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1 bail
n. borg, borgtocht; emmer--------v. borgstaan; hozen; parachuteren vanuit vliegtuig; uit de narigheid halenbail1♦voorbeelden:give bail • borg stellengo/stand/put in bail for someone/something • borg staan/zich borg stellen voor iemand/iets; 〈 figuurlijk〉voor iemand/iets instaanrefuse bail • vrijlating tegen borgtocht weigerenout on bail • vrijgelaten op/tegen borgtocht————————bail21 hozen→ bail out bail out/II 〈 overgankelijk werkwoord〉1 vrijlaten tegen/onder borgstelling2 in bewaring/onderpand geven→ bail out bail out/ -
2 go/stand/put in bail for someone/something
go/stand/put in bail for someone/somethingborg staan/zich borg stellen voor iemand/iets; 〈 figuurlijk〉voor iemand/iets instaanEnglish-Dutch dictionary > go/stand/put in bail for someone/something
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3 be out
be out1 (er)uit/buiten zijn ⇒ weg zijn, er niet (meer) zijn2 〈 informeel〉uit/voorbij zijn4 openbaar (gemaakt) zijn ⇒ gepubliceerd/verschenen zijn♦voorbeelden:〈 informeel〉 one more word and you are out! • nog één woord en je vliegt eruit!2 before the year is out • voor het jaar voorbij/om isthe results are out • de resultaten zijn bekendthe secret is out • het geheim is uitgelekt6 rough games are out! • geen ruwe spelletjes!11 the tide is out • het is laag tij/ebbe out by twenty pounds • twintig pond te weinig hebben/armer zijnbe out for oneself • zijn eigen belangen dienen
См. также в других словарях:
backed for bail — in England, when a magistrate grants a warrant it can show that, when arrested, the person shall be released on bail. Collins dictionary of law. W. J. Stewart. 2001 … Law dictionary
bail — bail1 /bayl/, Law. n. 1. property or money given as surety that a person released from custody will return at an appointed time. 2. the person who agrees to be liable if someone released from custody does not return at an appointed time. 3. the… … Universalium
bail — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ conditional, unconditional (both BrE) ▪ police (BrE) VERB + BAIL ▪ apply for (esp. BrE) ▪ allow sb … Collocations dictionary
bail — ▪ I. bail bail 1 [beɪl] noun [uncountable] LAW 1. when someone who has been accused of a crime is allowed to remain free until their court case starts, usually because an amount of money has been given to the court which the court will keep if… … Financial and business terms
bail bond — noun (criminal law) money that must be forfeited by the bondsman if an accused person fails to appear in court for trial the judge set bail at $10,000 a $10,000 bond was furnished by an alderman • Syn: ↑bail, ↑bond • Derivationally related forms … Useful english dictionary
bail — I n 1.Low. surety, bond, bail bond, warranty, security, collateral, guarantee, deposit; pledge, plight, sponsorship. 2. bailor, bondsman, sponsor, backer, backup, custodian. 3. go or stand bail for bail out, bond, get [s.o.] out on bail, put up… … A Note on the Style of the synonym finder
bail — 1 / bāl/ n [Anglo French, act of handing over, delivery of a prisoner into someone s custody in exchange for security, from bailler to hand over, entrust, from Old French, from Latin bajulare to carry (a burden)] 1: the temporary release of a… … Law dictionary
bail bond — see bond 1a Merriam Webster’s Dictionary of Law. Merriam Webster. 1996. bail bond n. A contract betw … Law dictionary
bail bondsman — A professional agent for an insurance company who specializes in providing bail bonds for people charged with crimes and who do not have the money necessary to post the entire bail with the court. Bail bondsmen usually charge a fee of 10% of the… … Law dictionary
bail — bail1 [bāl] n. [ME & OFr, power, control, custody < OFr baillier, to keep in custody, deliver < L bajulare, to bear a burden < bajulus, porter, carrier] 1. money, a bond, etc. deposited with the court to obtain the temporary release of… … English World dictionary
Bail — Bail, n. [OF. bail guardian, administrator, fr. L. bajulus. See {Bail} to deliver.] 1. Custody; keeping. [Obs.] [1913 Webster] Silly Faunus now within their bail. Spenser. [1913 Webster] 2. (Law) (a) The person or persons who procure the release… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English