Vekt. Vekt saw the pendant around the woman's neck and demanded it too. But the woman didn't want to give it and fought back when Vekt was trying to grab the pendant. Vekt shot her to the heart, which caused the woman to die. 4. Vekt sold the stolen goods to his friend who dealt with selling them. They agreed on the prices of the jewellry and made the deal. Vekt decided to keep the watch. He hided it into the heel of a boot. 5. The atmosphere in the courtroom was nervous. Vekt's eyes were wandering around the courtroom. His attorney told him to stay focus and write down everything that could give them an advantage in the trial. The prosecutor was six-foot-two, had a pounch and was moving around the courtroom. The jurors were mostly white, only two of them were black. 6. At first Vekt's attorney asked why his client had been accused of murder. He had been told that Mr. Jagoda, the victim's husband, had identified him in a police lineup
Birth certificate- document that proves your birth Automatically-unintentionally Preserved- remained Privacy- secret Willing- ready Vangi mõistma- sentenced to Kiirust ületama- speeding Külglibisema- skidding Kohtuprotsess- trial Tunnistaja- witness Kohtunik- judge Tõend- proof Varastatud- stolen Kohtust väljas- courtyard Süütuks tunnistama- pleade not gulity Kohtumaja- court Tunnistused- statements Kaitse- defence Röövitud- robbed Kohtusaal- courtroom Süüdistati milleski- charged with Rööviti- robbed of Kallaletungis süüdistama- accused of Peteti- cheated out Anti kohtu alla- tried for
by the idea of appearing at his funeral and surprising everyone. He persuades Joe and Huck to do the same. Their return is met with great rejoicing, and they become the envy and admiration of all their friends. Back in school, Tom gets himself back in Becky’s favor after he nobly accepts the blame for a book that she has ripped. Soon Muff Potter’s trial begins, and Tom, overcome by guilt, testifies against Injun Joe. Potter is acquitted, but Injun Joe flees the courtroom through a window. Summer arrives, and Tom and Huck go hunting for buried treasure in a haunted house. After venturing upstairs they hear a noise below. Peering through holes in the floor, they see Injun Joe enter the house disguised as a deaf and mute Spaniard. He and his companion, an unkempt man, plan to bury some stolen treasure of their own. From their hiding spot, Tom and Huck wriggle with delight at the prospect of digging it up. By an amazing
court 20. tõestamise kohustus lasub – burden of proof lies on 21. vastutav olema tõenäosuse alusel – to be liable on the balance of probability 22. võistlev menetlus – adversary procedure 23. võistlus kohtuniku ees – contest before a judge 24. vastaspooled – opposing parties 25. erapooletu kohtunik – impartial judge 26. küsitlus kohtus – examination in the courtroom 27. ristküsitlus kohtus – cross-examination in the courtroom 28. uuriv menetlus – inquisitional procedure 29. kohtuasja uurima – to investigate the case 30. tõendeid koguma – to collect evidence 31. tunnistajaid kutsuma – to call witnesses 32. kahjutasu määrama – to award damages 33. kahjutasu nõudma – to claim compensation/ to claim damages 34
other generations have done. I think that applies to university graduates very well and what should be expected from them. University can open a door for you but you must enter yourself. This saying also means that universities has to be modern and always develop new learning methods. I think that one very good addition to university education nowadays is problem based learning. This method brings students so much closer to real life situations like playing out courtroom scenes etc. These type of solutions should be the face of 21th century university – it is vital for students to get some practise and not only learn theoretical aspects. Lots of practise in studying days also ensures many advantages and experience for future jobs. What I primarly mean in this paragraph is that universities should be creative and let the students feel like they are part of the process rather than observers and as result they are hopefully capable of doing new things.
