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1 allegedly
allegedly [ə'ledʒɪdlɪ]∎ they allegedly broke in and stole £300 ils seraient entrés par effraction et auraient volé 300 livres;∎ she allegedly stabbed her husband elle aurait poignardé son mari;∎ allegedly he's the greatest violinist since Paganini on dit que c'est le plus grand violoniste depuis Paganini -
2 allegedly
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3 allegedly
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4 allegedly
English-French dictionary of law, politics, economics & finance > allegedly
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5 treasury
Treasury bill ≃ bon m du Trésor;Treasury bond ≃ bon du Trésor (à long terme);Treasury note billet m de trésorerie;treasury savings économies f pl de financement;Treasury scrip inscription f sur le grand-livre;American Treasury Secretary ≃ ministre m des finances;treasury swap échange m cambiste;Treasury warrant mandat m du TresorGoldman Sachs has been notified that the Securities and Exchange Commission plans to pursue a case against it for allegedly trading US Treasury bonds based on inside information … The $3,000bn Treasury market rallied, with 30-year bonds seeing the biggest one-day gain in 14 years.
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6 officially
officially [ə'fɪʃəlɪ](a) (formally) officiellement;∎ he's now been officially appointed sa nomination est désormais officielle;∎ we now have it officially la nouvelle est maintenant officielle(b) (allegedly) théoriquement, en principe;∎ officially, he's at the dentist's en principe, il est chez le dentiste -
7 professedly
professedly [prə'fesɪdlɪ]∎ they are professedly anarchists de leur propre aveu, ce sont des anarchistes;∎ she has professedly killed three people d'après elle ou d'après ses dires, elle aurait tué trois personnes(b) (allegedly) soi-disant, prétendument;∎ he came here professedly to help me à l'en croire, il est venu pour m'aider;∎ she's professedly rich c'est une femme prétendument richeUn panorama unique de l'anglais et du français > professedly
См. также в других словарях:
allegedly — al·leg·ed·ly /ə le jəd lē/ adv: by or according to an allegation defendant s response allegedly showed malice Merriam Webster’s Dictionary of Law. Merriam Webster. 1996. allegedly … Law dictionary
allegedly — (adv.) 1828, from ALLEGED (Cf. alleged) + LY (Cf. ly) (2) … Etymology dictionary
allegedly — alleged, allegedly 1. Alleged is pronounced as two syllables, and allegedly as four. 2. Their role is to distinguish an unproven accusation (i.e., an allegation) from a proven fact or event (the victim of the alleged fraud / their alleged… … Modern English usage
allegedly — adverb a) According to someones allegation. The suspect was allegedly involved in the robbery, but his alibi placed him in another state at the time. b) According to someones conspicuous impressions (which could be alleged ensuingly). The game is … Wiktionary
allegedly — adv. Allegedly is used with these adjectives: ↑illegal, ↑obscene Allegedly is used with these verbs: ↑assault, ↑confess, ↑kill, ↑leak, ↑mislead, ↑murder, ↑plot, ↑rape, ↑ … Collocations dictionary
allegedly — al|leg|ed|ly [ ə ledʒədli ] adverb * if someone allegedly does something, another person says that they have done it, even though this has not been proved: The second incident allegedly occurred in the spring of 1992 … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
allegedly */ — UK [əˈledʒɪdlɪ] / US [əˈledʒədlɪ] adverb if someone allegedly does something, another person says that they have done it, even though this has not been proved The second incident allegedly occurred in the spring of 1992 … English dictionary
allegedly — See allegedly, reportedly, reputedly … Dictionary of problem words and expressions
allegedly — al|leg|ed|ly [əˈledʒıdli] adv [sentence adverb] formal used when reporting something that people say is true, although it has not been proved ▪ a sports car, allegedly stolen in Manchester … Dictionary of contemporary English
allegedly — adverb (sentence adverb) used when reporting something that other people say is true, although there is no proof: He was allegedly caught shoplifting in his local supermarket … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
allegedly — allege ► VERB ▪ claim that someone has done something illegal or wrong, typically without proof. DERIVATIVES alleged adjective allegedly adverb. ORIGIN originally in the sense «declare on oath»: from Old French esligier, from Latin lis lawsuit ;… … English terms dictionary