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1 waive
waive vtr gen, Jur déroger à [regulation, rule] ; renoncer à [claim, demand, privilege, right] ; supprimer [fee, condition, requirement] ; to waive one's claim to sth renoncer à ses droits sur qch. -
2 waive
waive [weɪv][+ claim, right, privilege] renoncer à ; [+ condition, age limit] ne pas insister sur* * *[weɪv]transitive verb déroger à [rule]; renoncer à [claim, demand, right]; supprimer [fee, condition] -
3 waive
waive [weɪv](condition, requirement) ne pas insister sur, abandonner; (law, rule) déroger à; (claim, right) renoncer à, abandonner -
4 waive
[weiv]1) (to give up or not insist upon (eg a claim or right): He waived his claim to all the land north of the river.) renoncer (à)2) (not to demand or enforce (a fine, penalty etc): The judge waived the sentence and let him go free.) abandonner -
5 waive
(condition, requirement) abandonner; (law, rule) déroger à; (claim, right) renoncer à
См. также в других словарях:
waive — / wāv/ vt waived, waiv·ing [Anglo French waiver weiver, literally to abandon, forsake, from waif weif forlorn, stray, probably from Old Norse veif something loose or flapping] 1: to relinquish (as a right or privilege) voluntarily and… … Law dictionary
Waive — Waive, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Waived}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Waiving}.] [OE. waiven, weiven, to set aside, remove, OF. weyver, quesver, to waive, of Scand. origin; cf. Icel. veifa to wave, to vibrate, akin to Skr. vip to tremble. Cf. {Vibrate}, {Waif}.] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
waive — [weɪv] verb [transitive] LAW to state officially that a right, rule etc can be ignored in a particular case: • The government has waived restrictions on dealing in foreign currencies. • American Express offered to waive fees for additional cards… … Financial and business terms
waive — means ‘to give up (a right or claim) voluntarily’, as in waiving an immunity or waiving formalities. It is not formally confused with the more familiar verb wave except in phrasal verbs such as waive aside and waive away (= to put aside as if… … Modern English usage
claim — vb *demand, exact, require Analogous words: *maintain, assert, defend, vindicate, justify: allege, *adduce, advance Antonyms: disclaim: renounce Contrasted words: disavow, disown, dis acknowledge (see affirmative verbs at ACKNOWLEDGE): reject,… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
waive — [wāv] vt. waived, waiving [ME weiven < Anglo Fr waiver, to renounce, abandon < ON veifa, to fluctuate: see WAIF] 1. to give up or forgo (a right, claim, privilege, etc.) 2. to refrain from insisting on or taking advantage of 3. to put off… … English World dictionary
waive — [ weıv ] verb transitive to choose to officially ignore a rule, right, or claim: The defendant has waived his right to a jury trial. Museum entrance fees have been waived (=not charged) … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
waive — cede, yield, resign, abandon, surrender, *relinquish, leave Analogous words: *forgo, forbear, sacrifice: concede, *grant, allow Contrasted words: *demand, claim, require, exact: assert, *maintain, defend … New Dictionary of Synonyms
waive — [v] give up; let go abandon, allow, cede, defer, delay, disclaim, disown, dispense with, forgo, grant, hand over, hold off, hold up, leave, neglect, postpone, prorogue, put off, refrain from, reject, relinquish, remit, remove, renege, renounce,… … New thesaurus
waive — ► VERB ▪ refrain from insisting on or applying (a right or claim). ORIGIN Old French gaiver allow to become a waif, abandon … English terms dictionary
claim — I n. 1) to enter, file, lodge, make, put forward, put in, submit; establish; press; substantiate a claim (she filed a claim for compensation) 2) to lay claim to; to stake, stake out a claim to 3) (esp. AE) to jump ( steal ) smb. s claim 4) to… … Combinatory dictionary