ADVOCATE/ ATTORNEY-AT- LAW WHAT DO THEY A notary public of the A judge presides over The prosecutor has Attorney at law or DO? common law is a a courtroom, hearing three main tasks: attorney-at-law, public officer evidence, making usually abbreviated in constituted by law to decisions on motions. to investigate everyday speech to serve the public in The judge is crimes, attorney, is the
Interpersonal Communication Linguistics Mass communication Pragmatics Development communication Semiotics Communication studies Discourse analysis Organizational communication Audiology Sociolinguistics Speech therapy Conversation analysis Forensics (debate) and courtroom communication Mitteverbaalne suhtlemine Mittesõnaline suhtlus. Sõnad piiratud kultuuriruumiga, mitteverbaalne (peaaegu) universaalne näit emotsioonide lugemine! Edward Hall suhtlemine loomariigis! Verbaalset vähe! Mitteverbaalse suhtlemise kanalid Pilk tundlikkus silmkontakti suhtes. Pilk suhete indikaator, kõnekorra edasiandja
• SP “hõivanud” osa kommunikatsiooniuuringutest – Mitteverbaalsed suhtlemiskanalid – Petlik kommunikatsioon – Suhtlemismängud – Nõustamine Kommunikatsioon Interpersonal Communication Mass communication Development communication Communication studies Organizational communication Sociolinguistics Conversation analysis Cognitive linguistics Linguistics Pragmatics Semiotics Discourse analysis Audiology Speech therapy Forensics (debate) and courtroom communication Mitteverbaalne suhtlemine • Mittesõnaline suhtlus. Sõnad piiratud kultuuriruumiga, mitteverbaalne (peaaegu) universaalne – näit emotsioonide lugemine! Edward Hall – suhtlemine loomariigis! Verbaalset vähe! • Mitteverbaalse suhtlemise kanalid • Pilk – tundlikkus silmkontakti suhtes. Pilk – suhete indikaator, kõnekorra edasiandja • Miimika – universaalsed näoväljendused (üllatus, hirm, viha,
burgeon v. grow at a fast pace adj. burgeoning Syn. thrive The burgeoning population of major cities is creating a demand for more services. His talent as a pianist burgeoned at the age of 14. conspicuously adv. attracting attention adj. conspicuous Syn. noticeably His name was conspicuously absent from the list of winners. The attorneys were conspicuous for their aggressive manner in the courtroom. demand v. to ask for something in a strong way adv. demandingly Syn. insist adj. demanding n. demand She demanded to know the truth. The employees' demands for better working conditions caused the work stoppage. endorse v. to express approval n. endorsement Syn. support The union endorsed the new contract. The president's endorsement of the project guaranteed its funding.
rather than passive, at this of all times. SHOWDOWNS In Westerns, crime fiction, and many action films, the Resurrection is expressed as the biggest confrontation and battle of the story, the showdown or shootout. A showdown pits hero and villains in an ultimate contest with the highest possible stakes, life and death. It's the classic gunfight of the Western, the swordfight of the swashbuckler, or the last acrobatic battle of a martial arts movie. It may even be a courtroom showdown or an emotional "shootout" in a domestic drama. T h e showdown is a distinct dramatic form with its own rules and conven tions. T h e operatic climaxes of the Sergio Leone "spaghetti Westerns" exaggerate the elements of the conventional showdown: the dramatic music; the opposing forces marching towards each other in some k i n d of arena (the town street, a corral, a cemetery, the villain's h i d e o u t ) ; the closeups of guns, hands, and eyes poised for
authorities: "The bearer of this is a subject of the Empire who travels as a Russian under the name of Pablo Waberski. He is a German secret agent. Please furnish him on request protection and assistance; also advance him on demand up to 1,000 pesos of Mexican gold and send his code telegrams to this embassy as official consular dispatches." When Manly read this to a military commission of colonels and generals who were trying Witzke on spy charges in a hushed courtroom at Fort Sam Houston, *In addition to this and the Zimmermann telegram, two messages to the diplomat from his home office, encoded in the English-French half of Clifton's Nouveau Dictionnaire Frangals, which had replaced the betrayed Cipher 13040, were solved by MI-8. They disclosed Germany trying to bribe Mexico to remain neutral. San Antonio, the effect was condemnatory. The handsome young spy was sentenced to death. Wilson later commuted it to life imprisonment,
days later, a representative of the American Cancer Society did call and ask for neighborhood canvassers (Sherman, 1980). Using the same strategy, but this time asking citizens to predict whether they would vote on election day, other re- searchers have been able to increase significantly the turnout at the polls among those called (Greenwald, Carnot, Beach, ~Young, 1987; Spangenberg ~ Greenwald, in press). Courtroom combatants appear to have adopted this practice of extracting a lofty initial commitment that is designed to spur future consistent behavior. When screening potential jurors before a trial, Jo-Ellen Demitrius, the woman cur- rently reputed to be the best consultant in the business of jury selection asks an art- ful question: "If you were the only person who believed in my client's innocence, could you withstand the pressure of the rest of the jury to change your mind?" How