Definition of indicia in English:
indicia
plural nounɪnˈdɪʃɪəɪnˈdɪsɪəinˈdiSH(ē)ə
formal Signs, indications, or distinguishing marks.
the indicia of predictive child abuse
Example sentencesExamples
- The Court of Appeal found the following to be sufficient indicia of threshold reliability to afford the jury a satisfactory basis for evaluating its ultimate reliability.
- Your Honours are faced with an argument that there is a tort of breach of privacy without the necessary indicia of that which is private, namely, the quality of confidentiality.
- These matters could be incidental indicia of a real partnership, but indicia of substance (partnership accounts, sharing of profits and expenses etc.) are simply not here.
- That is why I am about to go through the various indicia which indicate that there is a limited extraterritorial effect in this legislation.
- Later I suggested a number of indicia for the definition of a political crime.
Origin
Early 17th century: plural of Latin indicium, from index, indic- 'informer, sign'.
Rhymes
Felicia, Galicia, Lycia, Mysia