to be considered by a judge, committee, or other authority as part of an official process
to have happened previously
Any forms affected by the glitch will go before a judge and the couple may not have to attend.
Anyone who abuses a child should go before a judge and jury.
His ordeal will continue until June, when the case goes before an employment tribunal.
In total 20 suspects have gone before the courts.
It has little chance of success when it goes before a judge next Monday, but the issue raised is real.
Requests would go before a judge in secret but journalists want a say and the right to appeal.
THE parents of a terminally ill boy went before a judge yesterday to try to stop doctors withdrawing the child's life support.
That one shot is to go before a local judge and plead her case, to throw herself on the mercy of the local judge.
The case is scheduled to go before the Appeal Court next week.
The case went before the city's judge for the first time yesterday.
The custody battle will go before a family court hearing again today at Bristol crown court.
The machinery will shudder to a stop and all of the appeals she has thus far waived will go before various courts.
We can now go before a judge to seek accountability for what happened.
a brief summary of what has gone before
goes before
going before
went before
gone before
There is no origin for this phrasal verb
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