Of or relating to the High Court of Justiciary.
Judicial: of or relating to the administration of justice, judges, or judgeships.
Of or relating to a circuit court held by one of the judges of the High Court of Justiciary.
The judiciary: a collective term for the court system or the body of judges, justices etc.
A judgeship: a judge's jurisdiction, power, or office.
Various equivalent medieval offices elsewhere in Europe.
A believer in the doctrine (or heresy) that adherence to religious law redeems mankind before God.
A justiciar: a high-ranking judicial officer of medieval England or Scotland.
A magistrate.
A judge or justice.
A Chief Justiciar: the highest political and judicial officer of the Kingdom of England in the 12th and 13th centuries.
Being a graduate or alumnus of a school, especially a public school.
A grammatical intensifier, often used in describing something positive, and combined with another adjective.
Having been used and thus no longer new or unused.
Former, previous.
Of a living being, having lived for most of the expected years.
Of an object, concept, relationship, etc., having existed for a relatively long period of time.
That is no longer in existence.
Having existed or lived for the specified time.
Tiresome after prolonged repetition.
Of a species or language, belonging to a lineage that is distantly related others
Obsolete; out-of-date.
Said of subdued colors, particularly reds, pinks and oranges, as if they had faded over time.
Indicating affection.
Of a perishable item, having existed for most of, or more than, its shelf life.
Familiar.
One's parents.
People who are old; old beings; the older generation, taken as a group.
A person older than oneself, especially an adult in relation to a teenager.
A typically dark-coloured lager brewed by the traditional top-fermentation method.