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court-cupboard English

Meaning court-cupboard meaning

What does court-cupboard mean?

court-cupboard

(obsolete) A movable sideboard or buffet on which plate and other articles of luxury were displayed on special occasions.

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News and current affairs

The answer is obvious: China mounted a full-court press to change minds.
General Stanculescu has appealed to the Supreme Court to quash his conviction.
Similarly, while Britain has many outstanding musicians, the favorite of the royal court is Elton John.
A reckless, right-wing Supreme Court has agreed with them.
The Bush team was outspoken in its hostility to a range of international agreements, from the Kyoto Treaty to reduce global warming to the establishment of the International Criminal Court.
A German court has now issued arrest warrants for those involved in his abduction.
The International Criminal Court, which is now taking shape in The Hague with the selection of its first justices, does not have retroactive jurisdiction.
Two years ago, Prof. Ibrahim, together with practically all of the Ibn-Khaldun Institute staff, were arrested and put on trial before a State Security Court on trumped up charges.
WASHINGTON, DC - Sovereign debt has been back in the news recently, this time because of a United States Supreme Court ruling concerning Argentine debt.
It was that ruling that the Supreme Court recently upheld.
Under the court order, Argentina may not pay the holders of the new bonds unless it also pays the holdouts, and no US financial institution can serve as an intermediary to make payments for Argentina.
The US Supreme Court's decision on Argentina adds a new wrinkle, and may well further increase the risk attached to holding sovereign debt - and this to the cost of issuing it.
By a vote of eight to three, the Court upheld his conviction on charges of racism.
No court should convict someone lightly because of the views he espouses in the public sphere.
In the coming days, judges sitting on the International Criminal Court in The Hague will decide whether to issue a warrant for the arrest of Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir for the crime of genocide.
Although the threatened indictment of al-Bashir has prompted protest in Khartoum, no one expects him to appear in court soon.
Nonetheless, the Court has come under fire for three alleged failings.
On the one hand, the Court's actions often have political consequences: however well-founded, accusing the leader of a rebel army may be seen as taking sides in a conflict.
On the other hand, the Court cannot charge - or refrain from charging - a senior political or military official responsible for grave crimes solely to avert negative political repercussions.
Both of these complaints reflect a third: unease with the Court's overwhelming focus on Africa.
Thirty African governments have ratified the ICC's governing statute, and several of the Court's 18 judges hail from Africa, as does a substantial portion of its staff.
Still, the Court should not hesitate to act outside Africa when mass atrocities demand redress.
Failure to do so, in the view of Goldstone's commission, should result in the Security Council referring the matter to the prosecutor for the International Criminal Court in The Hague.
American President Barack Obama visited China, more in the spirit of a supplicant to an imperial court than the leader of the world's greatest superpower.
The fact that national governments referred three of the Court's four active cases - and that in each of those cases only armed rebels or government opponents have been charged so far - has contributed to this perception.

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