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1 commit **** com·mit vt
[kə'mɪt]1) (crime, act) commettere2)to commit o.s. (to sth/to doing sth) — impegnarsi (in qc/nel fare qc)
3)to commit sth to sb's care — affidare qc a qn -
2 trespass
I ['trespəs]1) (unlawful entry) intrusione f., sconfinamento m.; dir. violazione f. della proprietà2) (unlawful act) trasgressione f., infrazione f.3) relig. (sin) peccato m., colpa f.II ['trespəs]1) (enter unlawfully) introdursi abusivamente; dir. = commettere una violazione della proprietàto trespass on — introdursi in, violare [ property]
"no trespassing" — "proprietà privata", "vietato l'ingresso"
2) (commit unlawful act) commettere un'infrazione3) fig. form.to trespass on — fare perdere [ time]; approfittare di, abusare di [ generosity]
4) relig.* * *['trespəs] 1. verb(to enter illegally: You are trespassing (on my land).) sconfinare, (introdursi abusivamente)2. noun(the act of trespassing.) sconfinamento (violazione di proprietà)* * *trespass /ˈtrɛspəs/n. [uc]1 (leg.) violazione di proprietà; intrusione; sconfinamento2 (leg.) abuso; prevaricazione; usurpazione; violazione● (relig.) trespass offering, sacrificio espiatorio □ (leg.) trespass to chattels (o to goods), illecita turbativa del possesso di cose □ (leg.) trespass to the person, illecito contro la persona.(to) trespass /ˈtrɛspəs/v. i.1 (arc. o biblico) contravvenire ( a un divieto, ecc.); (lett.) offendere, peccare, far torto: to trespass against a moral principle, trasgredire a un principio morale; «And forgive us our trespasses, as we forgive them that trespass against us», «e rimetti a noi i nostri debiti, come noi li rimettiamo ai nostri debitori»2 (leg.) oltrepassare un confine; introdursi abusivamente; sconfinare, invadere: to trespass on a private beach, introdursi abusivamente in una spiaggia privata3 (form.) – to trespass on (o upon) abusare di; approfittare di; usurpare; violare: I shall not trespass on your hospitality, non abuserò della vostra ospitalità; (leg.) to trespass upon sb. 's rights, violare i diritti di q.● to trespass upon sb. 's time, far perdere del tempo a q. □ «No trespassing!» ( cartello), «proprietà privata»FALSI AMICI: to trespass non significa trapassare.* * *I ['trespəs]1) (unlawful entry) intrusione f., sconfinamento m.; dir. violazione f. della proprietà2) (unlawful act) trasgressione f., infrazione f.3) relig. (sin) peccato m., colpa f.II ['trespəs]1) (enter unlawfully) introdursi abusivamente; dir. = commettere una violazione della proprietàto trespass on — introdursi in, violare [ property]
"no trespassing" — "proprietà privata", "vietato l'ingresso"
2) (commit unlawful act) commettere un'infrazione3) fig. form.to trespass on — fare perdere [ time]; approfittare di, abusare di [ generosity]
4) relig. -
3 suicide
['suːɪsaɪd, 'sjuː-] 1. 2.* * *1) (the/an act of killing oneself deliberately: She committed suicide; an increasing number of suicides.) suicidio2) (a person who kills himself deliberately.) suicida•- suicidal- suicidally* * *['suːɪsaɪd, 'sjuː-] 1. 2. -
4 outrage
I ['aʊtreɪdʒ]1) (anger) indignazione f., sdegno m. (at per)2) (horrifying act) attentato m.II ['aʊtreɪdʒ]* * *1. noun(a wicked act, especially of great violence: the outrages committed by the soldiers; The decision to close the road is a public outrage.) oltraggio, offesa2. verb(to hurt, shock or insult: She was outraged by his behaviour.) oltraggiare, offendere- outrageously
- outrageousness* * *outrage /ˈaʊtreɪdʒ/n.1 [u] indignazione; sdegno: The decision was greeted with general outrage, la decisione è stata accolta dall'indignazione generale; to tremble with outrage, tremare dall'indignazione; to voice one's outrage, esprimere il proprio sdegno; protestare con veemenza2 atto crudele; atrocità: to commit outrages, commettere atrocità; bomb outrage, attentato dinamitardo3 atto scandaloso; scandalo; soperchieria: an outrage against taxpayers, una soperchieria ai danni del contribuente; This is an outrage!, è uno scandalo!FALSI AMICI: outrage non significa oltraggio nel senso di offesa rivolta a una persona. (to) outrage /ˈaʊtreɪdʒ/v. t.2 violare; fare violenza a; offendere (la morale, ecc.): to outrage sb. 's sense of justice, offendere il senso di giustizia di q.FALSI AMICI: to outrage non significa oltraggiare nel senso di offendere una persona outrageda.indignato; sdegnato; scandalizzato.* * *I ['aʊtreɪdʒ]1) (anger) indignazione f., sdegno m. (at per)2) (horrifying act) attentato m.II ['aʊtreɪdʒ] -
