Recent Examples on the WebAfter dispensing with the subject of writing in his Nobel lecture, Pinter used the occasion to arraign U.S. leadership for war crimes.Los Angeles Times, 12 July 2021 Under the new order signed Tuesday the court can take up to seven days after an arrest to arraign someone. Greg Moran, San Diego Union-Tribune, 12 Apr. 2021 Mouat is expected to be formally arraigned before Brown on Tuesday morning. Ray Kisonas, Detroit Free Press, 8 June 2020 Bologna surrendered Monday and is waiting to be arraigned, according to Mike Neilon of Bellevue Public Relations. Steve Almasy, Melanie Schuman And Elizabeth Joseph, CNN, 8 June 2020 Police soon arrived and arrested Carrillo, who will be arraigned Friday. Matthias Gafni, SFChronicle.com, 8 June 2020 The Erie County District Attorney said that the officers, 39-year-old Aaron Torgalski, and 32-year-old Robert McCabe, were virtually arraigned this morning. Li Cohen, CBS News, 6 June 2020 Officers Aaron Torgalski and Robert McCabe were arraigned virtually and released on their own recognizance by Buffalo City Court Judge Craig Hannah, Mr. Flynn said at a news conference. Jimmy Vielkind, WSJ, 6 June 2020 Tinsley was finally arraigned around 1 p.m. Monday but was not officially released from jail until sometime between 3 and 4 a.m. Tuesday. Olivia Krauth, The Courier-Journal, 6 June 2020 See More
Word History
Etymology
Middle English araynen, areynen, arreynen "to ask (a question), ask (someone) a question, interrogate, rebuke, (in law) call upon to answer an accusation," borrowed from Anglo-French arener, araisner, arrener "to speak to, ask questions of, call to account, (in law) call upon to answer an accusation," going back to Vulgar Latin *adratiōnāre, from Latin ad-ad- + Vulgar Latin *ratiōnāre "to speak, converse," verbal derivative of Latin ratiōn-, ratiō "reckoning, calculation, explanation" (early Medieval Latin also "justification, dispute, discussion, speech") — more at reason entry 1
Note: The spoken Latin form *adratiōnāre gave rise to two paradigms in medieval French, one based on stress on the stem (as in first person singular j'araisone), another based on stress on the ending (as in second person plural vous araisniez). In Anglo-French these developed into two more or less distinct verbs (arener and araisuner) with only partial semantic overlap, the legal sense belonging predominantly to arener. The verb araisuner was taken into Middle English as aresounen "to address, ask a question," with "present with an accusation" as a very infrequent meaning; it appears to have dropped from use after the sixteenth century. In modern standard French only the tonic form arraisoner survives; to judge by its inclusion in French-English dictionaries (Larousse, Oxford-Hachette), the most current meaning is "to board and inspect (an airplane or ship)." The g in English arraign, which first turns up in the early sixteenth century, has no evident etymological justification.