Definition of Preconviction

1. Adjective. Prior to conviction. ¹

¹ Source: wiktionary.com

Definition of Preconviction

1. [n -S]

Lexicographical Neighbors of Preconviction

preconstitutes
preconstituting
preconstitutional
preconstructed
preconstruction
preconsumerist
precontact
precontest
precontract
precontracts
precontrive
precontrived
precontrives
precontriving
preconvention
preconviction (current term)
preconvictions
precook
precooked
precooker
precookers
precooking
precooks
precool
precooled
precooling
precools
precopulatory
precoracoid
precoracoids

Literary usage of Preconviction

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. Healthy People 2000: National Health Promotion & Disease Prevention by DIANE Publishing Company (2004)
"Also, pretrial or preconviction diversion programs operate in some courts. Administrative suspension and revocation laws and implied consent laws are ..."

2. Longman's Magazine by Charles James Longman (1890)
"How many people have attacked his books with the preconviction of finding them filled with outrageous ..."

3. The National Review edited by Richard Holt Hutton, Walter Bagehot (1856)
"The difficulty is to get people to read poetry at all; once get them to read with a preconviction of ..."

4. The Entomologist; an Illustrated Journal of General Entomology by Edward Newman, Royal Entomological Society of London (1889)
"The preconviction I entertained with respect to Aglio, tau was that it haunted the shade of forest glades and clearings, where the caterpillar bred recluse ..."

5. Therapeutic Gazette (1904)
"These views are an almost necessary result of the author's preconviction that the mechanism of the asthmatic dyspnea consists in constriction of the ..."

6. Buffalo Medical Journal (1854)
"... in some respects unsatisfactory, and as the reporter implies, obscured by a preconviction of the correctness of the explanation, is to be regarded as ..."

7. Healthy People 2000: National Health Promotion & Disease Prevention by DIANE Publishing Company (2004)
"Also, pretrial or preconviction diversion programs operate in some courts. Administrative suspension and revocation laws and implied consent laws are ..."

8. Longman's Magazine by Charles James Longman (1890)
"How many people have attacked his books with the preconviction of finding them filled with outrageous ..."

9. The National Review edited by Richard Holt Hutton, Walter Bagehot (1856)
"The difficulty is to get people to read poetry at all; once get them to read with a preconviction of ..."

10. The Entomologist; an Illustrated Journal of General Entomology by Edward Newman, Royal Entomological Society of London (1889)
"The preconviction I entertained with respect to Aglio, tau was that it haunted the shade of forest glades and clearings, where the caterpillar bred recluse ..."

11. Therapeutic Gazette (1904)
"These views are an almost necessary result of the author's preconviction that the mechanism of the asthmatic dyspnea consists in constriction of the ..."

12. Buffalo Medical Journal (1854)
"... in some respects unsatisfactory, and as the reporter implies, obscured by a preconviction of the correctness of the explanation, is to be regarded as ..."

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