English

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Adjective

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inquisitory (comparative more inquisitory, superlative most inquisitory)

  1. In the manner of an inquisition or inquiry.
    • 1908, Herbert Baxter Adams, The Johns Hopkins University Studies in Historical and Political Science:
      Called into being probably because of the continued emigration of Puritans to New England, the complaints against the Massachusetts charter, and the growth of Independency in that colony, it was in origin a coercive, not an inquisitory, body, in the same class with the courts of Star Chamber and High Commission, and the Councils of Wales and the North.

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