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1 admissible
[əd'mɪsəbl]aggettivo ammissibile* * *[-səbl]adjective (allowable: admissible evidence.) ammissibile, accettabile* * *admissible /ədˈmɪsəbl/a.ammissibile; accettabileadmissibilityn.ammissibilità.* * *[əd'mɪsəbl]aggettivo ammissibile -
2 admissible ad·mis·sible adj
[əd'mɪsəbl] -
3 admissibility
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4 ♦ evidence
♦ evidence /ˈɛvɪdəns/n. [u]1 prova, prove; segno evidente; evidenza: There's no evidence that the boy is lying, non ci sono prove che il ragazzo menta; The girl's pallor was evidence of her uneasiness, il pallore della ragazza era segno evidente del suo disagio; The papers showed evidence of having been tampered with, le carte mostravano segni di manomissione; the evidence of the facts, l'evidenza dei fatti2 (leg.) prova, prove: There isn't enough evidence against him, non ci sono prove sufficienti contro di lui; All evidence has been destroyed, tutte le prove sono state distrutte; circumstantial evidence, prove indiziarie; irrefutable evidence, prova certa; corroborative evidence, prova sufficiente; conclusive evidence, prova inoppugnabile; convincing evidence, prove convincenti; damning evidence, prove schiaccianti; documentary evidence, prova documentale (o scritta); forensic evidence, prove legali; hard evidence, prove concrete (pl.); prova concreta; reliable evidence, prove attendibili; inconclusive evidence, prove non conclusive (o che non provano nulla); tangible evidence, prova tangibile (o prove tangibili); strong evidence, prove ben fondate; to produce st. in evidence, produrre qc. come prova; admissible in evidence, ammissibile come prova; to fabricate evidence, creare prove false; falsificare le prove; to sift the evidence, vagliare le prove; experimental evidence, prove sperimentali3 (leg.) deposizione, deposizioni: to give evidence in court, deporre in tribunale; on the evidence of the bystanders, secondo le deposizioni degli astanti● evidence to the contrary, prova contraria; prova del contrario □ in evidence, in evidenza; in mostra; in risalto; evidente; presente: to be much in evidence, essere in grande evidenza; essere presente in gran numero □ (comm.: di merce) «on evidence», «come si trova» □ (leg.) to turn King's (o Queen's; USA, State's) evidence, testimoniare contro i propri complici.(to) evidence /ˈɛvɪdəns/v. t.2 (leg.) suffragare con prove. -
5 intake
['ɪnteɪk]1) (consumption) consumo m., quantità f. immessa2) scol. univ. amm. + verbo sing. o pl. reclute f.pl., matricole f.pl.the new intake — (at school) i nuovi alunni; (into training) i nuovi arrivati; (into job) i nuovi assunti
3) (inhalation)4) tecn. (inlet) entrata f.* * *['inteik]1) (the thing or quantity taken in: This year's intake of students is smaller than last year's.) (numero di studenti ammessi)2) (a place at which eg water is taken into a channel etc: The ventilation system broke down when something blocked the main air intake.) presa3) (the act of taking in: an intake of breath.) presa, aspirazione* * *intake /ˈɪnteɪk/n. [cu]1 (ind., mecc.) presa ( d'acqua, d'aria, ecc.): air intake, presa d'aria ( d'un motore, in una miniera, ecc.)2 quantità di cibo assunto; (med.) apporto; quantità di liquido assorbito; capacità di assorbimento; (tecn.) energia assorbita: admissible daily intake (abbr. ADI), apporto giornaliero ammissibile; The sewer intake is too small, la capacità d'assorbimento della fogna è troppo piccola5 (ind. min.) galleria di ventilazione6 (agric.) terreno bonificato10 (trasp.) quantità di merce caricata● (mecc.) intake manifold, collettore d'aspirazione (o di alimentazione) □ (mecc.) intake stroke, corsa d'aspirazione □ (mecc.) intake valve, valvola d'aspirazione □ intake well, pozzo ( petrolifero) di sondaggio.* * *['ɪnteɪk]1) (consumption) consumo m., quantità f. immessa2) scol. univ. amm. + verbo sing. o pl. reclute f.pl., matricole f.pl.the new intake — (at school) i nuovi alunni; (into training) i nuovi arrivati; (into job) i nuovi assunti
