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The phrase "a common plea of" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when referring to a frequently expressed request or appeal made by a group or individual.
Example: "A common plea of the community is for better public transportation options."
Alternatives: "a frequent request for" or "a typical appeal from".
Exact(1)
It is a common plea of nursing home and hospital patients, who long for their homes, fragrant with healthy memories.
Similar(58)
Reducing delay in diagnosis was a common plea with considerable anxiety, confusion and delay for those in the continued care of non-specialists.
Ordinary people," was a common plea.
Mason had previously served as a common pleas judge in Cuyahoga County and in the state legislature.
The judiciary comprises the seven-member Supreme Court; a dozen district courts of appeals, each with a three-judge panel; county-level courts of common pleas and of probate; and such other lower courts as the legislature may establish.
He served briefly as clerk of the Ohio House of Representatives and then as a judge of common pleas but soon resigned and returned to private practice.
Common Pleas Judge Steven O'Neill, of Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, rejected the argument that the prosecutor had agreed not to charge Cosby as a way to induce him to answer questions in a lawsuit filed by Andrea Constand, the woman claiming Cosby molested her. .
Sandusky threatened the reported victim and his family if either told anyone about the abuse, according to a complaint filed Wednesday in Philadelphia County Court of Common Pleas.
An equilibrium between the courts was eventually reached, but the result was three common law courts (the Exchequer of Pleas, Common Pleas and King's Bench) with near-identical jurisdictions.
Two years later he married Frances, daughter of Sir Thomas Aylesbury, who held a high legal office and through whom he was able to pursue a successful career at the bar and become keeper of the writs and rolls of common pleas.
Dunning was appointed solicitor general in 1768, probably at the instance of Lord Chancellor Camden, who as chief justice of common pleas had upheld Dunning's argument against general warrants (in Wilkes's case).
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com