英:[staɪˈpendiəri]
美:[staɪˈpendieri]
英:[staɪˈpendiəri]
美:[staɪˈpendieri]
sti·pen·di·ar·y
staI pen di eI ri
复数:stipendiaries
Noun
1. paid magistrate (appointed by the Home Secretary) dealing with police cases
Adjective
1. pertaining to or of the nature of a stipend or allowance;
"stipendiary funds"
2. receiving or eligible for compensation;
"salaried workers"
"a stipendiary magistrate"
3. for which money is paid;
"a paying job"
"remunerative work"
"salaried employment"
"stipendiary services"
1540年代,源自拉丁语 stipendiarius,来自 stipendium(参见 stipend)。
The first known use of stipendiary was in the 15th century
1 But though a chief landlord, or a stipendiary magistrate, may occasionally be sacrificed, the great majority of victims are furnished by the humblest class.
2 “No use taking the ‘great unpaid’ into my confidence, nor yet the sharper stipendiaries.
3 When they received pay, which must have been the usual case, they were literally his soldiers, or stipendiary troops.
4 Later in the course of the inquiry the trainer and the stipendiary stewards were talking in Hindi and I couldn't understand what they were saying.
5 Dr. O'Grady was riding back to Ballymoy on his bicycle when he met Mrs. Ford, the wife of the stipendiary magistrate.
6 If you can get him out of Belfast and lay him down safe and sound on his own doorstep the Government will be so grateful that they’ll very likely make you a stipendiary magistrate.”
7 The stipendiary steward, Robert Earnshaw, said that five days of the penalty related to Maguire's marking of Cool Mission, while two days related to his excessive use of the whip.
8 The Hospitallers appointed Brother Theodore, their prior, a most valiant soldier, to lead a band of knights and of stipendiary troops, with an immense treasure, to the succour of the Holy Land.
9 A guard of Swiss stipendiaries is not enough for the liberticide schemes of the Capets.
10 In times of crisis, 18 volunteer magistrates and a stipendiary full-time magistrate took charge of law and order, and it was this body of anxious men who would precipitate the crisis of the day.
11 And so the magistrate of first instance never dares to sum up severely, and the stipendiary never dares press his interrogations with firmness.
12 Summary Jurisdiction Act.—Besides the ordinary suit for a judicial separation a wife may obtain speedy and inexpensive relief by making an application to a stipendiary magistrate for an order of separation and maintenance.
13 Hence those many diversities in the relation between provincial towns and Rome, represented by the names of free, federate, or stipendiary cities, municipium and colonia.
14 In order to try a case there must be at least two lay (non-lawyer) magistrates, or a stipendiary magistrate.
要审理一个案件必须至少有两名非法律专业治安法官,或者一名领薪治安法官方可进行。
15 Instead, Noel Quinlan spoke a couple of sentences to the stipendiary steward, who reported those explanations to the panel, who accepted them.
16 A stipendiary police magistrate, appointed shortly after the system was changed, organised a body of police: twenty-five thousand lashes were inflicted in sixteen months, beside other forms of punishment.
17 I shall be asked, mean you stipendiary service?
18 This place formed one of the stipendiary towns of this Latin race, and was called "Durobrivae."
19 The council may by petition obtain the appointment of a stipendiary magistrate for the borough.
20 According to the BHA's Paul Struthers, it is the responsibility of the stipendiary stewards to contact their colleagues at other tracks.
1 薪水