-
1 committed
-
2 committed
zatwierdzony -
3 committed
zatwierdzonyEnglish-Polish dictionary of Electronics and Computer Science > committed
-
4 commit
[kə'mɪt]vtshe was committed to a hospital/nursing home — umieszczono ją w szpitalu/prywatnym domu opieki
to commit o.s. (to do sth) — zobowiązywać się (zobowiązać się perf) (do zrobienia czegoś)
to commit suicide — popełnić ( perf) samobójstwo
to commit sth to writing — zapisywać (zapisać perf) or notować (zanotować perf) coś
to commit sb for trial — stawiać (postawić perf) kogoś w stan oskarżenia
* * *[kə'mit]past tense, past participle - committed; verb1) (to perform; to do (especially something illegal): He committed the murder when he was drunk.) popełniać2) (to hand over (a person) to an institution etc for treatment, safekeeping etc: committed to prison.) powierzać, osadzać3) (to put (oneself) under a particular obligation: She has committed herself to looking after her dead brother's children till the age of 18.) zobowiązywać się•- committal
- committed -
5 act
n abbr= American College Test standardowy test dla kandydatów na studia* * *[ækt] 1. verb1) (to do something: It's time the government acted to lower taxes.) działać2) (to behave: He acted foolishly at the meeting.) zachowywać się3) (to perform (a part) in a play: He has acted (the part of Romeo) in many theatres; I thought he was dying, but he was only acting (= pretending).) grać, występować2. noun1) (something done: Running away is an act of cowardice; He committed many cruel acts.) akt, wyczyn2) ((often with capital) a law: Acts of Parliament.) akt3) (a section of a play: `Hamlet' has five acts.) akt, prawo, ustawa4) (an entertainment: an act called `The Smith Family'.) występ sceniczny, numer•- acting- actor
- act as
- act on
- act on behalf of / act for
- in the act of
- in the act
- put on an act -
6 alibi
['ælɪbaɪ]nalibi nt inv* * *(the fact or a statement that a person accused of a crime was somewhere else when it was committed: Has he an alibi for the night of the murder?) alibi -
7 atrocity
[ə'trɔsɪtɪ]nokrucieństwo nt* * *[ə'trosəti]noun (an extremely cruel and wicked act: The invading army committed many atrocities.) okrucieństwo -
8 culpable
['kʌlpəbl]adj* * *(deserving blame; guilty: She was the one who committed the crime but he was culpable also.) winny -
9 deport
[dɪ'pɔːt]vt* * *[di'po:t]((of a government etc) to send (a person) out of the country eg because he has committed a crime or because he is not officially supposed to be there: He is being deported on a charge of murder.) wydalać -
10 extradite
['ɛkstrədaɪt]vtekstradować ( perf)* * *(to give (someone) up to the police of another country (for a crime committed there).) wydać (przestępcę) -
11 felony
['fɛlənɪ]n* * *plural - felonies; noun (a serious crime: He committed a felony.) przestępstwo -
12 foul
[faul] 1. adj 2. n (SPORT)faul m3. vtbrudzić (zabrudzić perf), zanieczyszczać (zanieczyścić perf); (SPORT) faulować (sfaulować perf); anchor, propeller blokować (zablokować perf); fishing net uszkadzać (uszkodzić perf)* * *1. adjective1) ((especially of smell or taste) causing disgust: a foul smell.) wstrętny, paskudny2) (very unpleasant; nasty: a foul mess.) wstrętny, okropny2. noun(an action etc which breaks the rules of a game: The other team committed a foul.) nieczysta gra, faul3. verb1) (to break the rules of a game (against): He fouled his opponent.) faulować2) (to make dirty, especially with faeces: Dogs often foul the pavement.) zanieczyszczać• -
13 injustice
[ɪn'dʒʌstɪs]n* * *((an instance of) unfairness or the lack of justice: He complained of injustice in the way he had been treated; They agreed that an injustice had been committed.) niesprawiedliwość- do someone an injustice- do an injustice -
14 outrage
['autreɪdʒ] 1. n 2. vt* * *1. noun(a wicked act, especially of great violence: the outrages committed by the soldiers; The decision to close the road is a public outrage.) gwałt, zniewaga2. verb(to hurt, shock or insult: She was outraged by his behaviour.) zaszokować, oburzyć- outrageously
- outrageousness -
15 suicide
['suɪsaɪd]nSee also:- commit* * *1) (the/an act of killing oneself deliberately: She committed suicide; an increasing number of suicides.) samobójstwo2) (a person who kills himself deliberately.) samobójca•- suicidal- suicidally -
16 wanted
['wɔntɪd]adj"cook wanted" — "zatrudnię kucharza"
* * *1) (being searched for by the police because of having committed a criminal act: He is a wanted man; He is wanted for murder.) poszukiwany2) ((negative unwanted) (of people) needed; cared for: Old people must be made to feel wanted.) potrzebny
См. также в других словарях:
Committed — may refer to: Committed (2000 film), a film starring Heather Graham and Luke Wilson Committed (comic strip), a comic strip by Michael Fry Committed (2001 TV series), an animated television series based on the strip Committed (2005 TV series), a… … Wikipedia
committed — UK US /kəˈmɪtɪd/ adjective ► very willing to give your time and energy to something: »The level of the bid shows we are very committed and serious. »Endowment savings plans are for the committed, long term investor. ► FINANCE money that has been… … Financial and business terms
committed — adj. 1. Bound or obligated, as under a pledge to a particular cause, action, or attitude. Opposite of {uncommitted}. Note: [Narrower terms: {bound up, involved, wrapped up}; {dedicated, devoted}; {pledged, sworn}] [WordNet 1.5] 2. Associated in… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
committed — committed; un·committed; … English syllables
committed — index agreed (promised), arrested (apprehended), bound, contractual, loyal Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
committed — 1590s, entrusted, delegated, pp. adj. from COMMIT (Cf. commit) (q.v.). Meaning locked into a commitment is from 1948 … Etymology dictionary
committed — ► ADJECTIVE 1) dedicated to a cause, activity, job, etc. 2) in a long term emotional relationship … English terms dictionary
committed — adj. 1) committed to (committed to his principles) 2) committed to + inf. (they are committed to help us; or, more usu.: they are committed to helping us) * * * [kə mɪtɪd] committed to + inf. (they are committed to help us; or, more usu. : they… … Combinatory dictionary
committed — adj. VERBS ▪ be, feel ▪ become ▪ remain ADVERB ▪ extremely, fairly, very … Collocations dictionary
committed — com|mit|ted [kəˈmıtıd] adj willing to work very hard at something ▪ The party has a core of committed supporters. committed to ▪ We are fully committed to Equal Opportunity policies … Dictionary of contemporary English
Committed — Commit Com*mit , v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Committed}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Committing}.] [L. committere, commissum, to connect, commit; com + mittere to send. See {Mission}.] 1. To give in trust; to put into charge or keeping; to intrust; to consign;… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English