (adj); 6) ensure (verb).
To show that you understand the words given above, choose the best word to complete the following sentences. Use each word once only, and make any necessary changes (e. g. plural forms).
a) The Race Relations Act 1976 was passed to ______ fair treatment for people of all races.
b) A good knowledge of French and English is often a ______ for an international lawyer.
c) A ______ order is a court order which places the property of a debtor in the control of a special trustee in bankruptcy cases.
d) It was alleged that the newspaper article caused ______ damage to the company’s good name and professional reputation.
e) The Universal Declaration of Human Rights was made to guarantee the ______ of fundamental rights.
f) The plaintiff claimed damages against his employer because he had been ______ dismissed.
Ex. 3. Fill in the gaps with prepositions.
In 1991, the Osaka High Court ordered the review of a Hong Kong man’s case 1) ___ finding that the police had used a biased interpreter. In 1991, the Japanese Civil Liberties Union believes there have been numerous cases 2) ___ police violence 3) ___ foreign suspects, many 4) ___ whom are not told of their rights in a language which they can understand. 5) ___ the Birmingham Six case, British police officers obtained confessions 6) ___ men suspected of bombing a pub 7) ___ beating them up. In the United States, illegally obtained evidence is not valid 8) ___ court, but in Britain the court decides whether it is fair to accept such evidence 9) ___ a case-by-case basis. A confession obtained 10) ___ force would not be allowed, but one obtained 11) ___ trickery might.
Ex. 4. Fill in the gaps with the missing words given below. Make necessary changes.
punishment, sentence, wave, execution, convict, legally, innocent, prison, research |
In 1987, two academics published a study showing that 23 1) ______ people had been executed in the United States. This 2) ______ has shown that capital 3) ______ is used inconsistently. For example, in South Africa, black murderers are far more likely to be 4) ______ to death than whites. During a crime 5) ______ in China in the 1980s, cities were given a quota of 6) ______ to meet; in a city where there weren't very many murders, people 7) ______ of lesser crimes were more likely to be executed. In addition, while in some countries young people are not sent to 8) ______ but to special juvenile detention centres, in Nigeria, Iran, Iraq, Bangladesh, Barbados and the United States children under 18 have been 9) ______ put to death.
Read the text. Make notes of is main points. Be ready to discuss them.
TEXT 1
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