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1 answer for
vt fus( person etc) ręczyć (poręczyć perf) za +acc; ( one's actions) odpowiadać (odpowiedzieć perf) za +acc* * *1) ((often with to) to bear the responsibility or be responsible for (something): I'll answer to your mother for your safety.) odpowiadać2) (to suffer or be punished (for something): You'll answer for your rudeness one day!) odpowiadać -
2 day of reckoning
(the time when one has to pay for, or be punished for, one's mistakes, crimes etc.) dzień zapłaty -
3 disobedience
[dɪsə'biːdɪəns]n* * *[-'bi:djəns]noun (failing or refusing to obey: You must be punished for your disobedience!) nieposłuszeństwo -
4 get away with
vt fus* * *(to do (something bad) without being punished for it: Murder is a serious crime and one rarely gets away with it.) uniknąć odpowiedzialności -
5 honesty
['ɔnɪstɪ]n( truthfulness) uczciwość f; ( sincerity) szczerość f* * *noun Surely, if you own up to something, you should be praised for your honesty, not punished.) uczciwość -
6 justice
['dʒʌstɪs]n ( JUR)sprawiedliwość f, wymiar m sprawiedliwości; ( of cause) słuszność f; ( of complaint) zasadność f; ( fairness) sprawiedliwość f; (US) ( judge) sędzia mLord Chief Justice ( BRIT, JUR) — przewodniczący Ławy Królewskiej Sądu Najwyższego i Prezes (Wydziału Kryminalnego) Sądu Apelacyjnego.
to do justice to ( fig) — (represent, capture) dobrze oddawać (oddać perf) +acc; ( deal properly with) dawać (dać perf) sobie radę z +instr, uporać się ( perf) z +instr
she didn't do herself justice — nie pokazała, na co ją stać
to bring sb to justice — oddawać (oddać perf) kogoś w ręce sprawiedliwości
* * *1) (fairness or rightness in the treatment of other people: Everyone has a right to justice; I don't deserve to be punished - where's your sense of justice?) sprawiedliwość2) (the law or the administration of it: Their dispute had to be settled in a court of justice.) wymiar sprawiedliwości3) (a judge.) sędzia•- do
- in justice to -
7 outlaw
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8 punish
['pʌnɪʃ]vtto punish sb for sth/for doing sth — karać (ukarać perf) kogoś za coś/za (z)robienie czegoś
* * *1) (to cause to suffer for a crime or fault: He was punished for stealing the money.) karać2) (to give punishment for: The teacher punishes disobedience.) karać•- punishment
- punitive -
9 punishable
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10 punishment
['pʌnɪʃmənt]nkara f* * *1) (the act of punishing or process of being punished.) karanie2) (suffering, or a penalty, imposed for a crime, fault etc: He was sent to prison for two years as (a) punishment.) kara -
11 rightly
['raɪtlɪ]adv( with reason) słusznie* * *1) (justly, justifiably; it is right, good or just that (something is the case): He was punished for his stupidity and rightly: Rightly or wrongly she refused to speak to him.) słusznie2) (correctly; accurately: They rightly assumed that he would refuse to help.) słusznie, prawidłowo -
12 ringleader
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13 scapegoat
['skeɪpgəut]nkozioł m ofiarny* * *['skeipɡəut](a person who is blamed or punished for the mistakes of others: The manager of the football team was made a scapegoat for the team's failure, and was forced to resign.) kozioł ofiarny -
14 scheme
[skiːm] 1. nplan m; ( of government etc) program m2. vispiskować, knuć or snuć intrygi* * *[ski:m] 1. noun1) (a plan or arrangement; a way of doing something: a colour scheme for the room; There are various schemes for improving the roads.) system, plan, projekt2) (a (usually secret) dishonest plan: His schemes to steal the money were discovered.) intryga2. verb(to make (especially dishonest) schemes: He was punished for scheming against the President; They have all been scheming for my dismissal.) spiskować, intrygować- schemer- scheming -
15 strictly speaking
(if we must be completely accurate, act according to rules etc: Strictly speaking, he should be punished for this.) ściśle mówiąc -
16 they
[ðeɪ]pl pronthey say that … — mówią or mówi się, że…
* * *[ðei]1) (persons, animals or things already spoken about, being pointed out etc: They are in the garden.) oni2) (used instead of he, he or she etc when the person's sex is unknown or when people of both sexes are being referred to: If anyone does that, they are to be severely punished.) on -
17 unquestionably
[ʌn'kwɛstʃənəblɪ]advniewątpliwie, bezsprzecznie* * *adverb (certainly: Unquestionably, he deserves to be punished.) bezsprzecznie -
18 wrongdoer
noun (a person who does wrong or illegal things: The wrongdoers must be punished.) złoczyńca
См. также в других словарях:
Punished — Punish Pun ish, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Punished}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Punishing}.] [OE. punischen, F. punir, from L. punire, punitum, akin to poena punishment, penalty. See {Pain}, and { ish}.] 1. To impose a penalty upon; to afflict with pain, loss,… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Punished peoples — Coined by the dissident historian Aleksandr Nekrich in his Punished Peoples: The Deportation and Fate of Soviet Minorities at the End of the Second World War (1978), the term refers to those ethnic minorities that were deported en masse during … Historical Dictionary of the Russian Federation
punished — un·punished; … English syllables
punished — adjective That has been the object of punishment … Wiktionary
punished — (Roget s IV) modif. Syn. corrected, disciplined, chastened, penalized, sentenced, trained, reproved, chastised, castigated, lectured, scolded, imprisoned, incarcerated, immured, expelled, exiled, transported, dismissed, debarred, disbenched,… … English dictionary for students
punished — pun·ish || pÊŒnɪʃ v. discipline, penalize … English contemporary dictionary
punished him lightly — gave him a light sentence, gave him a minimal penalty … English contemporary dictionary
punished severely — gave him a major penalty, gave him a harsh sentence … English contemporary dictionary
punished — adjective subjected to a penalty (as pain or shame or restraint or loss) for an offense or fault or in order to coerce some behavior (as a confession or obedience) • Ant: ↑unpunished • Similar to: ↑tarred and feathered … Useful english dictionary
How Geirald the Coward was Punished — is an Icelandic fairy tale collected in Neuislandische Volksmärchen . Andrew Lang included it in The Brown Fairy Book .ynopsisA poor knight had many children. One day, the oldest, Rosald, made a friend named Geirald who persuaded him to come with … Wikipedia
corporations have neither bodies to be punished nor souls to be damned — A large organization, unlike a private individual, can act unjustly or highhandedly without fear of being brought to account. 1658 E. BULSTRODE Reports II. 233 The opinion of Manwood, chief Baron [c 1580], was this, as touching Corporations, that … Proverbs new dictionary