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Definition of remand verb from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

remand

verb
 
/rɪˈmɑːnd/
 
/rɪˈmænd/
[usually passive]
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they remand
 
/rɪˈmɑːnd/
 
/rɪˈmænd/
he / she / it remands
 
/rɪˈmɑːndz/
 
/rɪˈmændz/
past simple remanded
 
/rɪˈmɑːndɪd/
 
/rɪˈmændɪd/
past participle remanded
 
/rɪˈmɑːndɪd/
 
/rɪˈmændɪd/
-ing form remanding
 
/rɪˈmɑːndɪŋ/
 
/rɪˈmændɪŋ/
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  1. to send somebody away from a court to wait for their trial which will take place at a later date
    • be remanded (+ adv./prep.) The two men were charged with burglary and remanded in custody (= sent to prison until their trial).
    • She was remanded on bail (= allowed to go free until the trial after leaving a sum of money with the court).
    • After his arrest, he was remanded to Brixton prison.
    Topics Law and justicec2
    Oxford Collocations DictionaryRemand is used with these nouns as the subject:
    • magistrate
    See full entry
    Word Originlate Middle English (as a verb in the sense ‘send back again’): from late Latin remandare, from re- ‘back’ + mandare ‘commit’. The noun dates from the late 18th cent.
See remand in the Oxford Advanced American Dictionary
trait
noun
 
 
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