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court-martial
[ kawrt-mahr-shuhl, -mahr-, kohrt- ]
noun
- a court consisting of military or naval personnel appointed by a commander to try charges of offenses by soldiers, sailors, etc., against military or naval law.
- a trial by such a court.
- a conviction by such a court:
He lost his privileges because of his court-martial.
- a session of such a court:
He attended the court-martial this morning.
verb (used with object)
- to arraign and try by court-martial.
court martial
noun
- a military court that tries persons subject to military law
verb
- tr to try by court martial
Word History and Origins
Origin of court-martial1
Example Sentences
Suspending the prison sentence for two years, the military board at a court martial in Bulford, Wiltshire, also ordered him to 30 days of rehabilitation, 150 hours unpaid work and to pay his victim £2,500 compensation.
What the personnel had done merited not merely reassignment or discharge, but potentially a court martial for deliberately rendering themselves undeployable, endangering other service members, gross insubordination and possibly even mutiny, as it was an organized action against their unit.
Their court martial, in a strange display of leniency, sentenced the most culpable perpetrator to just 10 years in prison, while one of the four defendants did not even receive a punitive discharge.
The sailors were tried and convicted in a court martial, sentenced to bad conduct discharge and fined three months pay.
While investigators searched for Lee, he was convicted and sentenced in absentia at a Jan. 19 court martial for felony sexual assault.
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