¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Judgeships
1. judgeship [n] - See also: judgeship
Lexicographical Neighbors of Judgeships
Literary usage of Judgeships
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Political Science and Comparative Constitutional Law by John William Burgess (1891)
"The courts once established, however, and the judgeships created, endowed and
filled, Congress may not so abolish these offices as to deprive the incumbents ..."
2. The Law Review and Quarterly Journal of British and Foreign Jurisprudence by William S. Hein & Company (1847)
"By the term " Colonial judgeships," are to be understood judgeships, not merely in
... The law and practice as to those judgeships, varies very greatly, ..."
3. An Analysis and Summary of Old Testament History and the Laws of Moses: With by James Talboys Wheeler (1853)
"[The Book of Judges does not contain the judgeships of Eli and Samuel and his
sons, but concludes about B. c. 1112, extending over a period of 313 years; ..."
4. The Life, Times, and Correspondence of the Right Rev. Dr. Doyle, Bishop of by William John Fitzpatrick (1861)
"There were two vacant chief judgeships to be given away, and Lord Duncannon
endeavoured that ... judgeships ..."
5. Colonial Policy of 1840 and 1841: As Illustrated by the Governor's by Edward Macarthur (1841)
"... that there was to be an extensive surveying staff sent to Melbourne; there
would be new governorships and new judgeships, and other offices innumerable; ..."