5 sin
I [sɪn]nome relig. peccato m.; fig. offesa f., errore m.••II [sɪn]for my sins — scherz. disgraziatamente per me
* * *[sin] 1. noun(wickedness, or a wicked act, especially one that breaks a religious law: It is a sin to envy the possessions of other people; Lying and cheating are both sins.) peccato2. verb(to do wrong; to commit a sin, especially in the religious sense: Forgive me, Father, for I have sinned.) peccare- sinner- sinful
- sinfully
- sinfulness* * *[sɪn]1. nit would be a sin to do that Rel — sarebbe peccato farlo, fig sarebbe un peccato farlo
2. vi* * *I [sɪn]nome relig. peccato m.; fig. offesa f., errore m.••II [sɪn]for my sins — scherz. disgraziatamente per me
См. также в других словарях:
act — 1 n 1 a: something done by a person in accordance with his or her free will a tortious act see also actus reus b: the failure to do something that one has a legal duty to do – called also negative act; 2 a … Law dictionary
Commit — Com*mit , v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Committed}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Committing}.] [L. committere, commissum, to connect, commit; com + mittere to send. See {Mission}.] 1. To give in trust; to put into charge or keeping; to intrust; to consign; used with… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
commit — com·mit vb com·mit·ted, com·mit·ting vt 1 a: to put into another s charge or trust: entrust consign committed her children to her sister s care b: to place in a prison or mental hospital esp. by judicial order was found to be gravely … Law dictionary
commit — vb 1 Commit, entrust, confide, consign, relegate are comparable when they mean to assign to a person or place for some definite end or purpose (as custody or safekeeping). Commit is the widest term; it may express merely the general idea of… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
commit a crime — commit and illegal act, commit felony … English contemporary dictionary
commit — [v1] perform an action accomplish, achieve, act, carry out, complete, contravene, do, effectuate, enact, execute, go for broke*, go in for*, go out for*, offend, perpetrate, pull, pull off*, scandalize, sin, transgress, trespass, violate, wreak;… … New thesaurus
commit — ► VERB (committed, committing) 1) carry out or perform (a crime, immoral act, or mistake). 2) pledge or dedicate to a course, policy, or use. 3) (commit oneself to) resolve to remain in a long term emotional relationship with (someone). 4)… … English terms dictionary
act illegally — I verb be derelict, be illegal, be perfidious, be recalcitrant, break the law, commit a crime, disobey the law, not comply, refuse to obey, repudiate, resist, transgress, traverse, trespass, violate, violate the law II index disobey, violate… … Law dictionary
act on — index affect, award, commit (perpetrate), discharge (perform), militate, obey, treat ( … Law dictionary
Commit (data management) — In the context of computer science and data management, commit refers to the idea of making a set of tentative changes permanent. A popular usage is at the end of a transaction. A commit is an act of committing. Contents 1 Data management 2… … Wikipedia
act — I n. action 1) to commit, perform an act 2) a barbaric, barbarous; courageous; criminal; foolish, rash; heroic, noble; humane; illegal; impulsive; justified; kind; overt; statesmanlike; thoughtful act (she performed an heroic act) 3) an act of… … Combinatory dictionary