Justiceship

Word JUSTICESHIP
Character 11
Hyphenation jus tice ship
Pronunciations N/A

Definitions and meanings of "Justiceship"

What do we mean by justiceship?

Here you will find one or more explanations in English for the word justiceship. Define justiceship, justiceship synonyms, justiceship pronunciation, justiceship translation, English dictionary definition of justiceship.

Synonyms and Antonyms for Justiceship

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The word "justiceship" in example sentences

OpEdNews - Article: Justice Jackson's (pre-justiceship) Speech of December 1936. ❋ Unknown (2009)

I think she wants a justiceship so that she can fully indulge her pompous self-righteousness in the lamest branch of the federal government. ❋ Unknown (2009)

Promoted to Headline (H3) on 5/1/09: Justice Jackson's (pre-justiceship) Speech of December 1936. yahooBuzzArticleHeadline = 'Justice Jackson\'s (pre-justiceship) Speech of December 1936.' ❋ Unknown (2009)

Roberts obtained his justiceship by (i) unethically sitting on, and casting the deciding vote for the Executive on, a court of appeals case from Guantanamo involving the same kind of question at issue in the recent case, while (ii) meeting with Dick Cheney, David Addington, et.al. to assure them of his intellectual fealty to the ideas they wished to prevail. ❋ Unknown (2008)

Finally, he will move away from the imperial chief justiceship established by his mentor Rehnquist and will rule the court with less of an iron hand. ❋ Unknown (2008)

But now, so uncertain are our tempers, and so much do we at different times differ from ourselves, she would hear of no mitigations; nor could all the affected penitence of Honour, nor all the entreaties of Sophia for her own servant, prevail with her to desist from earnestly desiring her brother to execute justiceship (for it was indeed a syllable more than justice) on the wench. ❋ Unknown (2004)

Federalist Party, first appointed him secretary of State in the fall of -- in 1798, and then moved him up into the chief justiceship as a third chief justice just before he left office. ❋ Unknown (2001)

Mr. ATKINSON: Well, Edward Douglass White was moved to the chief justiceship by President Taft. ❋ Unknown (1999)

But the old gentleman accepted the chief justiceship immediately. ❋ Unknown (1999)

In 1799, Sir John Scott was appointed to the chief justiceship of the ❋ Various (N/A)

I could not reasonably expect from him that he would quit the chief-justiceship of the common pleas, which he held for life, and put himself in the power of those who were not to be trusted, to be dismissed from the chancery perhaps the day after his appointment. ❋ Edward Farr (N/A)

In order to serve as delegate to the Congress over which he soon presided, Jay resigned the chief justiceship on the tenth of November, 1778; and signalized his advent by a logical, seasonable, and cheering address to the people on the condition of affairs. ❋ Various (N/A)

Bradley, if chosen for any particular views, got the justiceship because of his attitude on legal tender; and the conditions under which Waite was appointed do not show up any such bias on his part. ❋ Various (N/A)

The death of Sir Thomas Fleming made a vacancy in the chief justiceship of the king's bench, and Bacon, after some deliberation, proposed to the king that Coke should be removed from his place in the court of common pleas and transferred to the king's bench. ❋ Various (N/A)

In 1801 the chief-justiceship dropped into his lap when Livingston went to France and Lansing became chancellor, just as the chancellorship would probably have come to him had Lansing continued a candidate for governor. ❋ DeAlva Stanwood Alexander (N/A)

Jay's brief tenure of the chief-justiceship of the United States ❋ DeAlva Stanwood Alexander (N/A)

During the next fifteen years, which was the period of Waite's chief justiceship, twenty-nine cases reached the Court in which State legislation was set aside under the clause. ❋ Edward Samuel Corwin (1920)

The contrast between these observations and the disheartened words in which Jay declined renomination to the chief justiceship in 1801 gives perhaps a fair measure of Marshall's accomplishment. ❋ Edward Samuel Corwin (1920)

American "legalism," that curious infusion of politics with jurisprudence, that mutual consultation of public opinion and established principles, which in the past has so characterized the course of discussion and legislation in America, is traceable to origins long antedating Marshall's chief justiceship. ❋ Edward Samuel Corwin (1920)

Despite all these concessions which he made to the rising spirit of the times, Marshall found his last years to be among the most trying of his chief justiceship. ❋ Edward Samuel Corwin (1920)

Cross Reference for Justiceship

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What does justiceship mean?

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