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Executed

Executed is the past participle of the verb execute and may refer to the completion of an action, the formal completion of a document, or the carrying out of a plan. In general usage, to execute a task is to complete it or to perform it as intended. In legal and governmental contexts, execution often denotes carrying out a sentence, order, or policy.

In the context of criminal justice, execution refers to capital punishment, the state-imposed termination of a

In computing, execution is the process by which a program’s instructions are carried out by a computer’s

In finance and business, execution describes the completion of an order or trade. An order is considered

Etymology traces to Latin exsecutus, from ex- “out” and sequi “to follow.”

convicted
person’s
life.
Practices
have
varied
by
country
and
era,
including
methods
such
as
lethal
injection,
electrocution,
and
firing
squad.
Abolition
movements
and
moratoriums
have
reduced
or
ended
executions
in
many
jurisdictions;
debates
focus
on
deterrence,
ethics,
and
human
rights,
with
international
law
recognizing
the
right
to
life
while
allowing
for
certain
legal
penalties
in
some
systems.
processor
or
runtime
environment.
A
program
is
said
to
be
executed
when
the
code
runs,
producing
results
or
effects
such
as
data
processing
or
user
interface
updates.
executed
when
it
has
been
filled,
fully
or
partially,
at
a
given
price,
subject
to
market
conditions
and
brokerage
rules.
In
contract
law,
to
execute
an
instrument
means
to
sign
and
thereby
make
it
legally
binding;
an
executed
contract
or
will
has
been
signed
and
is
in
effect.