plead

கெஞ்ச
definition
verb
they pleaded with Carol to come home again
make an emotional appeal.
using cheap melodrama to plead the case for three prisoners
present and argue for (a position), especially in court or in another public context.
translation of 'plead'
நியாயத்தை எடுத்துப் பேசு
verb
வழக்காடு
example
So there was no voice strong enough to 'plead' their case.
So if the excisable good in question were alleged to be brandy, how would the pleader 'plead' the nature of those goods?
If she wants to 'plead' good reason on this occasion, she also needs to apologise.
In our universities, students justifiably 'plead' poverty and the recommendations of the Cubie inquiry have been completely ignored.
The unhappy partner had to petition the legislature or court to 'plead' his or her case.
In return, the unions agreed to 'plead' the claim in the arbitration tribunal, tying their members to whatever decision is handed down.
In the courtroom, the German judge read the charges and asked me in which court I wished to 'plead' my case: German or American.
using cheap melodrama to 'plead' the case for three prisoners
As counsel for the Bank has pointed out, the Statement of Defence does not 'plead' unconscionability.
How can one 'plead' ignorance in the presence of this massive and continuous universal call?
My mother particularly thought I'd make a very good barrister, and you know, do I think I could 'plead' a case in court?
The city now seeks to amend the claim to 'plead' fraudulent misrepresentation and deceit and to seek punitive damages.
I thought you had conceded earlier that as originally framed, it would not have been appropriate to expect the accused to 'plead' guilty to that charge.
When he saw Monica's car, he'd flag it down, 'plead' engine trouble and ask if Corbett could drive him.
They continually 'plead' poverty, yet when it comes to dishing out bonuses, they are good to their own.
the idea that in public relations work someone is paid to 'plead' a special case is disliked
A court should only grant a motion for particulars where they are necessary for the moving party to 'plead' and the particulars are not within the knowledge of the moving party.
But the various cities and counties have continued to 'plead' poverty in the hope of receiving aid from central government.
Phil gets to live on beyond this, and with his history of rather public instability, he is pretty well set up to 'plead' insanity.
The death penalty is not that often given to these types of people because at the trial, the defendant will 'plead' insanity and claim that they were not in control of their actions at the time that they committed the crime.
I notice that the Commonwealth, by its defence, does not 'plead' any statute of limitations.
It is interesting to note, lest anyone should 'plead' passage of time, that the court stipulated that sentences were to run from February 4, 1999.
The couple went to court in October to 'plead' poverty and beg for financial mercy.
The Plaintiff did not 'plead' from an employment law perspective, that the employment contract had been breached, or that the Plaintiff had been fired without cause.
Unions are special 'pleaders' ; no one mistakes them for impartial observers or disinterested honest brokers.
The claim 'pleads' the provisions of the judgment in the 1995 action.
But Mr Brown and his peers cannot find comfortable haven in 'pleading' helplessness in the face of a fractured infrastructure.
But that is not how the case was 'pleaded' or argued.
By 'pleading' economic necessity, the company tacitly rules out of court all arguments based on morality or claims that they are supporting deviance.
It exploded as he 'pleaded' with police to diffuse it.
Credits: Google Translate