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Committal   /kəmˈɪtəl/   Listen
Committal

noun
1.
The official act of consigning a person to confinement (as in a prison or mental hospital).  Synonyms: commitment, consignment.
2.
The act of committing a crime.  Synonyms: commission, perpetration.



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"Committal" Quotes from Famous Books



... Billy begins to have his doubts. "It ends my career if I'm found out," he reflects, "whereas they can't do much to Stan for visiting." And thus communing with himself, he has decided to guard his secret against all comers,—at least for the present. And so he is non-committal ...
— Starlight Ranch - and Other Stories of Army Life on the Frontier • Charles King

... this astonishingly audacious proceeding must result either in the fall of Cecil, to whom it was due, or in open war with Spain, and the immediate committal of England to the formation of a Protestant League; which might force the English Catholics in their turn directly to espouse the cause of Mary. The reception given in this country shortly before to the Cardinal of Chatillon, Coligny's brother, was a symptom of Cecil's ...
— England Under the Tudors • Arthur D. Innes

... minutes later Arch was loping back up the river road. Within an hour he had won old Jason to a non-committal silence and straight-way volunteered to show the colonel the outcroppings of his coal. And old Jason mounted his sorrel mare and rode with the party ...
— The Heart Of The Hills • John Fox, Jr.

... to a standstill at the door. Here was a decision thrust on him for which he was oddly unprepared. He recognised at once it meant setting the seal to his own committal if he answered as the lawyer evidently expected and hoped he would do. He paused just long enough to remember how hardly he had taken Mr. Aston's insistence he should sign his ...
— Christopher Hibbault, Roadmaker • Marguerite Bryant

... in the fictions of the pretended archbishop.[7] The Paladins are well distinguished from one another; Orlando as foremost alike in prowess and magnanimity, Rinaldo by his vehemence, Ricciardetto by his amours, Astolfo by an ostentatious rashness and self-committal; but in all these respects they appear to have been made to the author's hand. Neither does the poem exhibit any prevailing force of imagery, or of expression, apart from popular idiomatic phraseology; still less, though it has plenty of infernal ...
— Stories from the Italian Poets: With Lives of the Writers, Volume 1 • Leigh Hunt


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