Defendant
The plural form of plaintiff is plaintiffs.
A defendant may assert that the plaintiff "came to the nuisance." A "coming to the nuisance" defense may be successful if a defendant can prove that he or she engaged in the offending activity with similar results before the plaintiff moved to the neighborhood. For example, a plaintiff is unlikely to succeed in a nuisance action for barking dogs when the plaintiff knowingly bought property next to a large dog kennel.
Complaintiff: complainant plaintiff
not unless the context requires it
Defendant
The opposite word of defendant is plaintiff. The plaintiff is the party who brings a case against another party in a court of law.
The Plaintiff.
The person initiating a law suit is called an Appellant.
The possessive form of the word "plaintiff" is "plaintiff's."
"Plaintiff's" is the possessive form of "plaintiff," indicating something belonging to a single plaintiff. "Plaintiffs'" is the plural possessive form, indicating something belonging to multiple plaintiffs.
Plaintiff is a noun.
"Ptf." is the shorthand for plaintiff.
a male plaintiff = to'en (טוען) a female plaintiff = to'enet (×˜×•×¢× ×ª)
The plural form of plaintiff is plaintiffs.
You must obtain a release from the plaintiff's estate.You must obtain a release from the plaintiff's estate.You must obtain a release from the plaintiff's estate.You must obtain a release from the plaintiff's estate.
The plaintiff.The plaintiff.The plaintiff.The plaintiff.