Vocab
Juror #
questions
pieces of evidence
Vocab 2
100

What Is the Definition of Jury

A group of citizens chosen to decide the outcome of a trial.

100

Who is Juror 8

a quiet, thoughtful, and compassionate man who seeks the truth

100

Why does Juror 8 initially vote not guilty

 

He believes the boy deserves a careful discussion and that there are too many unanswered questions in the evidence to send someone to death without talking it through.

100

Why is the old man’s walking speed important to the case?
 

Because if he could not reach his door in the time he claimed, his testimony about seeing the boy run down the stairs becomes unreliable.

100

What is the Defintion of Verdict

The final decision of the jury — guilty or not guilty.


200

What Is the Definition Of Defendent


The person accused of a crime who is being tried in court.


200

Who is Juror 3

 a forceful, opinionated antagonist driven by a deep-seated personal bias stemming from his failed relationship with his own son.

200

What does the film reveal about personal biases among the jurors?


Many jurors base their decisions on stereotypes, personal anger, or past experiences—not facts. Over time, they confront these biases and reconsider their votes.

200

How does the glasses argument undermine the woman’s testimony?

 

 If she wasn’t wearing her glasses at the time, she probably could not clearly see the murder, making her eyewitness account questionable.

 

200

What is the definition of Reasonable doubt



A legal term meaning there is not enough proof to find someone guilty.


300

What is the definition of Prosecution


The lawyers who work to prove the defendant is guilty.


300

Who is Juror 2

 a meek, hesitant, and easily influenced man who initially goes along with the majority vote because he is afraid to voice his own opinions

300

How does the weather influence the jurors’ behavior?

 ]

The heat makes the men irritable, impatient, and more likely to argue emotionally rather than logically. When the storm finally breaks, the cooler air mirrors the calmer, clearer thinking in the room.

300

What does the identical knife shown by Juror 8 suggest?
 

It suggests that the murder weapon was not as rare as the prosecution claimed, weakening the argument that the knife must have come from the boy.

300

What is the Definition of Alibi

An excuse or evidence that someone was somewhere else during a crime.

400

What is the Definition of Testimony

A statement given by a witness in court

400

Who is Juror 12

superficiality, lack of real conviction, and indecisiveness, often changing his vote to align with the majority for the sake of efficiency

400

Why is Juror 3 the last to change his vote?

 His anger comes from his strained relationship with his own son. He projects this resentment onto the defendant

His anger comes from his strained relationship with his own son. He projects this resentment onto the defendant,

400

What does the knife angle reveal about the murder?

It suggests the killer used the knife in a way inconsistent with the boy’s typical handling, making it less likely that the boy inflicted the wound.

400

What is the definition of evidence

Information or objects that help prove something true or false.


500

What is the Definition of Unanimous

When everyone agrees on the same decision

500

Who is Juror 5

a young, intimidated man who grew up in a slum and initially votes guilty out of deference to the older jurors

500

How does peer pressure affect the voting process?


some jurors change their votes not because they are convinced, but because they don’t want conflict, feel embarrassed, or realize they were going along with the group

500

What does the knife angle reveal about the murder?
 

It suggests the killer used the knife in a way inconsistent with the boy’s typical handling, making it less likely that the boy inflicted the wound.

500

What is the definition of Bias

An unfair opinion or feeling that affects judgment.


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