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1 crime
crime [kʀim]masculine nouna. ( = meurtre) murder• la victime/l'arme du crime the murder victim/weaponb. ( = délit grave) crime• il est parti avant l'heure ? ce n'est pas un crime ! he left early? well, that's hardly a crime!* * *kʀimnom masculin1) ( acte criminel répréhensible) gén, Droit crime2) ( meurtre) murdercrime passionnel — crime of passion, crime passionnel
3) ( actions criminelles) crime•Phrasal Verbs:* * *kʀim nm1) (= offense) crime2) (= meurtre) murderUn crime a été commis ici. — There was a murder here.
* * *A nm1 ( acte criminel) crime; ce n'est pas un crime! there's no law against it!;2 ( meurtre) murder; heure/lieux du crime time/scene of the murder; crime crapuleux murder for money; crime passionnel crime of passion, crime passionnel; crime parfait perfect crime;3 ( actions criminelles) crime; le crime ne paie pas crime does not pay;4 ( faute) crime; ce serait un crime de faire it would be a crime to do; ton seul crime est d'avoir dit oui your only crime is to have said yes.B ○nf crime squad.crime contre l'humanité crime against humanity; crime d'État crime against the state; crime de haute trahison crime of high treason; crime organisé organized crime; crime de sang murder; crimes de guerre war crimes.[krim] nom masculinun crime contre l'État (high) treason ou a crime against the state2. [meurtre] murdercrime (à motif) sexuel sex crime ou murdercrime passionnel crime passionnel, crime of passionc'est un crime de démolir ces églises it's a crime ou it's criminal to knock down these churchescrime contre nature act ou crime against nature4. [criminalité] -
2 commettre
commettre [kɔmεtʀ]➭ TABLE 56 transitive verb[+ crime, injustice] to commit ; [+ erreur] to make* * *kɔmɛtʀ
1.
1) ( faire) to make [erreur]; to commit [crime]; to carry out [attentat, massacre]2) ( préposer)
2.
se commettre verbe pronominal fml* * *kɔmɛtʀ vt[crime, exaction, faute] to commitIl a commis un crime grave. — He has committed a serious crime.
* * *commettre verb table: mettreA vtr1 ( faire) to make [erreur, gaffe]; to commit [délit, crime, péché]; to carry out [attentat, agression, massacre]; commettre une lâcheté/infamie to do something cowardly/disreputable; commettre une imprudence to be careless; le régime a commis des excès the regime is guilty of excesses;3 ( préposer) to appoint; commettre qn à un emploi to appoint sb to a post; commettre un avocat à la défense de qn to appoint a lawyer to defend sb; expert commis appointed expert.B se commettre vpr fml se commettre avec des indésirables to consort ou associate with undesirable characters.[kɔmɛtr] verbe transitifl'impatience lui a fait commettre une faute impardonnable his impatience led him to make an inexcusable mistake2. DROIT [nommer - arbitre, avocat, huissier] to appoint3. (humoristique & péjoratif) [produire - livre, émission] to perpetrate————————se commettre avec verbe pronominal plus préposition -
3 monstruosité
mɔ̃stʀyozite1) ( de crime) monstrousness3) ( difformité) deformity* * *mɔ̃stʀyozite nf* * *monstruosité nf1 (de crime, conduite) monstrousness;2 ( acte) atrocity; ( objet) monstrosity; commettre des monstruosités to commit atrocities; dire des monstruosités to say preposterous things; cette calomnie est une monstruosité this is a monstrous slander;[mɔ̃stryozite] nom féminin1. [difformité] deformity2. [acte, crime] monstrositycommettre/dire des monstruosités to do/to say the most terrible things -
4 s'accuser
akyze1. vpr/réflto blame o.s.Il s'est accusé d'un crime qu'il n'a pas commis. — He took the blame for a crime he didn't commit.
s'accuser d'avoir fait qch — to blame o.s. for having done sth
2. vpr/récip3. vpr/pass(= s'accentuer) to become more marked
См. также в других словарях:
done with intent to commit crime — index felonious Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
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crime — [ kraım ] noun *** 1. ) count an illegal activity or action: commit a crime (=do something illegal): She was unaware that she had committed a crime. the scene of a crime (=where it happened): There were no apparent clues at the scene of the crime … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
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