Definition
A written legal argument submitted to a court outlining the facts, issues, and legal precedents supporting your case. Despite the name, these documents are rarely brief—lawyers get paid by the hour, after all. A well-crafted brief can win cases before you even step into the courtroom; a terrible one can torpedo your case before the judge finishes their morning coffee.
Example Usage
The associate spent three weeks drafting the appellate brief, which somehow ballooned to 47 pages of dense legal arguments.
Source: Common legal terminology
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See “brief” in Corporate Speak, Gen-Z Slang, Pirate Speak, and more.
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