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Definition of Charge sheet
1. Noun. The daily written record of events (as arrests) in a police station.
Generic synonyms: Written Account, Written Record
Lexicographical Neighbors of Charge Sheet
Literary usage of Charge sheet
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. A Manual for Courts-martial, Courts of Inquiry and of Other Procedure Under by United States War Dept (1916)
"All charges for trial by court-martial will be prepared in triplicate, using the
prescribed charge sheet as a first sheet and using such additional sheets ..."
2. Slang and Its Analogues Past and Present: A Dictionary, Historical and by John Stephen Farmer, William Ernest Henley (1891)
"3. (old). — The hangman ; Jack Ketch.—See DANCE, verb, sense i. D AND D, phr.
(police).—'Drunk and disorderly (in connection with charge sheet cases). ..."
3. Military Law by William Winthrop (1886)
"(D.) If the convening officer directs that, in the event of the conviction of a
prisoner upon a charg'e in any charge-sheet, he need not be tried upon the ..."
4. Military Law: Its Procedure and Practice by Sisson Cooper Pratt (1887)
"In such a case the 213 court shall, after having been sworn, arraign and try the
prisoner in respect of each charge sheet separately up to the Jinding. ..."
5. The Law Reports. Court of Common Pleas by Great Britain Court of Common Pleas (1870)
"The charge- sheet containing this allegation was accordingly signed by the defendant.
The defendant did not, nor did any one on his behalf, require that the ..."
6. The Metallurgy of the Common Metals, Gold, Silver, Iron, Copper, Lead and Zinc by Leonard Strong Austin (1907)
"At the left of the charge-sheet write in the slag composition. ... 4 Ib.
copper lost in the slag, to be deducted from the 100 Ib. given on the charge-sheet. ..."
7. Reports of All the Cases Decided by All the Superior Courts Relating to by Edward William Cox, Great BRitain Magistrates' cases (1871)
"The charge sheet containing this allegation was accordingly signed by the defendant.
fC.P. 10. The defendant did not, nor did anyone on big behalf, ..."