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prej·u·dice 1 /'pre-jə-dəs/ n [Old French, from Latin praejudicium previous judgment, damage, from prae- before + judicium judgment]1: injury or detriment to one's legal rights or claims (as from the action of another): asa: substantial impairment of a defendant's ability to defendthe court found no prejudice to the defendant by the lengthy delay in bringing chargesb: tendency for a decision on an improper basis (as past conduct) by a trier of factwhether an ex parte communication to a deliberating jury resulted in any reasonable possibility of prejudice to the defendant — National Law Journalc: implied waiver of rights and privileges not explicitly retainedDistrict Court erred in attaching prejudice to prisoner's complaint for injunctive relief — National Law Journal2: a final and binding decision (as an adjudication on the merits) that bars further prosecution of the same cause of action or motiondismisses this case with prejudicethe dismissal was without prejudice3 a: an irrational attitude of hostility directed against an individual, a group, a race, or their supposed characteristicsthe Constitution does not prohibit laws based on prejudice per se — R. H. Borkb: an attitude or disposition (as of a judge) that prevents impartialitythat the judge before whom the matter is pending has a personal bias or prejudice...against him — U.S. Codeprejudice 2 vt -diced, -dic·ing1: to injure or damage the rights of by some legal action or prejudiceif it appears that a defendant or the government is prejudiced by a joinder of offenses — Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure Rule 142: to injure or damage (rights) by some legal action or prejudicethat the denial prejudiced his right to a fair trialthis clause does not prejudice other rights
Merriam-Webster’s Dictionary of Law. Merriam-Webster. 1996.
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I
(injury) noun
damage, detriment, detrimentum, disadvantage, harm, hurt, impairment, injustice, irreversible damage, loss, unfairness, wrong
associated concepts: absence of prejudice, dismissal with prejudice, dismissal without prejudice, prejudice to a party's rights, prejudicial error
II
(preconception) noun
bent, bias, discrimination, favoritism, forejudgment, inclination, intolerance, leaning, narrow-mindedness, one-sidedness, opinio praeiudicata, partiality, partisanship, personal bias, preconceived idea, preconceived notion, preconception, predetermination, predilection, predisposition, preference, prejudgment, prepossession, provincialism, slant, subjectivity, unreasonable bias
associated concepts: disqualification for bias
III
(influence) verb
affect, bear upon, bend to one's will, bias, bring pressure to bear, carry weight, color, convince, distort, exercise influence over, exercise influence upon, exert influence, gain over, give an inclination, have influence over, have influence upon, influence against, jaundice, persuade, predetermine, predispose, prejudge, prepossess unfavorably, present with bias, prevail over, slant, sway, turn, twist, warp, win over
associated concepts: prejudice the trier of fact
IV
(injure) verb
affect detrimentally, cause damage to, cause detriment, cause pain, damage, demolish, destroy, devastate, disadvantage, disservice, exacerbate, harm, hurt, impair, inflict injury, maim, mar, play havoc with, ravage, ruin, spoil, taint, weaken, wound, wreck, wrong
associated concepts: prejudicial error
V
index
bias, damage, detriment, disadvantage (noun), disadvantage (verb), discrimination (bigotry), drawback, exclusion, favor (partiality), favoritism, foregone conclusion, hatred, inclination, inequality, inequity, influence, injury, injustice, intolerance, ostracism, partiality, penchant, preconception, predetermination, predilection, predisposition, preference (choice), proclivity, segregation (isolation by races), slant, tendency
Burton's Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006
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n.Bias; prejudgment not based on actual experience or evidence; injury to a party that results from preconceived notions about the facts.v.To cause prejudice; to harm.adj.prejudicial
The Essential Law Dictionary. — Sphinx Publishing, An imprint of Sourcebooks, Inc. Amy Hackney Blackwell. 2008.
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n. A leaning toward one side in a lawsuit; an opinion held favoring one side without having heard the case; a predisposition or bias.See also dismissal (dismissal with prejudice) and (dismissal without prejudice).
Webster's New World Law Dictionary. Susan Ellis Wild. 2000.
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A forejudgment; bias; partiality; preconceived opinion. A leaning toward one side of a cause for some reason other than a conviction of its justice.
Dictionary from West's Encyclopedia of American Law. 2005.
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A forejudgment; bias; partiality; preconceived opinion. A leaning toward one side of a cause for some reason other than a conviction of its justice.
Short Dictionary of (mostly American) Legal Terms and Abbreviations.