objections - meaning and definition. What is objections
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What (who) is objections - definition

WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Ojection; Objected; Objecting; Objections; Objection (disambiguation)

objection         
n.
Exception, difficulty, doubt, scruple.
objection         
n. a lawyer's protest about the legal propriety of a question which has been asked of a witness by the opposing attorney, with the purpose of making the trial judge decide if the question can be asked. A proper objection must be based on one of the specific reasons for not allowing a question. These include: irrelevant, immaterial, incompetent (often stated together, which may mean the question is not about the issues in the trial or the witness is not qualified to answer), hearsay (the answer would be what someone told the witness rather than what he/she knew first-hand), leading (putting words in the mouth of one's own witness), calls for a conclusion (asking for opinion, not facts), compound question (two or more questions asked together), or lack of foundation (referring to a document lacking testimony as to authenticity or source). An objection must be made quickly and loudly to halt the witness before he/she answers. The judge will either "sustain" the objection (ruling out the question) or "overrule" it (allow the question). The judge may ask for an "offer of proof" in which the lawyer asking the question must explain to the court the reason the question is relevant, and what evidence his/her questions will bring out. Badly worded, confusing or compound questions are usually challenged by an objection to the form of the question, which is essentially a demand that the question be withdrawn and reworded. An attorney may "object" to a witness's answer as "non-responsive" to the question, but the proper request should be that the answer or a comment without a question be "stricken" from the record. See also: compound question hearsay immaterial incompetent irrelevant lay a foundation leading question object overrule sustain
Objection         
·noun Cause of trouble; sorrow.
II. Objection ·noun The act of objecting; as, to prevent agreement, or action, by objection.
III. Objection ·noun That which is, or may be, presented in opposition; an adverse reason or argument; a reason for objecting; obstacle; impediment; as, I have no objection to going; unreasonable objections.

Wikipedia

Objection

Objection may refer to:

  • Objection (United States law), a motion during a trial to disallow a witness's testimony or other evidence
  • Objection (argument), used in informal logic and argument mapping
    • Inference objection, a special case of the above
    • Counterargument, in informal logic, an objection to an objection
  • Objection to the consideration of a question, in parliamentary procedure
  • Objection (Tango), a song by Shakira
  • A phrase shouted numerous times in games from the Ace Attorney series; its purpose in line with the legal and argumental terms
Examples of use of objections
1. And while there are moral objections to torture, most of my objections are pragmatic.
2. The first 50 potential jurors included 11 approved over defense objections and five who survived prosecutors‘ objections.
3. Objections Germany, Austria, Denmark and Portugal raised strong objections on the first day of the committee talks.
4. Linda Lingle struggled with environmental objections.
5. Some opponents cited religious and health objections.