Statement of particulars
1statement of particulars — index specification Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …
2particulars — par‧tic‧u‧lars [pəˈtɪkjləz ǁ pərˈtɪkjlərz] noun [plural] facts and details about a person, event etc: • The company couldn t comment on particulars because it hadn t seen all the documents. particulars of • An employee is entitled to a written… …
3statement — state·ment n 1 a: an official or formal report or declaration a statement of policy b: an oral or written assertion (as by a witness) or conduct intended as an assertion see also hearsay, prior consistent statement …
4statement — In a general sense, an allegation; a declaration of matters of fact. The term has come to be used of a variety of formal.narratives of facts, required by law in various jurisdictions as the foundation of judicial or official proceedings and in a… …
5particulars — [[t]pə(r)tɪ̱kjʊləz[/t]] N PLURAL The particulars of something or someone are facts or details about them which are written down and kept as a record. You will find all the particulars in Chapter 9... The nurses at the admission desk asked her for …
6particulars of claim — Formerly known as a statement of claim. Under the Civil Procedure Rules, a document setting out the case of the claimant and specifying the facts relied upon. The particulars of claim are either contained in the claim form or served on the… …
7statement of case — The document(s) in which a party sets out its case in civil litigation. Known as a pleading before the introduction of the Civil Procedure Rules. A statement of case may be a claim form, particulars of claim, a defence, a Part 20 claim, a reply… …
8statement of claim — index demand Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 statement of claim …
9particulars — The details of a claim, or the separate items of an When these are stated in an orderly form, for the information of a defendant, the statement is called a bill of particulars . See particulars of criminal charges …
10particulars of criminal charges — A prosecutor, when a charge is general, is frequently ordered to give the defendant a statement of the specific acts charged (bill of particulars). Fed.R.Crim.P. 7. See bill (bill of particulars) …