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1 offence *** of·fence
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2 ♦ (to) commit
♦ (to) commit /kəˈmɪt/A v. t.1 commettere: to commit a crime [a blunder, an offence], commettere un delitto [un errore, un reato]; to commit a sin, commettere un peccato; ( sport) to commit a foul, commettere un fallo; to commit perjury, commettere spergiuro; spergiurare; to commit suicide, suicidarsi2 impegnare; vincolare: to commit sb. to do st., impegnare q. a fare qc.; You don't have to feel committed to it, non devi sentirti impegnato4 (form.) affidare: to commit money to a bank, affidare denaro a una banca; to commit one's soul to God, affidare (o rimettere) la propria anima a Dio5 (leg.) mandare ( per disposizione ufficiale): to commit to jail (o to prison) mandare in prigione ( in detenzione preventiva); to commit sb. for trial, rinviare q. a giudizio6 internare; rinchiudere: to commit to a psychiatric hospital, internare in un ospedale psichiatrico8 (comput.) portare a termine; eseguire (il) commit: to commit a transaction, portare a termine una transazioneB v. i.impegnarsi; prendere posizione; pronunciarsi in modo esplicito: The Minister has committed to rationalizing the national health service, il ministro s'è impegnato a razionalizzare il servizio sanitario nazionale● to commit oneself, impegnarsi; prendere posizione; pronunciarsi in modo esplicito: I'd rather not commit myself to a specific figure, preferisco non arrischiare una cifra esatta; I don't want to commit myself to a stable relationship, non voglio impegnarmi in un rapporto fisso □ (form.) to commit a body to the earth [to the sea], affidare un corpo alla terra [al mare] □ to commit st. to memory, mandare (o imparare) qc. a memoria □ to commit st. to paper (o to writing), mettere qc. sulla carta (o per iscritto). -
3 ♦ (to) commit
♦ (to) commit /kəˈmɪt/A v. t.1 commettere: to commit a crime [a blunder, an offence], commettere un delitto [un errore, un reato]; to commit a sin, commettere un peccato; ( sport) to commit a foul, commettere un fallo; to commit perjury, commettere spergiuro; spergiurare; to commit suicide, suicidarsi2 impegnare; vincolare: to commit sb. to do st., impegnare q. a fare qc.; You don't have to feel committed to it, non devi sentirti impegnato4 (form.) affidare: to commit money to a bank, affidare denaro a una banca; to commit one's soul to God, affidare (o rimettere) la propria anima a Dio5 (leg.) mandare ( per disposizione ufficiale): to commit to jail (o to prison) mandare in prigione ( in detenzione preventiva); to commit sb. for trial, rinviare q. a giudizio6 internare; rinchiudere: to commit to a psychiatric hospital, internare in un ospedale psichiatrico8 (comput.) portare a termine; eseguire (il) commit: to commit a transaction, portare a termine una transazioneB v. i.impegnarsi; prendere posizione; pronunciarsi in modo esplicito: The Minister has committed to rationalizing the national health service, il ministro s'è impegnato a razionalizzare il servizio sanitario nazionale● to commit oneself, impegnarsi; prendere posizione; pronunciarsi in modo esplicito: I'd rather not commit myself to a specific figure, preferisco non arrischiare una cifra esatta; I don't want to commit myself to a stable relationship, non voglio impegnarmi in un rapporto fisso □ (form.) to commit a body to the earth [to the sea], affidare un corpo alla terra [al mare] □ to commit st. to memory, mandare (o imparare) qc. a memoria □ to commit st. to paper (o to writing), mettere qc. sulla carta (o per iscritto). -
4 offense of·fense Am [ə'fɛns] n
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 — 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 — n. infraction 1) to commit an offence 2) a minor, petty, trivial; serious offence 3) a capital; impeachable; indictable offence 4) an offence against feeling of outrage 5) to take offence at (she takes offence at every remark) insult (formal) 6)… … Combinatory dictionary
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 */*/*/ — 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 — (BrE) (AmE offense) noun 1 illegal act ADJECTIVE ▪ grave, heinous, major, serious ▪ lesser, minor, petty, trivial … Collocations dictionary
commit — com‧mit [kəˈmɪt] verb committed PTandPP committing PRESPART 1. [intransitive, transitive] to say that someone will definitely do something or must do something: commit somebody to do something • He committed his government to support Thailand s… … Financial and business terms
Offence against the person — Criminal law Part o … Wikipedia
offence — 01. Shoplifting is a serious [offence], and will be punished. 02. The smell of perfume can be quite [offensive] to people with allergies. 03. Because it was his first [offence], he was let off with a warning. 04. In some countries, selling… … Grammatical examples in English
commit */*/*/ — UK [kəˈmɪt] / US verb Word forms commit : present tense I/you/we/they commit he/she/it commits present participle committing past tense committed past participle committed Get it right: commit: Don t write the ed and ing forms of commit with only … English dictionary
commit — verb Commit is used with these nouns as the object: ↑abuse, ↑act, ↑adultery, ↑assault, ↑atrocity, ↑blasphemy, ↑blunder, ↑breach, ↑burglary, ↑crime, ↑deed, ↑error … Collocations dictionary