From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishretrialre‧tri‧al /ˌriːˈtraɪəl, ˈriːtraɪəl $ ˌriːˈtraɪəl/ noun [countable] SCTa process of judging a law case in court again → retry The jury was dismissed and the judge ordered a retrial.
Examples from the Corpus
retrial• He had been tried jointly with another businessman, Jeffrey Smith, who was eventually cleared at a retrial.• The players will face a retrial on charges of serious assault in October.• District Attorney McKittrick has asked the judge for a retrial.• The civil division of the Court of Appeal enjoys much wider powers to order a retrial than the criminal division.• The 27-year attorney has said that the second Menendez retrial may be her last.• One jury will decide the retrial.• I am sorry about what happened ... He told the judge that he would not be instructed for the retrial.• For the retrial, there is no agreement; the brothers were defended at taxpayer expense.• The retrial is in the rebuttal phase.From Longman Business Dictionaryretrialre‧tri‧al /ˌriːˈtraɪəl, ˈriːtraɪəlˌriːˈtraɪəl/ noun [countable, uncountable]LAW the process of bringing a legal case back to court so that it can be decided againHis request for a retrial was dismissed.