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1 waive
відмовлятися (від права, домагання, привілею тощо); не вимагати виконання ( чогось); тимчасово відкладати; ухилятися, уникати; робити вилучення ( або виключення)- waive a counsel
- waive a hearing
- waive a jury trial
- waive a privilege
- waive a right
- waive a tort
- waive a trial
- waive an appeal
- waive an immunity
- waive an indictment
- waive an objection
- waive bail
- waive defence
- waive defense
- waive effectuation of a right
- waive indictment
- waive one's right
- waive over to the court
- waive proof
- waive territorial claims
- waive the jurisdiction
- waive the right to a jury
- waive the right to a trial -
2 waive
v1. відмовлятися (від права/ вимоги)3. уникати, ухилятися- to waive ceremony не дотримуватися церемонії, без церемоній- to waive a claim відмовитися від позову/ претензій/ вимоги- to waive a demand не наполягати на вимозі- to waive discussion ухилитися від суперечки- to waive etiquette не дотримуватися вимог етикету- to waive formality не виконувати/ не дотримуватися формальностей- to waive immunity відмовитися від імунітету/ недоторканості- to waive a law не застосовувати закон- to waive an objection зняти заперечення- to waive one's right to reply відмовитися від права на відповідь- to waive one's right to speak відмовитися від виступу- to waive a rule не застосовувати правила- to waive the rules of procedure призупиняти дію правил процедури, не вдаватися до/ не звертатися до правил процедури -
3 waive
v1) юр. відмовлятися (від права, вимоги)2) утримуватися (від чогось)3) уникати, ухилятися4) відкладати на невизначений час5) покинути; відкинути (тж waive aside, waive away, waive off)* * *[weiv]v1) юp. відмовлятися ( від прав)2) допускати відхилення ( від чогось); відступати від чогось3) icт. ухилятися, уникати6) кинути ( крадені речі) -
4 waive
[weiv]v1) юp. відмовлятися ( від прав)2) допускати відхилення ( від чогось); відступати від чогось3) icт. ухилятися, уникати6) кинути ( крадені речі) -
5 waive
[weɪv]v1) відмовля́тися (від права, вимоги; тж. юр.)2) тимчасо́во відклада́ти -
6 waive defence
= waive defense відмовлятися від захисту -
7 waive defense
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8 waive a claim
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9 waive a counsel
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10 waive a hearing
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11 waive a jury trial
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12 waive a privilege
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13 waive a right
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14 waive a tort
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15 waive a trial
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16 waive an appeal
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17 waive an immunity
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18 waive an indictment
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19 waive an objection
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20 waive bail
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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 — [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 — Waive, n. [See {Waive}, v. t. ] 1. A waif; a castaway. [Obs.] Donne. [1913 Webster] 2. (O. Eng. Law) A woman put out of the protection of the law. See {Waive}, v. t., 3 (b), and the Note. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
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 — 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
Waive — Waive, v. i. To turn aside; to recede. [Obs.] [1913 Webster] To waive from the word of Solomon. Chaucer. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
waive — (v.) c.1300, from Anglo Fr. weyver to abandon, waive, O.Fr. weyver, guever to abandon, give back, probably from a Scandinavian source akin to O.N. veifa to swing about, from P.Gmc. *waibijanan (see WAIF (Cf. waif)). In Middle English legal… … Etymology dictionary
waive — [weıv] v [T] [Date: 1200 1300; : Old North French; Origin: weyver, from waif; WAIF] to state officially that a right, rule etc can be ignored ▪ She waived her right to a lawyer … Dictionary of contemporary English
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