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Competency
(redirected from competencies)

   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Medical, Financial, Wikipedia 0.05 sec.

COMPETENCY, evidence. The legal fitness or ability of a witness to be heard on the trial of a cause. This term is also applied to written or other evidence which may be legally given on such trial, as, depositions, letters, account-books, and the like.
     2. Prima facie every person offered is a competent witness, and must be received, unless Lis incompetency (q.v.) appears. 9 State Tr. 652.
     3. There is a difference between competency and credibility. A witness may be competent, and, on examination, his story may be so contradictory and improbable that he may not be believed; on the contrary he may be incompetent, and yet be perfectly credible if he were examined.
     4. The court are the sole judges of the competency of a witness, and may, for the purpose of deciding whether the witness is or is not competent, ascertain all the facts necessary to form a judgment. Vide 8 Watts, R. 227; and articles Credibility; Incompetency; Interest; Witness.
     5. In the French law, by competency is understood the right in a court to exercise jurisdiction in a particular case; as, where the, law gives jurisdiction to the court when a thousand francs shall be in dispute, the court is competent if, the sum demanded is a thousand francs or upwards, although the plaintiff may ultimately recover less.



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The students demonstrated an ability to work within their realm of experience using the domains of the ANMC competencies, according to Ms Willsher.
About half of the largest publicly traded companies use competencies in evaluating potential employees, she estimates.
This question can be addressed through the use of competencies and competency models.
 
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