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The contexte is:
- Oh, for Christ`s sake! Maddox said waerily. Come on, then. Someone stick an Inci over her.

And other one:
The pathologist arrived and desappeared for an hour inside the white Incitent.

Tnx in advance.

2007-02-23 09:01:32 · 9 answers · asked by Effy 1 in Education & Reference Words & Wordplay

9 answers

Are you reading a detective novel? - Inci is probably in-job shorthand word for incident tent, and the pathologist disappeared into the white incident tent they put around bodies to preserve the scene (crime scene talk!) and hide it from the public view.

2007-02-23 11:55:59 · answer #1 · answered by Serendipity 6 · 0 0

DO YOU MEAN Indictment?
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In the common law legal system, an indictment (IPA: /ɪnˈdaɪt.mənt/) is a formal charge of having committed a most serious criminal offense. In those jurisdictions which retain the concept of a felony, the serious criminal offense would be a felony; those jurisdictions which have abolished the concept of a felony often substitute instead the concept of an indictable offense, i.e. an offense which requires an indictment.

Traditionally an indictment was handed up by a grand jury, which returned a "true bill" if it found cause to make the charge, or "no bill" if it did not find cause. Most common law jurisdictions (except for much of the United States) have abolished grand juries.

2007-02-23 19:43:09 · answer #2 · answered by Jamie F 1 · 0 0

I think it means incident tent, which is what is placed over a body found outside.

The police tend to shorten everything, for example, polac, meaning police accident.

Misper, meaning missing person.

It seems we're getting just like the Americans trying to abbreviate various phrases.

2007-02-25 09:40:51 · answer #3 · answered by mollysadler 3 · 0 0

You need to check your spelling. As you've written it, there's no way to tell. I would guess from context that it was some sort of large covering.

2007-02-23 17:38:52 · answer #4 · answered by jelesais2000 7 · 0 0

Is it short for incident tent???

like they might use in police investigations

2007-02-23 18:00:29 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Doh.

2007-02-23 17:09:11 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

you can't speak english, how are supposed to know what you mean?

2007-02-23 17:07:18 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

sorry i do not have any reply for this one

2007-02-23 17:05:05 · answer #8 · answered by Joe M 1 · 0 2

eh ?

2007-02-23 17:04:27 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2

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