jury
柯林斯詞典
1. N-COUNT-COLL In a court of law, the jury is the group of people who have been chosen from the general public to listen to the facts about a crime and to decide whether the person accused is guilty or not. 陪審團(tuán)[also 'by' N]
The jury convicted Mr. Hampson of all offences. 該陪審團(tuán)裁定漢普森先生的全部罪名成立。
2. N-COUNT-COLL A jury is a group of people who choose the winner of a competition. (競賽的) 評委會
I am not surprised that the jury chose to award this novel the prize. 我并不驚訝于評委選擇給這部小說頒獎。
3. ADJ makeshift 應(yīng)急的[nautical]
jury-rigged
4. PHRASE If you say that the jury is out or that the jury is still out on a particular subject, you mean that people in general have still not made a decision or formed an opinion about that subject. 尚無定論
The jury is out on whether or not this is true. 這是否屬實(shí)尚無定論。
返回 jury
jury /?d???r?/ (juries)
劍橋詞典
- a group of people who have been chosen to listen to all the facts in a trial in a law court and to decide if a person is guilty or not guilty , or if a claim has been proved
- The jury delivered a verdict of not guilty .
- The members of the jury left the court with a police escort .
- Not surprisingly , the jury found them both guilty .
- The decision about whether he is innocent or guilty rests with the jury.
- He went free because the jury decided there was a reasonable doubt about his guilt .
陪審團(tuán)
members of the jury 陪審團(tuán)成員
The jury has/have been unable to return a verdict (= reach a decision ). 陪審團(tuán)未能作出裁決。
Police officers aren't usually allowed to be/sit /serve on a jury. 警察通常不允許進(jìn)入陪審團(tuán)。
a group of people chosen to decide the winner of a competition
(競賽的)裁判團(tuán),評判委員會
例句