Burden of proof

/ˈbɜːrdən əv pruːf/ noun

The obligation of a party in a legal proceeding to prove their claims or allegations with sufficient evidence. The burden typically falls on the plaintiff in civil cases and the prosecution in criminal cases.

From Old French 'burden' (load) and Latin 'probare' (to test or prove). The legal concept developed in medieval European courts to establish which party must present evidence, evolving from ancient practices of trial by ordeal to rational evidence-based proceedings.

📖 Full word page — etymology, 47 translations, audio 🔑 Get Free API Key — 50 lookups/day 📚 Read the Docs — integrate Word Orb