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9. A person convicted for a criminal …………..may go to gaol.
This question similar with Puzzle No. 16, 11 Across and 19, 9 Across.
A11. Someone guilty of ……… is likely to end up in gaol. The answer: robbery A9. People who …………. Cheques fraudulently may end up in gaol. The answer: alter con·vict ( k…n-v¹kt") v. con·vict·ed con·vict·ing con·victs v. tr. 1. Law To find or prove (someone) guilty of an offense or crime, especially by the verdict of a court: The jury convicted the defendant of manslaughter. 2. To show or delcare to be blameworthy; condemn: His remarks convicted him of a lack of sensitivity. 3. To make aware of one's sinfulness or guilt. v. intr. 1. To return a verdict of guilty in a court: " We need jurors . . . who will not convict merely because they are suspicious " Scott Turow n. ( k¼n"v¹kt") Law 1. A person found or declared guilty of an offense or crime. 2. A person serving a sentence of imprisonment. adj. Archaic 1. Found guilty; convicted. [Middle English convicten from Latin convincere convict-; See convince ]crim·i·nal ( kr¹m"…-n…l) adj. Abbr. crim. 1. Of, involving, or having the nature of crime: criminal abuse. 2. Relating to the administration of penal law. 3. a. Guilty of crime. b. Characteristic of a criminal. 4. Shameful; disgraceful: a criminal waste of talent. n. 1. One that has committed or been legally convicted of a crime. [Middle English from Old French criminel from Late Latin crºmin³lis from Latin crºmen crºmin-accusation; See crime ] crim "i·nal·ly adv.krei- . Important derivatives are: riddle 1 garble crime criminal discriminate certain concern decree discern excrement secret crisis critic, hypocrisy To sieve, discriminate, distinguish. I. 1. Basic form with variant instrumental suffixes. a. suffixed form *krei-tro- . RIDDLE 1 , from Old English hridder , hriddel , sieve, from Germanic *hridra- , a sieve; b. suffixed form *krei-dhro- . CRIBRIFORM , GARBLE , from Latin cr ºbrum, a sieve. 2. Suffixed form *krei-men- . a. CRIME , ( CRIMINAL ); RECRIMINATE , from Latin cr ºmen, judgment, crime; b. DISCRIMINATE , from Latin discr ºmen, distinction ( dis- , apart). 3. Suffixed zero-grade form *kri-no- (participial form *kri-to- ). CERTAIN ; CONCERN , DECREE , DISCERN , ( EXCREMENT ), EXCRETE , ( INCERTITUDE ), RECREMENT , SECERN , SECRET , from Latin cernere (perfect cr ¶vº; past participle cr ¶tus), to sift, separate, decide. 4. Suffixed zero-grade form *kri-n-yo- . CRISIS , CRITIC , CRITERION ; APOCRINE , DIACRITIC , ECCRINE , ENDOCRINE , EPICRITIC , EXOCRINE , HEMATOCRIT , HYPOCRISY , from Greek krinein , to separate, decide, judge ( > krinesthai , to explain). [ Pokorny 4. sker- , Section II. 945. ] Gaol ( j³l) n. v. Chiefly British 1. Variant of jail .
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