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dispositive
[ dih-spoz-i-tiv ]
adjective
- involving or affecting disposition or settlement:
a dispositive clue in a case of embezzlement.
亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins
Origin of dispositive1
Example Sentences
No single factor is dispositive.
The Reid Technique also condones lying in certain circumstances, as long as it doesn鈥檛 involve 鈥渋ncontrovertible or dispositive evidence,鈥 noting that the Supreme Court in 1969 in Frazier vs.
In one especially Kafkaesque incident, I was even shut out of a hearing on dispositive motions for my client, Daniel Hale, even though there was no classified information at issue.
The majority 鈥減resents tradition itself as the constitutional argument,鈥 as though it is 鈥渄ispositive of the First Amendment issue,鈥 without any 鈥渢heoretical justification.鈥
In a passage that must have made the liberal justices proud, Barrett continued: 鈥淩elying exclusively on history and tradition may seem like a way of avoiding judge-made tests. But a rule rendering tradition dispositive is itself a judge-made test. And I do not see a good reason to resolve this case using that approach rather than by adopting a generally applicable principle.鈥
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