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1 accusare
accuselaw chargeaccusare ricevuta acknowledge receipt* * *accusare v.tr.1 ( incolpare) to accuse (s.o. of sthg., of doing); (form.) to charge (s.o. with sthg., with doing): l'accusò di aver dimenticato di chiudere la porta a chiave, he accused her of forgetting to lock the door; l'accusò di negligenza, he accused her of negligence; fu accusata ingiustamente di furto e licenziata, she was wrongly charged with theft and sacked2 (dir.) to accuse (s.o. of sthg., of doing); to indict, to prosecute (s.o. for sthg., for doing); to charge (s.o. with sthg., with doing): fu accusato di omicidio, he was charged with murder // accusare qlcu. di crimini contro lo stato, to impeach s.o. for crimes against the state4 ( rivelare, manifestare) to reveal, to betray: accusare stanchezza, to betray tiredness; parole che accusano una grande ignoranza, words that reveal (o show) great ignorance5 ( dire di sentire) to complain (of sthg.): accusava un fortissimo mal di testa, she complained of a splitting headache6 (comm.) to acknowledge: accusiamo ricevuta della Vs. lettera, we acknowledge receipt of your letter8 ( scherma) to acknowledge.◘ accusarsi v.rifl. to accuse oneself (of sthg., of doing): si accusò del furto, he accused himself of the theft.* * *[akku'zare] 1.verbo transitivo1) (incolpare) to accuse [ persona] (di of); to blame [destino, sfortuna] (di of); [fatto, prova] to point to, to incriminate [ persona]2) dir. [ querelante] to accuse (di of); [polizia, giudice] to charge (di with)essere accusato di omicidio — to face murder charges, to be arraigned on a charge of murder
3) (lamentare) to complain of [ mal di testa]2.••* * *accusare/akku'zare/ [1]1 (incolpare) to accuse [ persona] (di of); to blame [destino, sfortuna] (di of); [fatto, prova] to point to, to incriminate [ persona]2 dir. [ querelante] to accuse (di of); [polizia, giudice] to charge (di with); essere accusato di omicidio to face murder charges, to be arraigned on a charge of murderII accusarsi verbo pronominale(se stessi) to take* the blame (di for), to say* one is guilty (di of)accusare il colpo to feel the blow; accusare ricevuta to acknowledge receipt. -
2 corte marziale
(cortile) (court)yardSee:Cultural note: corti The Corte d'Appello hears appeals against sentences passed by courts in both civil and criminal cases and can modify sentences where necessary. The Corte d'Assise tries serious crimes such as manslaughter and murder; its judges include both legal professionals and members of the public. Similar in structure, the Corte d'Assise d'Appello hears appeals imposed by these two courts. The Corte di Cassazione is the highest judicial authority and ensures that the law is correctly applied by the other courts; it may call for a re-trial if required. The Corte dei Conti ensures the Government's compliance with the law and the Constitution. Reporting directly to Parliament, it oversees the financial aspects of the state budget. The politically independent Corte Costituzionale decides whether laws comply with the principles of the Constitution, and has the power to impeach the "Presidente della Repubblica".* * *corte marzialemil. court-martial\→ corte————————corte marzialecourt-martial\→ marziale -
3 donazione
f donation* * *donazione s.f.1 donation, gift: atto di donazione, deed of gift; fare una donazione, to make a donation (o to donate); donazione di modico valore, gratuity; revocare una donazione, to impeach a gift; imposta sulle donazioni, gift tax // (med.) donazione di organi, organ donation2 ( somma elargita per uno scopo) grant.* * *[donat'tsjone]sostantivo femminile donation (anche dir. med.)* * *donazione/donat'tsjone/sostantivo f.donation (anche dir. med.)\donazione di organi organ donation; donazione di sangue blood donation. -
4 invalidare
invalidate* * *invalidare v.tr. (dir.) to invalidate, to nullify, to void: invalidare un testamento, to invalidate a will; invalidare un contratto, to impeach a contract; invalidare un atto, to void a deed; invalidare una sentenza, to quash a verdict // invalidare una tesi, to disprove a theory.* * *[invali'dare]verbo transitivo1) dir. to invalidate [contratto, testamento]2) (confutare) to disprove, to invalidate* * *invalidare/invali'dare/ [1]1 dir. to invalidate [contratto, testamento]2 (confutare) to disprove, to invalidate. -
5 sconfessare
sconfessare v.tr. to disavow, to disown, to repudiate: sconfessare una dottrina, to disavow a doctrine; il partito ha sconfessato alcuni membri, the party has disowned some of its members; sconfessare la propria fede, to repudiate (o to abjure) one's faith; (dir.) sconfessare un testimone, to impeach a witness.* * *[skonfes'sare]verbo transitivo to disavow [dichiarazione, opinione]* * *sconfessare/skonfes'sare/ [1]to disavow [dichiarazione, opinione]. -
6 screditare
discredit* * *screditare v.tr. to discredit; to smear: (dir.) screditare un testimone, to impeach a witness; sta facendo di tutto per screditarmi, he's doing his best to blacken my name.◘ screditarsi v.intr.pron. to lose* credit, to be discredited, to get* smeared.* * *[skredi'tare]1. vt2. vip (screditarsi)* * *[skredi'tare] 1.verbo transitivo to discredit [persona, istituzione, teoria]2.verbo pronominale screditarsi to disgrace oneself* * *screditare/skredi'tare/ [1]to discredit [persona, istituzione, teoria]II screditarsi verbo pronominaleto disgrace oneself.
См. также в других словарях:
impeach — im·peach /im pēch/ vt [Anglo French empecher, from Old French empeechier to hinder, from Late Latin impedicare to fetter, from Latin in + pedica fetter, from ped pes foot] 1: to charge with a crime or misconduct; specif: to charge (a public… … Law dictionary
Impeach — Im*peach , v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Impeached}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Impeaching}.] [OE. empeechier to prevent, hinder, bar, F. emp[^e]cher, L. impedicare to entangle; pref. im in + pedica fetter, fr. pes, pedis, foot. See {Foot}, and {Appeach},… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Impeach (motion) — Impeach Class Incidental main Requires second? Yes Debatable? Yes May be reconsidered? A decision or finding favorable to accused may not be reconsidered, but an unfavorable decision can be reconsidered. Amendable? Yes The motion to impeach is… … Wikipedia
Impeach — Im*peach , n. Hindrance; impeachment. [Obs.] [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
impeach falsely — index frame (charge falsely) Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
impeach unfairly — index frame (charge falsely) Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
impeach unjustly — index frame (charge falsely) Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
impeach — UK US /ɪmˈpiːtʃ/ verb [T] LAW, GOVERNMENT ► especially in the US, to formally accuse a public official of a serious offence in connection with their job: »He was suspended and later impeached amid a $60 million financial scandal. impeachable… … Financial and business terms
impeach — (v.) late 14c., to impede, hinder, prevent, from Anglo Fr. empecher, O.Fr. empeechier hinder (12c., Mod.Fr. empêcher), from L.L. impedicare to fetter, catch, entangle, from from assimilated form of in into, in (see IN (Cf. in ) (2)) + L. pedica… … Etymology dictionary
impeach — indict, incriminate, *accuse, charge, arraign Analogous words: condemn, denounce, blame, censure (see CRITICIZE): try, test, *prove Contrasted words: *exculpate, vindicate, exonerate, acquit, absolve … New Dictionary of Synonyms
impeach — in BrE means ‘to charge with a crime against the State, especially treason’, and in AmE means ‘to charge (the holder of a public office) with misconduct’. It does not mean ‘to dismiss from office’ in either variety … Modern English usage