No, the word 'magistrate' is a noun, a word for a civil officer with power to administer and enforce law, a word for a person.
A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence. The pronouns that take the place of the noun 'magistrate' are he or she as a subject, and him or her as an object.
Examples:
You'll have to see the magistrate. He can authorize that. (subject of the sentence)
Yes, the magistrate is in. I saw her minutes ago. (direct object of the verb 'saw')
Magistrate is a noun.
Magistrate is a judge. He or she is addressed as judge.
Chief Magistrate of the ciry
Your Honor, or Madam Magistrate.
district magistrate of azamgarh
It depends on the country and what kind of magistrate. In the US, a magistrate can refer to two different things. They can be a civil magistrate. For small claims court, the civil magistrate acts as the "judge." In civil court, the civil magistrate files the case for the judge, if I'm not mistaken. For criminal court, the magistrate is the one whom charges are filed with. What happens next depends on the type of crime. If it is a misdemeanor, the magistrate passes control to a prosecutor (often an assistant district attorney). If it is a felony, the magistrate passes control to the grand jury. The magistrate also decides the bail and custody arrangements until a judge decides otherwise.
No. A magistrate is a lay "judge" and they usually sit as a panel of 3 in a "magistrate's court". The usher, clerk and probation officer are separate jobs from that of a magistrate.
what is the role of disaster magistrate
You cannot be a magistrate simply by being gay.
what is the role of disaster magistrate
In the UK a magistrate is addressed as your Worship.
A consul is the most powerful magistrate and magistrate is the first part of the government made up elected officials.