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1 offence
a. ( = crime) délit m• it is an offence to... il est illégal de...b. ( = insult) to cause offence to sb offenser qnc. ( = military attack) attaque f* * *GB, offense US [ə'fens] noun1) Law infraction f2) ( insult) offense fto cause ou give offence to somebody — offenser quelqu'un
no offence intended, but... — je ne voudrais pas te vexer, mais...
4) Military offensive f5) US Sportthe offence — les attaquants mpl
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2 offence
1 Jur infraction f ; to commit an offence commettre une infraction ; to charge sb with an offence inculper qn d'une infraction ; it is an offence to do il est illégal de faire ; offences against property/the person/the state atteintes fpl à la propriété/la personne/la sûreté de l'État ;2 ( insult) offense f ; to cause ou give offence to sb offenser qn ; to take offence (at) s'offenser (de) ; to avoid offence éviter d'offenser ; this building is an offence to the eye ce bâtiment choque la vue ; no offence intended, but… je ne voudrais pas te vexer, mais… ; no offence taken il n'y a pas de mal ;3 ( attack) atteinte f (against à) ; -
3 trespass
A n2 ( unlawful act) transgression f ;B vi1 ( enter unlawfully) gen s'introduire illégalement ; Jur se rendre coupable d'une violation de propriété ; to trespass on gen pénétrer illégalement dans, Jur violer [property] ; ‘no trespassing’ ‘défense d'entrer’ ;2 ( commit unlawful act) commettre un délit ;4 Relig to trespass against offenser. -
4 offence
∎ it's his first offence c'est la première fois qu'il commet un délit;∎ second or subsequent offence récidive f;∎ to commit a second or subsequent offence récidiver;∎ arrested for drug offences (dealing) arrêté pour trafic de drogue; (use) arrêté pour consommation de drogue;∎ indictable/nonindictable offence infraction f majeure/mineure;∎ motoring or driving offence infraction f au code de la route;∎ parking offence contravention f au stationnement;∎ sex offence ≃ attentat m à la pudeur(b) (displeasure, hurt)∎ to give or to cause offence to sb (person, personal remarks) blesser ou offenser qn; (film, book, programme) heurter la sensibilité de qn;∎ to take offence at sth s'offenser ou s'offusquer de qch;∎ he's very quick to take offence il se vexe pour un rien;∎ I meant no offence je ne voulais pas vous blesser;∎ no offence meant - none taken! je n'avais pas l'intention de te vexer - il n'y a pas de mal!;∎ no offence! il n'y a pas de mal!;∎ the factory is an offence to the eye l'usine est une insulte au regard;∎ it's an offence against good taste c'est un outrage au bon goût
См. также в других словарях:
commit offense — index offend (violate the law) Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … 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 — 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 — [kə mit′] vt. committed, committing [ME committen < L committere, to bring together, commit < com , together + mittere, to send: see MISSION] 1. to give in charge or trust; deliver for safekeeping; entrust; consign [we commit his fame to… … English World dictionary
commit an offense — commit a crime, violate the law … English contemporary dictionary
offense — of|fense [ ə fens ] noun *** ▸ 1 illegal act ▸ 2 make someone angry ▸ 3 in sports ▸ 4 something that makes you angry ▸ 5 process of attacking 1. ) count a crime or illegal activity for which there is a punishment: a traffic/drug/sex offense… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
commit — com|mit [ kə mıt ] verb *** ▸ 1 do something illegal/wrong ▸ 2 (make someone) agree to something ▸ 3 say something/someone will be used ▸ 4 send someone to prison ▸ 5 in relationships ▸ 6 state someone is mentally ill ▸ 7 put someone/something in … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
commit — To make a commitment; to perpetrate, as to commit burglary. Under the statute making it an offense to conspire to commit an offense against the United States, the word means no more than bring about. It is not necessary that the conspiracy… … Ballentine's law dictionary
offense — n. infraction 1) to commit an offense 2) a minor, petty, trivial; serious offense 3) a capital; impeachable; indictable offense 4) an offense against feeling of outrage 5) to take offense at (she takes offense at every remark) insult (formal) 6)… … Combinatory dictionary
commit — verb (committed; committing) Etymology: Middle English committen, from Anglo French committer, from Latin committere to connect, entrust, from com + mittere to send Date: 14th century transitive verb 1 … New Collegiate Dictionary
Inchoate offense — An inchoate offence is the crime of preparing for or seeking to commit another crime. The most common example of an inchoate offence is conspiracy. Inchoate offence has been defined as Conduct deemed criminal without actual harm being done,… … Wikipedia