assize









assize


assize [uh-sahyz] ExamplesWord Origin See more synonyms for assize on Thesaurus.com noun

  1. Usually assizes. a trial session, civil or criminal, held periodically in specific locations in England, usually by a judge of a superior court.
  2. an edict, ordinance, or enactment made at a session of a legislative assembly.
  3. an inquest before members of a jury or assessors; a judicial inquiry.
  4. an action, writ, or verdict of an assize.
  5. judgment: the last assize; the great assize.
  6. a statute for the regulation and control of weights and measures or prices of general commodities in the market.

Origin of assize 1250–1300; Middle English asise Old French: a sitting, noun use of feminine of asis seated at (past participle of aseeir), equivalent to a- a-5 + -sis Latin sēssum (sed- stem of sedēre to sit1 + -tus past participle suffix) Related Words for assize tribunal, decree, court, ordinance, enactment, inquest, rule, hearing, trial, session, measure, assembly Examples from the Web for assize Historical Examples of assize

  • The old saying, ‘Truth will out,’ does not apply in an assize court.

    The New Tenant

    E. Phillips Oppenheim

  • The trial came on at the Court of Assize about six weeks ago.

    Fantmas

    Pierre Souvestre

  • The judges on assize were ordered to press the king’s demand.

    History of the English People, Volume V (of 8)

    John Richard Green

  • The assize at Dorchester was opened on the 3rd of September.

    Roger Willoughby

    William H. G. Kingston

  • Nearly every assize is marked by a charge of this character.

    Cotton is King and The Pro-Slavery Arguments

    Various

  • British Dictionary definitions for assize assize noun

    1. (in the US)
      1. a sitting of a legislative assembly or administrative body
      2. an enactment or order of such an assembly
    2. English history a trial or judicial inquest, the writ instituting such inquest, or the verdict
    3. Scots law
      1. trial by jury
      2. another name for jury 1

    Word Origin for assize C13: from Old French assise session, from asseoir to seat, from Latin assidēre to sit beside; see assess Word Origin and History for assize n.

    “session of a law court,” c.1300 (attested from mid-12c. in Anglo-Latin), from Old French assise “session, sitting of a court” (12c.), properly fem. past participle of asseoir “to cause to sit,” from Latin assidere (see assess). Originally “all legal proceedings of the nature of inquests or recognitions;” hence sessions held periodically in each county of England to administer civil and criminal justice.

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