Juge of the Comune Place, and is forth into Kent with the Lords, &c.
And as for that the Lord Moleyns hath wretyn that he dar put the matier in awarde of my Lord Chaunceler, and in whatjuge he wole take to hym, &c.
And they gef you counsell in all wise that ye labour to have Yelverton Juge at that tyme, and in all wise bothe in that materz and in all other, that ye be war that Prisot have not to have do in any wise, for than all wole be nought.
The next stage to the parquet is the juge d'instruction, who corresponds to the English magistrate, and is the most formidable personage in the whole system of French criminal law.
Michel Le Neuf du Herisson was juge royal, and Severin Ameau was notary and registrar of the court.
Tel excelle à rimer qui juge sottement=--Some excel in rhyme who reason foolishly.
Le bon sens vulgaire est un mauvais juge quand il s'agit des grandes choses=--Good common-sense is a bad judge when it is a question of high matters.
In the lower degrees it created in each canton a justice of the peace (juge de paix), the idea and name of which were borrowed from England, but which differed very much from the English justice of the peace.
Young men new to crime herd together with hardened criminals, and we were told by a Juge d'Instruction, to whom we subsequently spoke on the matter, that the free intercourse is greatly provocative of crime.
As different as was 'Mirabeau juge par sa famille et Mirabeau juge par le peuple,' are you judged by your enemies, and judged by those who love you.
Juge ys soo parcyall with the other party that I trowe ther shalbe sped no maters before hym for you, nor for non of yours tyl it be otherwyse by twene you than it ys.
I felt by hym that all hys strawngenes from zow is for he demythe that ze wold parte from no thyng; and I told hym the contrary ther of to be trwe, az this day he is exaymined up on a bok to sey the trowthe of all thynges as the juge will[101.
Therfor I askyd off the juge hys accounts, and specyally the deposicionys and attestacionys off the wytteness that wer swor in the seyd codicill, &c.
I had been thinking of the Juge d'Instruction, and his terrible cross-examination which only a man of steel or iron can answer without trembling.
He has been in the hands of the Juge d'Instruction.
It is permitted nowadays that a foreigner, if he demands it, can be accompanied by his legal adviser when he goes before the Juge d'Instruction.
No one could know except the Juge d'Instruction and Ivor Dundas himself.
We were speaking of the scene with the Juge d'Instruction," I reminded him.
Mr. Dundas replied to the Juge d'Instruction that his own packet, stolen from him on the journey, contained nothing but papers entirely personal, concerning himself alone.
The book first appeared in France under the title of "Lord Byron juge par les Temoins de sa Vie," without the name of the countess.
At first, the work appeared prudently in French, and was called 'Lord Byron juge par les Temoins de sa Vie,' and was rather a failure.
Juge is now here, and he proposes to begin, madame, with you.
Juge arrives, then, perhaps; at any rate, at a later stage.
If thou ryghtwysly Juge by lawe and equyte Thou shalt haue presence of goddes hyghe maiestye But if thou Juge amys: than shall Eacus (As Poetis sayth) hell Juge thy rewarde discusse God is aboue and regneth sempiternally.
To rule a Royalme: as Juge or Counsellour Which seynge Justice, playne ryght and equyte Them falsly blyndeth by fauour or rigour Condemnynge wretches gyltles.
All the affirmations were in such entire concordance that no doubt remained in the mind of the juge d'instruction.
An insignificant juge d'instruction (an examining magistrate who has no exact counterpart in England.
The action of this scene consists in the formal but unwilling reconciliation of the two clans, represented by their chiefs, in the presence of a jugede paix; in token of which a hen was to be presented by the Orlando to the Colonna.
In the heat of the discussion, an Orlando was imprudent enough to threaten that he would summon the Colonne before the Juge de Paix, and put them on their oath.
In all criminal prosecutions, other than those coming before the juge de paix, a secret preliminary investigation is made by an official called a juge d'instruction.
In each canton is a juge de paix, who in his capacity as a civil judge takes cognizance, without appeal, of disputes where the amount sought to be recovered does not exceed L12 in value.
This process in some degree corresponds to the manner in which English magistrates dismiss a case or commit the prisoner to quarter sessions or assizes, but the powers of the juge d'instruction are more arbitrary and absolute.
Taking the first class of courts, which have both civil and criminal jurisdiction, the lowest tribunal in the system is that of the juge de paix.
The juge de paix and his brother are now among the most respected citizens of Arcis, and have lived to witness the rehabilitation of their great ancestor.
Next, let me say a word about the juge de paix in France, as I presume most readers are aware, a modest functionary, yet better paid than that of a priest.
The juge de paix and his family were on friendliest terms with my hostess, and he would often drop in for a chat.
We made a round of visits that day, but the juge de paix, who seemed to share the tastes of his great ancestor, was in the country in search of more partridges.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "juge" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.