voir dire
English
Etymology
From Anglo-Norman, literally “to speak the truth”, from Old French voir (“true; truly”) (from Latin vērus (“true”)) + dire (“to say”) (from Latin dīcere (“to speak; to say”)).
Pronunciation
- (Francophonic) IPA(key): /vwɑːʁ diʁ/
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /ˈvwɑː ˌdɪə/
- (US) IPA(key): /ˈvɔɹ ˌdaɪɹ/, /ˈvwɑɹ ˌdɪɹ/
Noun
voir dire (plural voir dires)
- (law) The preliminary phase of a jury trial in which the jurors are examined and selected.
- (law, England, Wales, New Zealand, Australia, US) A preliminary hearing without a jury in order to determine whether the evidence meets the test for admissibility to go to a full hearing at a criminal trial, in the legal systems of England and Wales, New Zealand, Australia, and the United States.
- (law) A hearing in the context of a larger trial to determine some specific issue relevant to that trial, such as the admissibility of a piece of evidence or the competency of a witness to testify.
Translations
juror selection process
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