English to Marathi Dictionary magisterial

magisterial

न्यायालयीन
definition
adjective
a magisterial pronouncement
having or showing great authority.
Instead of being terminated, these pilot projects should be expanded to other magisterial districts.
relating to or conducted by a magistrate.
translation of 'magisterial'
मजिस्ट्रेटचा,
मॅजिस्ट्रेटविषयक
example
He will not be able to change his residential address or leave the 'magisterial' district without approval from the head of community corrections.
Most readers of this collection will be familiar with Foot's 'magisterial' two-volume biography of Aneurin Bevan, published in 1962 and 1973.
With jurisdiction limited to the Johannesburg 'magisterial' district, the court will have the power of an ordinary magistrate's court and will be able to issue fines up to R10 000 or a term of imprisonment of no longer than six months.
William Randolph Hearst was, as the author of this 'magisterial' study rightly says, a major force in American politics and journalism for half a century.
Volume 2 of Roy Foster's 'magisterial' biography of W. B. Yeats opens in 1915, when Yeats was in his fiftieth year and at a crossroads in his life.
As a subject area, philosophy still suffers from an image problem sometimes, whether as austere, 'magisterial' or downright difficult, so this reassurance seems entirely appropriate.
However, these issues are really just hairsplitting; it is difficult to find fault with such a 'magisterial' work simply because the author did not cast an already broad net even wider.
‘The new by-laws first need to be certified by the magistrates of the various 'magisterial' districts in the municipal area of Johannesburg, which could take up to two weeks,’ said De Klerk.
In Schumann's Fourth Symphony his measured speeds are so subtly controlled that again squareness is avoided, while Emil Gilels gives a 'magisterial' account of the Piano Concerto, crisply lightened in the central Intermezzo.
Overseen by the Chief Magistrate of Johannesburg, it will have the power of an ordinary magistrate's court, with its jurisdiction limited to the Johannesburg 'magisterial' district.
Hay addresses 'magisterial' misconduct in ‘Dread of the Crown Office: the English Magistracy and King's Bench 1740-1800’.
The short volume is composed of a set of lectures that Keegan, author of such 'magisterial' works as The First World War and Fields of Battle, wrote in 1988 for the British Broadcasting System.
Port Elizabeth Chief Magistrate Peter Rothman, who oversees 43 'magisterial' districts, including East London, said representations were being made to the justice department to address the shortfalls.
But it's the obvious conclusion to emerge from Moloney's 'magisterial' work, though he doesn't himself draw it out as explicitly as this.
With their aid he took an audience of aspiring civil servants through a 'magisterial' ecological history of the Himalaya: the glaciers, the rivers, the forests, the fields.
To be fair, Nathan Rosenberg and L.E. Birdzell, in their 'magisterial' How The West Grew Rich, do argue that labor unions improved wages in manufacturing.
If Professor Kent's study is incisive and short, Lord Hattersley's is long and designed (but fails) to be 'magisterial' .
The performers look directly at us - here is no subterfuge, no stage personas, just 'magisterial' skill on transparent display.
Sakkie Retief, officer for the Graaff-Reinet 'magisterial' district, confirmed that two large swarms, already in the flying stage, were active north of Nieu Bethesda.
Roy Keane, perhaps, at his most 'magisterial' , used to command the midfield and dictate traffic.
With its deep research, compelling subject, clear analysis, and 'magisterial' yet accessible authorial voice, Black Prisoners and Their World will be a standard point of reference for years to come.
In this 'magisterial' tour d' horizon of the changing 20 th-century US presidency, Stephen Graubard argues that war and the threat of war have been factors as salient in the development of the presidency as the personalities involved.
I can picture him now, often speaking without a note, with humour, incisive argument and 'magisterial' disdain for the opposing view, swatting away anyone ill-judged enough to make a hostile intervention.
At the 1991 census, Utrecht town had a population of 2,866, representing only 10 percent of the total population in the 'magisterial' district.
They are not claiming 'magisterial' authority and bossing other people around.
In his 'magisterial' book on leadership, James MacGregor Burns describes the intellectual as someone concerned with ‘values, purposes and ends that transcend immediate needs’.
In 1883 Howitt's 'magisterial' district was enlarged to include south Gippsland.
This quotation is the epigraph to David Halberstam's 'magisterial' ‘Summer of '49,’ surely one of the most influential books in the baseball literary canon.
He called a meeting of senior and responsible people of the village to bring normalcy in the locality and after describing the incident as shameful, he assured the people of a 'magisterial' enquiry.
According to the provincial deputy director of traffic operations, fines between R1000 and R2500 were issued depending on 'magisterial' districts.
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