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Docket Common

Docket has 6 different meanings across 2 categories:

Noun · Verb

Definitions
Noun
1

(law) the calendar of a court; the list of cases to be tried or a summary of the court's activities

"The judge reviewed the daily docket to see which legal cases were scheduled for trial that morning."

2

a temporally organized plan for matters to be attended to

"The lawyer consulted her docket to ensure every client meeting was scheduled at the appropriate time."

3

A summary; a brief digest.

"The clerk handed me a docket summarizing all the recent court orders in just a few paragraphs."

In plain English: A docket is an official list of cases scheduled to be heard by a court on specific days.

"The lawyer checked her docket to see which cases were scheduled for trial today."

Usage: A docket is the official schedule listing cases to be heard by a court on specific days. It serves as a concise record that helps judges and attorneys organize their daily proceedings.

Verb
1

place on the docket for legal action

"Only 5 of the 120 cases docketed were tried"

2

make a summary or abstract of a legal document and inscribe it in a list

"The clerk docketed every pleading to ensure each case was properly recorded on the court's schedule."

3

To enter or inscribe in a docket, or list of causes for trial.

"The clerk will docket every new lawsuit to ensure it appears on the court's official schedule for trial."

In plain English: To docket something means to officially schedule it for a specific time, usually at court.

"The lawyer docketed all the new cases for review at the beginning of the week."

Example Sentences
"The lawyer checked her docket to see which cases were scheduled for trial today." noun
"The lawyer docketed all the new cases for review at the beginning of the week." verb
"The judge docketed the case for trial next Monday." verb
"She did not want to docket the meeting so late in the day." verb
"Please docket all your important appointments on your calendar." verb
Related Terms
Broader Terms (hypernyms)
calendar plan put sum up
Narrower Terms (hyponyms)
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Origin

The origin of docket is uncertain, though it may be a small or familiar form related to the word dock. It likely entered English as a term for a note or record kept at a dockside.

Rhyming Words
ket sket unket pocket backet ticket market gasket phuket bucket sacket becket wisket casket busket packet junket rocket picket broket
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