Similar words: perjury, silver jubilee, de jure, adjure, injure, abjure, injured, conjure. Meaning: ['pɜrdʒə /'pɜː-] v. knowingly tell an untruth in a legal court and render oneself guilty of perjury.
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1. The judge warned the witness not to perjure herself.
2. Witnesses lied and perjured themselves.
3. She admitted that she had perjured herself.
4. The judge claimed that the witness perjured himself.
5. The witness perjured himself.
6. It was true that I would never perjure myself.
7. And Mr Mitchum wouldn't perjure himself.
8. You will not jeopardise that job I perjured myself to get for you by a vagrancy charge tonight of all nights.
9. You made me perjure myself.
10. The man scrupled to perjure himself.
11. Physical evidence cannot be wrong, it cannot perjure itself, it cannot be wholly absent.
12. I cannot perjure myself to get him off the hook.
13. She would rather perjure herself than admit to her sins.
14. In our criminal law, crime of perjure encroaches on the normal criminal procedure of justice.
14. Wish you can benefit from our online sentence dictionary and make progress every day!
15. After the first instance, his lawyer had made great efforts, and tried every means to eye on that witness; as expected, this man was incited to perjure in court.
16. "What?! " He is so astonished, "You asked me to perjure, and now asked me to repent?! "
More similar words: perjury, silver jubilee, de jure, adjure, injure, abjure, injured, conjure, conjure up, paper jam, interject, overjoyed, lumberjack, interjection, jury, juror, injury, grand jury, conjuring, petit jury, conjuration, jurisdiction, jurisprudence, add insult to injury, appellate jurisdiction, cure, sure, pure, lure, allure.