closing quotation - definição. O que é closing quotation. Significado, conceito
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O que (quem) é closing quotation - definição

CONCLUDING STATEMENT OF EACH PARTY'S COUNSEL IN A TRIAL
Closing Argument; Closing (law); Summation (law); Closing remarks; Closing Arguments

double quote         
  • Clearly distinguishable apostrophe and angular quotation marks.
  • Bulletin de l’Agence générale des colonies}}, No. 302, May 1934, showing the usage of a pair of marks, opening and closing, at the level of lower case letters
  • Clash between the apostrophe and curved quotation marks in a phrase meaning “the crimes of the ‘good Samaritans’ ”
  • Blank space (in yellow) provoked by elevated quotation marks; some type designers consider this excessive.<ref name="design et typo" />
  • Different forms of German and English quotation marks and similar looking signs
PUNCTUATION MARK
Double quote; Quote mark; ‚; „; ‘; “; ”; Angle quotes; Curved quotes; Left double-angle quote; Right double-angle quote; Quotation dash; Smart quote; Inverted commas; Inverted comma; Curly quote; "; Single quote; Distance quotes; Speech mark; Speech marks; Dumb quotes; Dumb quote; ❝; ❞; Double quotes; 』; 『; ‛; Single quotes; 「; 」; Curly quotes; ‘ ’; “ ”; Quote sign; Quotation Mark; Quotation mark glyphs; Quotation mark, glyphs; Single quotation mark; Double quotation mark; "; Smart apostrophes; Quotation marks, non-English usage; Turned commas; ❛; ❜; ‟; Spanish quotes; French quotations; ' '; Typewriter quotes; Quotation Marks; “”; Quotation marks (punctuation); Quotation marks; Sixty-Nine and Ninety-Nine; Grocer's quotes; Quote (typography); Quotation mark, non-English usage; Non-English usage of quotation mark; U+0022; Quote marks; Citation mark; ‘’; " "; „“; „ “; „"; Non-English use of quotation marks; Quote characters; Curved quote; Quotation marks in other languages; Εισαγωγικά; Παύλα; ’’; Quote symbol; ❟; ❠; 「; 」; ﹁; ﹂; ﹃; ﹄; Quotation mark glyph; Fancy quote; Non-English usage of quotation marks; World usage of quotation marks; Doublequote; Speechmarks; Speechmark; Quotemarks; 🙶; 🙷; 🙸; International variation in quotation marks; French quotes; CJK quotation marks; Chinese quotation marks; Talking mark; Talking marks; Smartquote; Smartquotes; Quotemark; €™; Opening single quote; Closing single quote; Double quote mark; Double quotation marks; „”; Lquot; Rquot; Ldquo; Rdquo; Kavychki; Кавычки; ASCII 34; \x22; Japanese quotation marks; 「」; 『』; Opening single quotation mark; Straight quotes; ””; ‚‘; Quote dash; 66 and 99; Sixty-six and ninety-nine; Sixty six and ninety nine; 66 & 99; Single quotation marks; " " Straight quotation marks; Quoting mark
<character> '"' ASCII character 34. Often used in programming languages to delimit strings. In Unix shells and Perl it delimits a string inside which variable substitution may occur. Common names: quote. Rare: literal mark; double-glitch; ITU-T: quotation marks; ITU-T: dieresis; dirk; INTERCAL: rabbit-ears; double prime. (1995-03-28)
Block quotation         
SPECIALLY TYPESET QUOTATION IN DOCUMENT
Block-quote; Block quotes; Blockquotes; Block quote; Long quote; Long quotation; Block Quotation
A block quotation (also known as a long quotation or extract) is a quotation in a written document that is set off from the main text as a paragraph, or block of text, and typically distinguished visually using indentation and a different typeface or smaller size font. This is in contrast to setting it off with quotation marks in a run-in quote.
single quote         
  • Clearly distinguishable apostrophe and angular quotation marks.
  • Bulletin de l’Agence générale des colonies}}, No. 302, May 1934, showing the usage of a pair of marks, opening and closing, at the level of lower case letters
  • Clash between the apostrophe and curved quotation marks in a phrase meaning “the crimes of the ‘good Samaritans’&#x202F;”
  • Blank space (in yellow) provoked by elevated quotation marks; some type designers consider this excessive.<ref name="design et typo" />
  • Different forms of German and English quotation marks and similar looking signs
PUNCTUATION MARK
Double quote; Quote mark; ‚; „; ‘; “; ”; Angle quotes; Curved quotes; Left double-angle quote; Right double-angle quote; Quotation dash; Smart quote; Inverted commas; Inverted comma; Curly quote; "; Single quote; Distance quotes; Speech mark; Speech marks; Dumb quotes; Dumb quote; ❝; ❞; Double quotes; 』; 『; ‛; Single quotes; 「; 」; Curly quotes; ‘ ’; “ ”; Quote sign; Quotation Mark; Quotation mark glyphs; Quotation mark, glyphs; Single quotation mark; Double quotation mark; "; Smart apostrophes; Quotation marks, non-English usage; Turned commas; ❛; ❜; ‟; Spanish quotes; French quotations; ' '; Typewriter quotes; Quotation Marks; “”; Quotation marks (punctuation); Quotation marks; Sixty-Nine and Ninety-Nine; Grocer's quotes; Quote (typography); Quotation mark, non-English usage; Non-English usage of quotation mark; U+0022; Quote marks; Citation mark; ‘’; " "; „“; „ “; „"; Non-English use of quotation marks; Quote characters; Curved quote; Quotation marks in other languages; Εισαγωγικά; Παύλα; ’’; Quote symbol; ❟; ❠; 「; 」; ﹁; ﹂; ﹃; ﹄; Quotation mark glyph; Fancy quote; Non-English usage of quotation marks; World usage of quotation marks; Doublequote; Speechmarks; Speechmark; Quotemarks; 🙶; 🙷; 🙸; International variation in quotation marks; French quotes; CJK quotation marks; Chinese quotation marks; Talking mark; Talking marks; Smartquote; Smartquotes; Quotemark; €™; Opening single quote; Closing single quote; Double quote mark; Double quotation marks; „”; Lquot; Rquot; Ldquo; Rdquo; Kavychki; Кавычки; ASCII 34; \x22; Japanese quotation marks; 「」; 『』; Opening single quotation mark; Straight quotes; ””; ‚‘; Quote dash; 66 and 99; Sixty-six and ninety-nine; Sixty six and ninety nine; 66 & 99; Single quotation marks; " " Straight quotation marks; Quoting mark
<character> "'" ASCII character 39. Common names include single quote; quote; ITU-T: apostrophe. Rare: prime; glitch; tick; irk; pop; INTERCAL: spark; ITU-T: closing single quotation mark; ITU-T: acute accent. Single quote is used in C and derived languages to introduce a single character literal value which is represented internally by its ASCII code. In the Unix shells and Perl single quote is used to delimit strings in which variable substitution is not performed (in contrast to double-quote-delimited strings). Single quote is often used in text for both open and close single quotation mark and apostrophe. Typesetters use two different symbols - open has a tail going up, close and apostrophe have tails hanging down (like a raised comma). Some people use back quote (') for open single quotation mark. (1998-04-04)

