mittimus

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English

Etymology

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

Pronunciation

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 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