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21 subject
sub·ject n [ʼsʌbʤɪkt, -ʤekt]1) (theme, topic) Thema nt;on the \subject of sb/ sth über jdn/etw;while we're on the \subject wo wir gerade beim Thema sind;the planes have been the \subject of their concern die Flugzeuge waren Gegenstand ihrer Befürchtungen;the guest lecturer took as her \subject ‘imprisonment in modern society’ die Gastsprecherin hatte ‚die Freiheitsstrafe in der modernen Gesellschaft‘ zu ihrem Thema gewählt;the plan has been the \subject of debate recently über den Plan wurde vor kurzem diskutiert;to change the \subject das Thema wechseln;to wander off the \subject vom Thema abschweifen3) ( field) Fach nt; ( at school) [Schul]fach nt; ( specific research area) Spezialgebiet nt, Fachgebiet nt;he's better at arts \subjects than science in den künstlerischen Fächern ist er besser als in den naturwissenschaftlichen;her \subject is low-temperature physics sie hat sich auf Kältephysik spezialisiert;to be \subject to sth etw dat ausgesetzt sein;these flights are \subject to delay bei diesen Flügen muss mit Verspätung gerechnet werden;the goods are \subject to a 20% discount die Waren sind um 20% herabgesetzt;to be \subject to colds sich akk leicht erkälten;to be \subject to many dangers vielen Gefahren ausgesetzt sein;to be \subject to depression zu Depressionen neigen;to be \subject to a high rate of tax einer hohen Steuer unterliegen;3) ( contingent on)to be \subject to sth von etw dat abhängig sein;to be \subject to approval genehmigungspflichtig sein;\subject to wenn;we plan to go on Wednesday \subject to your approval wir haben vor, am Mittwoch zu gehen, wenn du nichts dagegenhast;\subject to your consent vorbehaltlich Ihrer Zustimmung vt [səbʼʤekt]1) ( subjugate)everyone interviewed had been \subjected to unfair treatment alle Interviewten waren unfair behandelt worden;to \subject sb/ sth to criticism jdn/etw kritisieren;to \subject sb to a lie-detector test jdn einem Lügendetektortest unterziehen;to \subject sb to torture jdn foltern -
22 any
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См. также в других словарях:
offence — of‧fence [əˈfens] , offense noun 1. [countable] LAW an illegal action or a crime: • The company was not aware that it was committing an offence. • It is an offence to sell alco … Financial and business terms
offence */*/*/ — UK [əˈfens] / US noun Word forms offence : singular offence plural offences 1) [countable] a crime or illegal activity for which there is a punishment motoring/firearms/public order offences criminal offence: Killing these animals is a criminal… … English dictionary
offence — [[t]əfe̱ns[/t]] ♦♦♦ offences (The spelling offense is used in American English. The pronunciation [[t]ɔ͟ːfens[/t]] is used for meaning 3.) 1) N COUNT An offence is a crime that breaks a particular law and requires a particular punishment.… … English dictionary
cause — 1 noun 1 WHAT CAUSES STH (C) a person, event, or thing that makes something happen (+ of): What was the cause of the accident? | The doctor had recorded the cause of death as heart failure. | root/underlying etc cause (=the basic cause): The root … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
offence*/*/ — [əˈfens] noun 1) [C] a crime or illegal activity for which there is a punishment motoring/firearms/public order offences[/ex] The usual fine is £15 to £100 for a first offence.[/ex] Killing these animals is a criminal offence.[/ex] minor offences … Dictionary for writing and speaking English
cause — cause1 W1S2 [ko:z US ko:z] n [Date: 1200 1300; : Old French; Origin: Latin causa] 1.) a person, event, or thing that makes something happen →↑effect cause of ▪ Breast cancer is the leading cause of death for American women in their forties.… … Dictionary of contemporary English
offence — noun 1) he has committed an offence Syn: crime, illegal act, misdemeanour, breach of the law, felony, infringement, violation, wrongdoing, sin 2) I do not want to cause offence Syn: annoyance … Synonyms and antonyms dictionary
offence — BrE usually offense AmE noun 1 (C) an illegal action or a crime: Driving while drunk is a serious offence. | a parking offense (+ against): sexual offences against children | commit an offence (=do something that is an offence) | first offence… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
offence — of|fence W3 BrE offense AmE [əˈfens] n 1.) an illegal action or a crime ▪ The possession of stolen property is a criminal offence. ▪ Punishment for a first offence is a fine. ▪ His solicitor said he committed the offence because he was heavily in … Dictionary of contemporary English
offence — (BrE) (AmE offense) noun 1 illegal act ADJECTIVE ▪ grave, heinous, major, serious ▪ lesser, minor, petty, trivial … Collocations dictionary
Offence — Offense Of*fense , Offence Of*fence , n. [F., fr. L. offensa. See {Offend}.] 1. The act of offending in any sense; esp., a crime or a sin, an affront or an injury. [1913 Webster] Who was delivered for our offenses, and was raised again for our… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English