different between jury vs sidebar
jury
English
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?d????.?i/, [?d????.??i], [d???i]
- Rhymes: -???i
Etymology 1
From Middle English jure, from Anglo-Norman juree, from Medieval Latin i?r?ta, from Latin i?r? (“I swear or take an oath”).
Noun
jury (plural juries)
- (law) A group of individuals chosen from the general population to hear and decide a case in a court of law.
- A group of judges in a competition.
- (theater, slang) The audience attending the first night of a performance, whose reaction may determine whether it succeeds or fails.
- 1828, The New Monthly Magazine (page 418)
- The jury which decides on the first night usually seals the fate of the season.
- 1971, George Jean Nathan, The Entertainment of a Nation: Or, Three-sheets in the Wind (page 130)
- The widespread idea that before a first-night the audience, dressed to the nose, dines en masse at the Colony and proceeds elegantly to the scene in Hispanos is as fabulous as that which imagines it assembles at Lindy's delicatessen in yesterday's shirt and moves on to the theatre in garbage wagons. And no less spurious is the theory that, in either case or in both together, the jury is possessed of a remarkably rich acumen in the matter of theatrical values.
- 1828, The New Monthly Magazine (page 418)
Meronyms
- juror
Derived terms
Descendants
- Portuguese: júri
Translations
Verb
jury (third-person singular simple present juries, present participle jurying, simple past and past participle juried)
- To judge by means of a jury.
Etymology 2
Early 1600s, of uncertain origin. Perhaps ultimately from Old French ajurie, from Latin adi?t?.
Alternatively, perhaps a variant of Middle English yore, ?are, from Old English ?eoro, ?earu (“ready, prompt, prepared, quick”).
Adjective
jury (not comparable)
- (nautical) For temporary use; applied to a temporary contrivance.
Derived terms
- jurymast
- jury-rig
Translations
Dutch
Etymology
Borrowed from English jury or French jury (itself from English), from Middle English jure, from Anglo-Norman juree, from Medieval Latin i?r?ta. If the Dutch term wasn't directly borrowed from French, the pronunciation has been secondarily influenced by the French pronunciation.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /??y?.ri/
- Hyphenation: ju?ry
Noun
jury f (plural jury's, diminutive jury'tje n)
- jury
Derived terms
- jurylid
French
Etymology
Borrowed from English jury.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?y.?i/
Noun
jury m (plural jurys)
- jury
Related terms
- juré
Further reading
- “jury” in Trésor de la langue française informatisé (The Digitized Treasury of the French Language).
Middle English
Noun
jury
- Alternative form of Jewery
Norman
Etymology
Borrowed from English jury.
Noun
jury m (plural jurys)
- (Jersey, law) jury
Norwegian Bokmål
Etymology
Borrowed from English jury.
Noun
jury m (definite singular juryen, indefinite plural juryer, definite plural juryene)
- (law, in competitions also) a jury
References
- “jury” in The Bokmål Dictionary.
Norwegian Nynorsk
Etymology
Borrowed from English jury.
Noun
jury m (definite singular juryen, indefinite plural juryar, definite plural juryane)
- (law, in competitions also) a jury
References
- “jury” in The Nynorsk Dictionary.
Polish
Etymology
From French jury, from English jury, from Middle English jure, from Anglo-Norman juree, from Medieval Latin i?r?ta, from Latin i?r? (“I swear or take an oath”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /???r?i/
Noun
jury n (indeclinable)
- (theater) jury (group of judges in a competition)
Related terms
- (nouns) juror, jurorka
- (adjective) jurorski
Further reading
- jury in Wielki s?ownik j?zyka polskiego, Instytut J?zyka Polskiego PAN
- jury in Polish dictionaries at PWN
Swedish
Etymology
From English jury, from Anglo-Norman juree, from Medieval Latin i?r?ta, from Latin i?r? (“I swear, I take an oath”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?j?r?/
- Rhymes: -?r?
Noun
jury c
- jury
Declension
Derived terms
- jurymedlem
References
- jury in Svensk ordbok (SO)
jury From the web:
- what jury duty
- what jury means
- what jury duty is like
- what jury duty do
- what jury summons means
- what jury duty means
- what jury do
- what jury service
sidebar
English
Etymology
From side +? bar.
Pronunciation
Noun
sidebar (plural sidebars)
- A short news story printed alongside a larger one.
- A block of information placed at the side of a printed page.
- 2004 "Height and Weight", GURPS Basic Set 3rd Edition 6th printing page 15
- The tables in the sidebar can be used to determine “average” height and weight, and to provide a slight random variation if desired.
- 2004 "Height and Weight", GURPS Basic Set 3rd Edition 6th printing page 15
- (Internet) A block of information placed at the side of a webpage.
- (US, law) a short conference, between a judge and the attorneys of a case, held outside the hearing of the jury and the spectators at the court
- (US, law) the place in the courtroom where such a conference happens.
- An accessory side note or aside made during a conversation, without changing the scope of the audience.
- 2018, Tom Ellis as Lucifer Morningstar, "Quintessential Deckerstar", Lucifer
- Well, when Charlotte had her mini-death, she went to Hell. Forest haunted her Hell loop and now is haunting her nightmares -- which, sidebar, Dan is also a part of, so things are heating up.
- 2018, Tom Ellis as Lucifer Morningstar, "Quintessential Deckerstar", Lucifer
- A short conversation between a smaller portion of a group held outside the hearing of the rest of the group.
- 2017 Ben Giroux as Mike Munroe in "Braces for Disaster" Bunsen is a Beast
- May we have a moment to discuss your proposition? Sidebar!
Let's pick a topic. Sidebar!
- May we have a moment to discuss your proposition? Sidebar!
- 2017 Ben Giroux as Mike Munroe in "Braces for Disaster" Bunsen is a Beast
Translations
Verb
sidebar (third-person singular simple present sidebars, present participle sidebarring, simple past and past participle sidebarred)
- (transitive) to place (information) into a sidebar, or as if into a sidebar
- 15 April 2018 "What's Your Story?" Fear the Walking Dead season 4 episode 1 (50m)
- Morgan "One of them was called Alexandria and then there was a place called the Kingdom. It actually had a king."
Althea "A king?"
Morgan "Even had a pet tiger."
Althea "All right, we're gonna have to sidebar that one. These settlements, were they good places to live?"
- Morgan "One of them was called Alexandria and then there was a place called the Kingdom. It actually had a king."
- 15 April 2018 "What's Your Story?" Fear the Walking Dead season 4 episode 1 (50m)
Anagrams
- Beairds, abiders, air beds, airbeds, bardies, barside, braised, darbies, sea bird, seabird
sidebar From the web:
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