-
1 сопутствующее обстоятельство
Универсальный русско-английский словарь > сопутствующее обстоятельство
-
2 сопутствующий
прич. и прил.accompanying; прил. тж. attendant, concomitantсопутствующее обстоятельство — attendant / concomitant circumstance, concomitant
-
3 сопутствующий
прич. и прил.accompanying; attendant, concomitantсопу́тствующее обстоя́тельство — attendant / concomitant circumstance, concomitant
сопу́тствующие това́ры — associated goods
-
4 отягчающее обстоятельство
Бизнес, юриспруденция. Русско-английский словарь > отягчающее обстоятельство
-
5 обстоятельство обстоятельств·о
1) обыкн. мн. circumstances2) юр. circumstance, factвыяснять обстоятельства — to fact-find, to find the facts
отягчающие обстоятельства — aggravation, attenuating circumstances
сопутствующие обстоятельства — attending / concomitant circumstances
форсмажорные обстоятельства, обстоятельства непреодолимой силы — circumstances of insuperable force; force majeure фр.
стечение обстоятельств — coincidence / concurrence of circumstances
в зависимости от обстоятельств — depending on the circumstances / situation
как / если того требуют обстоятельства — so warrant
по семейным обстоятельствам — due to family circumstances / for domestic reasons
Russian-english dctionary of diplomacy > обстоятельство обстоятельств·о
См. также в других словарях:
concomitant — [kənkäm′ə tənt] adj. [< LL concomitans: see CONCOMITANCE] accompanying; attendant n. an accompanying or attendant condition, circumstance, or thing concomitantly adv … English World dictionary
circumstance — noun Etymology: Middle English, from Anglo French, from Latin circumstantia, from circumstant , circumstans, present participle of circumstare to stand around, from circum + stare to stand more at stand Date: 13th century 1. a. a condition, fact … New Collegiate Dictionary
concomitant — concomitantly, adv. /kon kom i teuhnt, keuhn /, adj. 1. existing or occurring with something else, often in a lesser way; accompanying; concurrent: an event and its concomitant circumstances. n. 2. a concomitant quality, circumstance, or thing.… … Universalium
concomitant — con•com•i•tant [[t]kɒnˈkɒm ɪ tənt, kən [/t]] adj. 1) existing or occurring with something else, often in a lesser way; accompanying; concurrent: an event and its concomitant circumstances[/ex] 2) a concomitant quality, circumstance, or thing •… … From formal English to slang
concomitant — /kənˈkɒmətənt / (say kuhn komuhtuhnt), /kəŋ / (say kuhng ) adjective 1. accompanying; concurrent; attending. –noun 2. a concomitant quality, circumstance, person, or thing. {Late Latin concomitans, present participle, accompanying} –concomitance …
circumstance — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) Concomitant condition Nouns 1. circumstance, situation, condition, case, phase, position, posture, attitude, place, environment; footing, standing, status, state; occasion, eventuality, juncture,… … English dictionary for students
concomitant — I. a. Accompanying, concurrent, attendant, attending, conjoined. II. n. Attendant, accessary or accessory, accompaniment, attending or accompanying circumstance, accessary fact … New dictionary of synonyms
concomitant — adj 1. attendant, attending, accompanying, belonging; accessory, auxiliary, adjuvant, supplemental, supplementary; (all usually in a subordinate capacity) joint, joined, conjoint, conjoined, conjunctive, connected, tied, bound, linked; associated … A Note on the Style of the synonym finder
concomitant — n. & a. accompanying (thing or circumstance). ♦ concomitance, n.; Roman Catholic, existence of both body and blood of Christ in one element of Eucharist. ♦ concomitancy, n … Dictionary of difficult words
Mill's Methods — are five methods of induction described by philosopher John Stuart Mill in his 1843 book A System of Logic. They are intended to illuminate issues of causation. Contents 1 Direct method of agreement 2 Method of difference 3 … Wikipedia
Induktion (Philosophie) — Schematische Darstellung eines vermuteten Zusammenhangs von Theorie, Empirie, Induktion und Deduktion Induktion (von lateinisch inducere, „herbeiführen, veranlassen, einführen“) bedeutet seit Aristoteles den abstrahierenden Schluss aus… … Deutsch Wikipedia