mittimus

English

Etymology

From Latin mittimus (the opening word of such a document), first-person plural of mittō (send).

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /ˈmɪtɪməs/

Noun

mittimus (plural mittimuses or mittimi)

  1. (law, archaic outside the US) A warrant issued for someone to be taken into custody.
  2. A writ for moving records from one court to another.
    • 2013 March 31, Mark Morgenstein, “Suspect in prisons chief's death may have been freed 4 years early”, in CNN:
      Next, sometimes the same clerk, but often a second clerk, who may not have been in the courtroom, types up the mittimus, the formal court order that directs corrections offers[sic] to commit someone to prison, and something could get lost in translation there.
  3. A formal dismissal from a situation.

Latin

Verb

mittimus

  1. first-person plural present active indicative of mittō
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