Wikipédia

Closing argument

A closing argument, summation, or summing up is the concluding statement of each party's counsel reiterating the important arguments for the trier of fact, often the jury, in a court case. A closing argument occurs after the presentation of evidence. A closing argument may not contain any new information and may only use evidence introduced at trial. It is not customary to raise objections during closing arguments, except for egregious behavior. However, such objections, when made, can prove critical later in order to preserve appellate issues.

In the United States, the plaintiff is generally entitled to open the argument. The defendant usually goes second. The plaintiff or prosecution is usually then permitted a final rebuttal argument. In some jurisdictions, however, this form is condensed, and the prosecution or plaintiff goes second, after the defense, with no rebuttals. Either party may waive their opportunity to present a closing argument.

During closing arguments, counsel may not (among other restrictions) vouch for the credibility of witnesses, indicate their personal opinions of the case, comment on the absence of evidence that they themselves have caused to be excluded, or attempt to exhort the jury to irrational, emotional behavior.

In some countries (e.g. France or Germany), in criminal cases, the defendant's counsel always makes their closing argument last, after the public prosecutor or any other party. Sometimes the defendant is allowed to address the court directly after his or her counsel's closing argument.

In a criminal law case, the prosecution will restate all the evidence which helps prove each element of the offence. In the United States, there are often several limits as to what the prosecution may or may not say, including precluding the prosecution from using a defendant's exercise of his Fifth Amendment right to silence as evidence of guilt. One of the most important restrictions on prosecutors, however, is against shifting the burden of proof, or implying that the defense must put on evidence or somehow prove the innocence of the defendant.

In some cases, a judge's presentation of the jury instruction is also known as summing up. In this case, the judge is merely articulating the law and questions of fact upon which the jury is asked to deliberate.

The purposes and techniques of closing argument are taught in courses on Trial Advocacy. The closing is often planned early in the trial planning process. The attorneys will integrate the closing with the overall case strategy through either a theme and theory or, with more advanced strategies, a line of effort. The prosecution should also state the main points and be sure to give their side of the argument and to be emotional.