Judicial means having to do with judges and making fair decisions.
Imagine you're playing a game with your friends, and someone says they didn't get a turn because it wasn’t fair. That’s when you might want a judge, like a grown-up who listens carefully and decides what’s right. A judge is like the boss of fairness in a courtroom.
How Judges Work
When people argue about something important, like if someone broke a rule or didn't pay for something they owed, the judicial system helps them figure it out.
A judge listens to both sides, just like you listen when your brother and sister are arguing over who took the last cookie. Then the judge makes a decision that everyone has to follow, because it’s supposed to be fair.
Sometimes, there are more than one judge, they can work together to decide harder cases, just like how your teachers might help you solve bigger problems in class.
So next time you hear judicial, think of judges being the bosses of fairness!
Examples
- A judge decides who is telling the truth in a dispute.
- A parent uses fairness to split chores between siblings.
- A teacher gives everyone the same test to be fair.
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See also
- How Does Sociology of Law: Key Concepts Explained Work?
- How Does Law Explained | How Rules Shape Society Work?
- How Does The Legal Systems We Live In Today Work?
- What are legal frameworks?
- How To Always Make the Right Decision? – Sadhguru?