Journal of Namibian Studies, 33 S2(2023): 2440–2449 ISSN: 2197-5523 (online) 2440 Drafting an Appeal Petition for Jordanian Courts: Controls and Prohibitions Dr. Hamzeh M. Abu Issa 1 , Dr. Saad A. Meqdad 2 , Mohammad N. Khater 3 1 Associate Professor of Criminal Law - Faculty of Law- Applied Science Private University- Jordan, h_abuissa@asu.edu.jo. 2 Associate Professor of Arabic language and literature - Faculty of Arts & Science- Applied Science Private University- Jordan 3 Lecturer - Faculty of Law- Applied Science Private University- Jordan Abstract The study presents the stylistic of the judicial petition of appeal before the Jordanian courts, based on the terms and phrases used in the appeals submitted by some lawyers to the Court of Cassation and the Court of Appeal. In some of these appeals, there were inappropriate words and phrases that undermine the court prestige and respect, which violates the applicable controls and ethics in addressing the judicial body. Based on presented proven (real) examples, the study concluded by that these abusive words and phrases are wrong behaviors that lawyers should avoid, and improve their discourse style in order to preserve the prestige of the judiciary and respect its decisions. The study also concluded that the court has the right to liable the lawyer and hold him accountable for his use of such words and expressions, and sentence him if necessary, and that the lawyer must choose his words and phrases carefully without resorting to defamation or slandering in order to preserve the prestige of the law and those in charge of it. Key Words: Drafting, Procedure law, Jordanian law, Judicial petition, Appeal. 1 Introduction During his pleadings with his clients before the judge in various cases, the lawyer is keen to win his case because he believes in achieving justice in a way that serves his client. Therefore, the lawyer seeks to choose a style or method that has a strong and convincing impact on the judiciary, based on appropriate and polite language and agile words that are far from defaming, offending, or belittling the judge himself or the place that hosts court sessions. And as they say: every context a saying; The discourse status that challenges the court decisions calls for careful