-
1 acquittal
-
2 acquittal
-
3 acquittal
English-German dictionary of Architecture and Construction > acquittal
-
4 acquittal
noun(Law) Freispruch, der* * ** * *ac·quit·tal[əˈkwɪtəl, AM -t̬-]n* * *[ə'kwɪtl]nFreispruch m (on von)* * *acquittal [-tl] s1. JUR Freispruch m2. → academic.ru/543/acquittance">acquittance 1* * *noun(Law) Freispruch, der* * *n.Begnadigung f.Freispruch m.Schulderlass m. -
5 acquittal
ac·quit·tal [əʼkwɪtəl, Am -t̬-] n -
6 judgment of acquittal
judgment of acquittal Freispruch m -
7 acquit
- tt-1) (Law) freisprechen2)acquit oneself well — seine Sache gut machen
* * *[ə'kwit]past tense, past participle - acquitted; verb- academic.ru/542/acquittal">acquittal* * *ac·quit<- tt->[əˈkwɪt]vt▪ to \acquit sb jdn freisprechento be \acquitted on a charge von einem Anklagepunkt freigesprochen werden2. (perform)to \acquit oneself badly/well seine Sache schlecht/gut machen* * *[ə'kwɪt]1. vtfreisprechento be acquitted of a crime/on a charge — von einem Verbrechen/einer Anklage freigesprochen werden
2. vr(= conduct oneself) sich verhalten; (= perform) seine Sache machenhe acquitted himself well — er hat seine Sache gut gemacht
* * *acquit [əˈkwıt] v/t4. acquit o.s. (of)b) sich (von einem Verdacht) befreien:acquit o.s. of suspicion5. acquit o.s. well sich gut halten, seine Sache gut machen* * *- tt-1) (Law) freisprechen2)* * *v.freisprechen v. -
8 look to
transitive verb1) (rely on, count upon)look to somebody/something for something — etwas von jemandem/etwas erwarten
look to somebody/something to do something — von jemandem/etwas erwarten, dass er/es etwas tut
2) (be careful about) sorgen für; (keep watch upon) aufpassen auf (+ Akk.)* * *◆ look tovi1. (consider)to \look to to one's laurels sich akk behauptento \look to to one's motives seine Motive [genau] prüfen2. (rely on)▪ to \look to to sb auf jdn bauen [o setzen]we're \look toing to Jim for guidance on this matter wir erhoffen uns von Jim Rat in dieser Angelegenheitthe school is \look toing to its new head to improve its image die Schule erhofft sich vom neuen Direktor eine Aufbesserung ihres Image3. (expect)▪ to \look to to do sth erwarten [o damit rechnen], etw zu tun4. (regard with anticipation)to \look to to the future in die Zukunft blicken [o schauen]* * *vi +prep obj1) (= rely on) sich verlassen auf (+acc)they looked to him to solve the problem — sie verließen sich darauf, dass er das Problem lösen würde
we look to you for support —
we look to you to lead the country — wir rechnen damit or zählen darauf, dass Sie das Land führen
there's no point in looking to him for help — es ist sinnlos, von ihm Hilfe zu erwarten
we look to you for guidance — wir wenden uns an Sie um Rat
2)to look to the future — in die Zukunft sehen or blicken
3) (= look after) sich kümmern umlook to it that... — sieh zu, dass...
* * *look to v/i1. hinsehen oder hinschauen zulook to it that … achte darauf, dass …; sorge dafür, dass …; sieh zu, dass …; → academic.ru/41984/laurel">laurel 5I look to you to help me ( oder for help) ich erwarte Hilfe von dir; ich verlasse mich darauf, dass du mir hilfst7. hindeuten auf (akk), erwarten lassen:* * *transitive verb1) (rely on, count upon)look to somebody/something for something — etwas von jemandem/etwas erwarten
look to somebody/something to do something — von jemandem/etwas erwarten, dass er/es etwas tut
2) (be careful about) sorgen für; (keep watch upon) aufpassen auf (+ Akk.)
См. также в других словарях:
acquittal — ac·quit·tal /ə kwit əl/ n 1: release or discharge from debt or other liability 2: a setting free or deliverance from the charge of an offense by verdict of a jury, judgment of a court, or other legal process see also implied acquittal; judgment… … Law dictionary
Acquittal — Ac*quit tal, n. 1. The act of acquitting; discharge from debt or obligation; acquittance. [1913 Webster] 2. (Law) A setting free, or deliverance from the charge of an offense, by verdict of a jury or sentence of a court. Bouvier. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
acquittal — (n.) early 15c., payment of debt or retribution; see ACQUIT (Cf. acquit) + AL (Cf. al) (2). Sense of a release from debt or obligation is from mid 15c.; that of freeing from charge or offense (by legal process) is from 1530s … Etymology dictionary
acquittal — [n] declaration removing blame absolution, acquitting, amnesty, clearance, deliverance, discharge, discharging, dismissal, dismissing, exculpation, exemption, exoneration, freeing, letting off, liberation, pardon, release, releasing, relief from … New thesaurus
acquittal — [ə kwit′ l] n. [ME aquital < Anglo Fr aquitaille: see ACQUIT] 1. an acquitting; discharge (of duty, obligation, etc.) 2. Law a setting free or being set free by judgment of the court … English World dictionary
Acquittal — Not Guilty redirects here. For the song, see Not Guilty (song). Criminal procedure … Wikipedia
acquittal — noun VERB + ACQUITTAL ▪ return (BrE), vote for (AmE) ▪ The jury returned an acquittal after only 22 minutes. ▪ She claimed she had been intimidated into voting for acquittal. ▪ direct (BrE) … Collocations dictionary
Acquittal — (Roget s Thesaurus) < N PARAG:Acquittal >N GRP: N 1 Sgm: N 1 acquittal acquittal acquitment Sgm: N 1 clearance clearance exculpation Sgm: N 1 acquittance acquittance clearance exoneration Sgm: N 1 discharge discharge … English dictionary for students
acquittal — /euh kwit l/, n. 1. the act of acquitting; discharge. 2. the state of being acquitted; release. 3. the discharge or settlement of a debt, obligation, etc. 4. Law. judicial deliverance from a criminal charge on a verdict or finding of not guilty.… … Universalium
acquittal — n. (legal) to bring in an acquittal (the jury brought in an acquittal) * * * [ə kwɪtl] (legal) to bring in an acquittal (the jury brought in an acquittal) … Combinatory dictionary
acquittal — [[t]əkwɪ̱t(ə)l[/t]] acquittals N VAR Acquittal is a formal declaration in a court of law that someone who has been accused of a crime is innocent. ...the acquittal of six police officers charged with the beating of an alleged drug dealer... The… … English dictionary