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1. Relevance: Objecting to evidence not relevant to the case. 2. Leading Question: A question that suggests the answer or puts words in the witness's mouth, prohibited during direct examination but allowed on cross-examination. 3. Compound Question: A question that combines multiple inquiries, making it difficult for the witness to provide a clear response. 4. Argumentative: A question that does not seek new information but instead seeks to have the witness agree with an inference or conclusion. 5. Asked and Answered: Objecting to a question that has already been asked and sufficiently answered. 6. Vague: A question that is unclear or lacks specificity. 7. Speculation: Objecting to a question that requires the witness to guess or speculate on an issue where they do not possess direct knowledge. 8. Hearsay: An objection to evidence that relies on secondhand information rather than firsthand knowledge. 9. Privilege: Objecting to any question that seeks information protected by a form of privilege, such as attorney-client privilege. 10. Violation of Best Evidence Rule: Objecting to evidence that doesn’t follow the rule that requires the original item to be used in court unless unobtainable. 11. Narrative: An objection to a witness providing an uninterrupted monologue rather than answering specific questions. 12. Foundation: Objecting to testimony when a witness has not demonstrated the basis of their knowledge on the subject matter. 13. Personal Knowledge / Speculation: Similar to speculation, this objection emphasizes the need for witnesses to have direct knowledge of their testimony. 14. Unfair/prejudicial: Objecting to evidence that, although relevant, would unfairly prejudice the judge or jury against a party. 15. Non-responsive: When a witness's answer does not directly respond to the question asked. Music Summer Mvt 3 Presto by John Harrison with the Wichita State University Chamber Players is licensed under a Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 International License.