verdict - use in sentences

Converse of object

  • disable: There are only so many programs that you can watch about the African Bullfrog for example. disable ad VERDICT So should you invest?
  • damn: Have we all been victims of Trotskii's damning verdicts on Stalin?
  • overturn: Three senior judges will have the power to overturn the guilty verdict, order a retrial or keep the 41-year-old in jail.
  • pronounce: The jury had other ideas and pronounced a verdict of willful murder by the person or persons who ordered the militia to fire.

Preposition: at

  • inquest: About 50 women in England and Wales committed suicide in that first year, or there was an open verdict at the inquest.

Adjective modifier

  • unanimous: The inquest jury recorded a unanimous verdict of unlawful killing in March 1998.
  • guilty: A formal not guilty verdict was returned on a 10th count of indecent assault, for which the crown offered no evidence.
  • final: Final Verdict: You should know the 80s slasher drill by now.
  • perverse: There should be a right for the prosecution and defense to appeal against perverse jury verdicts.

Noun used with modifier

  • inquest: In 1993 the request for the inquest verdicts to be overturned was turned down.
  • ad: There are only so many programs that you can watch about the African Bullfrog for example. disable ad VERDICT So should you invest?
  • jury: A potential jury verdict nearly an second to lifting is.
  • killing: The police officers involved then attempted to get the unlawful killing verdict overturned, but failed.

Possessives

  • jury: Others were less inclined to agree with the first jury's guilty verdict.

Preposition: of

  • misadventure: An inquest jury has returned a verdict of misadventure on a prisoner found hanging in a cell at Bedford jail.
  • manslaughter: In October 1836 the jury at an inquest held at the White Hart in Lenton returned a verdict of manslaughter on Henry Thomas Mortimer.
  • killing: At a later inquest the jury returned a verdict of unlawful killing.
  • jury: The judges upheld the verdict of the original jury.
  • homicide: The Mayor initially refused an inquest, then relented but directed the coroner to return a verdict of justifiable homicide.

Preposition: for

  • plaintiff: The jury found a verdict for the plaintiff, damages £ 120.

The word usage examples above have been gathered from various sources to reflect current and historical usage. They do not represent the opinions of YourDictionary.com.