3) (inhalation)4) tecn. (inlet) entrata f. -
6 admit
[əd'mɪt] 1.1) (accept) ammettere, riconoscere [mistake, fact]to admit that — ammettere o riconoscere che
it is annoying, I (must, have to) admit — è fastidioso, devo ammetterlo
3) (allow to enter) ammettere [ person] ( into in, a)2."dogs not admitted" — "vietato l'ingresso ai cani"
admit of — form. ammettere
- admit to* * *[əd'mit]past tense, past participle - admitted; verb1) (to allow to enter: This ticket admits one person.) far entrare2) (to say that one accepts as true: He admitted (that) he was wrong.) ammettere, riconoscere•- admission
- admittance
- admittedly* * *[əd'mɪt] 1.1) (accept) ammettere, riconoscere [mistake, fact]to admit that — ammettere o riconoscere che
it is annoying, I (must, have to) admit — è fastidioso, devo ammetterlo
3) (allow to enter) ammettere [ person] ( into in, a)2."dogs not admitted" — "vietato l'ingresso ai cani"
admit of — form. ammettere
- admit to
См. также в других словарях:
admissible — [ admisibl ] adj. • 1453; lat. médiév. admissibilis 1 ♦ Vieilli Que l esprit peut admettre, qui est recevable. Hypothèse admissible. ♢ Mod. (surtout négatif) Tolérable, supportable. Sa conduite n est pas admissible. 2 ♦ Qui peut être admis (à un… … Encyclopédie Universelle
admissible — ad·mis·si·ble /əd mi sə bəl, ad / adj: capable of being allowed or permitted the difficulty would be lessened if entries in books of account were admissible as prima facie evidence B. N. Cardozo ad·mis·si·bil·i·ty / ˌmi sə bi lə tē/ n Merriam… … Law dictionary
admissible — ad‧mis‧si‧ble [ədˈmɪsbl] adjective LAW able to be used as evidence in a court of law: • Secretly recorded phone conversations are not admissible as evidence. * * * admissible UK US /ədˈmɪsəbl/ adjective LAW ► allowed or able to be considered in … Financial and business terms
Admissible — Ad*mis si*ble, a. [F. admissible, LL. admissibilis. See {Admit}.] Entitled to be admitted, or worthy of being admitted; that may be allowed or conceded; allowable; as, the supposition is hardly admissible. {Ad*mis si*ble*ness}, n. {Ad*mis si*bly} … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
admissible — (adj.) 1610s, from M.Fr. admissible, from pp. stem of L. admittere (see ADMIT (Cf. admit)). Legal sense is recorded from 1849 … Etymology dictionary
admissible — [ad mis′ə bəl, ədmis′ə bəl] adj. [Fr < ML admissibilis < L admissus, pp. of admittere, ADMIT] 1. that can be properly accepted or allowed [admissible evidence] 2. that ought to be admitted admissibility [ad mis΄əbil′ə tē, əd mis΄əbil′ə tē]… … English World dictionary
admissible — ADMISSIBLE. adj. des 2 genres. Valable, recevable, qui peut être admis. Ses moyens de Requête civile ont été jugés admissibles. Ses moyens de faux ont été déclarés pertinens et admissibles … Dictionnaire de l'Académie Française 1798
admissible — [adj] able or deserving of consideration; allowable acceptable, allowed, applicable, appropriate, concedable, fair, fitting, just, justifiable, lawful, legal, legitimate, licit, likely, logical, not impossible, not unlikely, okay, passable,… … New thesaurus
admissible — Admissible. adj. de tout genre. Terme de Pratique. Valable, recevable, digne d estre admis. Ses moyens, sa requeste civile ont esté jugez admissibles … Dictionnaire de l'Académie française
admissible — ► ADJECTIVE 1) acceptable or valid. 2) having the right to be admitted to a place. DERIVATIVES admissibility noun … English terms dictionary
admissible — (a dmi ssi bl ) adj. Qui peut être admis. Homme admissible dans la corporation. Proposition, excuse admissible. SUPPLÉMENT AU DICTIONNAIRE ADMISSIBLE. Ajoutez : HIST. XVIe s. • Disant qu il ne sçait lire ni escripre, au mains [moins]… … Dictionnaire de la Langue Française d'Émile Littré