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61 bestechlich
bestechlich adj open to bribery; corrupt; corruptible -
62 korrumpieren
korrumpieren v corrupt -
63 korrupt
korrupt adj corrupt -
64 schlecht
schlecht adj bad; faulty; corrupt; sick• schlecht bezahlen underpay• schlecht verwalten [wirtschaften] badly manage• schlechter stellen put in worse position; position more disadvantageously -
65 allesamt
al·le·samt [ʼaləʼzamt] advall [of them/you/us];die Politiker sind doch \allesamt korrupt politicians are corrupt to a man;ihr seit doch \allesamt verrückt! you're mad, the lot [or all] of you!, you're all mad! -
66 bestechlich
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67 Datenschrott
Da·ten·schrott mcorrupt data, [electronic] garbage (Am) -
68 demoralisieren
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69 einschießen
ein|schie·ßen irreg vt1) ( zerschießen)eine Tür mit einem Revolver \einschießen to shoot down a door sep;die Schaufensterscheibe mit dem Ball \einschießen to kick the football through the shop windowetw \einschießen Gewehr, Pistole etc. to test sth3) ( zwischendurch einheften)etw \einschießen to insert sthvr haben2) ( sich jdn als Ziel wählen)die Presse hatte sich auf den korrupten Politiker eingeschossen the press had the corrupt politician in their sightsvier schoss zum 3:0 ein he made the score 3:0 -
70 Haupt
( geh)1) ( Kopf) head2) ( zentrale Figur) headWENDUNGEN:an \Haupt und Gliedern totally, drastically;die gesamte Verwaltung dieses Staates ist verfault an \Haupt und Gliedern the entire administration of this state is totally corrupt;entblößten \Hauptes;mit bloßem \Haupt bareheaded;gesenkten/erhobenen \Hauptes with one's head bowed/raised;jdn aufs \Haupt schlagen to vanquish sb;zu jds Häupten at sb's head -
71 korrumpieren
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72 verballhornen
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73 Verderben
ver·der·ben1. ver·der·ben <verdarb, verdorben> [fɛɐ̭ʼdɛrbn̩]vt haben1) ( moralisch korrumpieren)jdn/etw \Verderben to corrupt sb/sth2) ( ruinieren)[jdm] etw \Verderben to ruin [sb's] sth;jdn \Verderben to ruin sb3) ( zunichtemachen)[jdm] etw \Verderben to spoil [or ruin] [sb's] sth4) ( verscherzen)2. Ver·der·ben <-s> [fɛɐ̭ʼdɛrbn̩] ntjds \Verderben sein to be sb's undoing [or ruin];in sein \Verderben rennen to be heading for the rocks;jdn ins \Verderben stürzen to bring ruin upon sb -
74 verderben
ver·der·ben1. ver·der·ben <verdarb, verdorben> [fɛɐ̭ʼdɛrbn̩]vt haben1) ( moralisch korrumpieren)jdn/etw \verderben to corrupt sb/sth2) ( ruinieren)[jdm] etw \verderben to ruin [sb's] sth;jdn \verderben to ruin sb3) ( zunichtemachen)[jdm] etw \verderben to spoil [or ruin] [sb's] sth4) ( verscherzen)2. Ver·der·ben <-s> [fɛɐ̭ʼdɛrbn̩] ntjds \verderben sein to be sb's undoing [or ruin];in sein \verderben rennen to be heading for the rocks;jdn ins \verderben stürzen to bring ruin upon sb -
75 verdorben
ver·dor·ben [fɛɐ̭ʼdɔrbn̩]das Fleisch riecht so merkwürdig, wahrscheinlich ist es \verdorben the meat smells so peculiar, it's probably off2) ( moralisch korrumpiert) corrupt3) medeinen \verdorbenen Magen haben to have an upset stomach -
76 fehlerhaft
adj COMP [Bit, Block, Datenblock] corrupt, PROG erroneous, TELEKOM faulty -
77 verfälschen
vt COMP [Daten] corrupt -
78 verstümmeln
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79 verstümmelt
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80 zerstören
vt COMP [Daten] corrupt
См. также в других словарях:
Corrupt — Cor*rupt , v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Corrupted}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Corrupting}.] 1. To change from a sound to a putrid or putrescent state; to make putrid; to putrefy. [1913 Webster] 2. To change from good to bad; to vitiate; to deprave; to pervert; to … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Corrupt — Cor*rupt (k?r r?pt ), a. [L. corruptus, p. p. of corrumpere to corrupt; cor + rumpere to break. See {Rupture}.] 1. Changed from a sound to a putrid state; spoiled; tainted; vitiated; unsound. [1913 Webster] Who with such corrupt and pestilent… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
corrupt — cor·rupt 1 /kə rəpt/ adj: having an unlawful or evil motive; esp: characterized by improper and usu. unlawful conduct intended to secure a benefit for oneself or another (as by taking or giving bribes) cor·rupt·ly adj cor·rupt·ness n corrupt 2 vt … Law dictionary
corrupt — [adj1] dishonest base, bent, bribable, crooked, debauched, double dealing, exploiting, extortionate, faithless, fast and loose*, fixed, foul, fraudulent, gone to the dogs*, inconstant, iniquitous, knavish, mercenary, nefarious, on the take*, open … New thesaurus
corrupt — mid 14c., from O.Fr. corropt unhealthy, corrupt; uncouth (of language), and directly from L. corruptus, pp. of corrumpere to destroy; spoil, figuratively corrupt, seduce, bribe, from com , intensive prefix (see COM (Cf. com )), + rup , pp. stem… … Etymology dictionary
corrupt — vb deprave, debauch, pervert, *debase Analogous words: degrade, debase, *abase: *ruin, wreck: pollute, defile, *contaminate Contrasted words: reform, amend, *correct … New Dictionary of Synonyms
corrupt — ► ADJECTIVE 1) willing to act dishonestly in return for money or personal gain. 2) evil or morally depraved. 3) (of a text or computer data) made unreliable by errors or alterations. 4) archaic rotten or putrid. ► VERB 1) make corrupt. 2) … English terms dictionary
corrupt — [kə rupt′] adj. [ME < L corruptus, pp. of corrumpere, to destroy, spoil, bribe < com , together + rumpere, to break: see RUPTURE] 1. Obs. changed from a sound condition to an unsound one; spoiled; contaminated; rotten 2. deteriorated from… … English World dictionary
Corrupt — Cor*rupt (k?r r?pt ), v. i. 1. To become putrid or tainted; to putrefy; to rot. Bacon. [1913 Webster] 2. To become vitiated; to lose purity or goodness. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
corrupt — ▪ I. corrupt cor‧rupt 1 [kəˈrʌpt] adjective 1. LAW using power in a dishonest or illegal way in order to get money or an advantage of some kind: • Swiss justice, in our experience, is as tough on corrupt bankers as it is on all other criminals. • … Financial and business terms
corrupt — 01. The former president was obviously [corrupt], and is accused of having stolen millions of dollars from the country. 02. Suspicions of widespread [corruption] in government have resulted in the downfall of the presidency. 03. There is a lot of … Grammatical examples in English