<P> In India, judges of the Supreme Court and the High Courts were addressed as Your Lordship or My Lord and Your Ladyship or My Lady, a tradition directly attributable to England . The Bar Council of India had adopted a resolution in April 2006 and added a new Rule 49 (1) (j) in the Advocates Act . As per the rule, lawyers can address the court as Your Honour and refer to it as Honourable Court . If it is a subordinate court, lawyers can use terms such as sir or any equivalent phrase in the regional language concerned . Explaining the rationale behind the move, the Bar Council had held that the words such as My Lord and Your Lordship were "relics of the colonial past". The resolution has since been circulated to all state councils and the Supreme Court for adoption but over five years now, the resolution largely remained on paper . </P> <P> However, in an unprecedented move in October 2009, one of the judges of Madras HC, Justice K Chandru had banned lawyers from addressing his court as My Lord and Your Lordship . </P> <P> In Israel, Judge is named Shofet (שופט ‬, the judges of all courts are addressed as Sir, Madam (אדוני ‬ ‎ / גבירתי ‬) or Your Honor (כבודו ‬ ‎ / כבודה ‬). Much of the time after every naming you will hear "HaShofet", meaning "the judge" after the respective address . Example: Your Honor the Judge (כבוד השופט ‬). </P> <P> In Malaysia, judges of the subordinate courts are addressed as Tuan or Puan ("Sir", "Madam"), or Your Honour . Judges of the superior courts are addressed as Yang Arif (lit . "Learned One") or My Lord, My Lady, etc.; and Your Lordship or My Ladyship if the proceedings, as they generally are in the superior courts, are in English . </P>

Of the following which is not an inferior court