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crime+(

  • 1 crime

    1. noun
    1) (act(s) punishable by law: Murder is a crime; Crime is on the increase.) delict; criminalitate
    2) (something wrong though not illegal: What a crime to cut down those trees!) ticăloşie
    2. noun
    (a person who has been found guilty of a crime.) infractor

    English-Romanian dictionary > crime

  • 2 crime

    interlasch

    Dictionnaire en ligne Français-Romanche > crime

  • 3 evil

    ['i:vl] 1. adjective
    (very bad; wicked; sinful: evil intentions; an evil man; He looks evil; evil deeds; an evil tongue.) rău
    2. noun
    1) (wrong-doing, harm or wickedness: He tries to ignore all the evil in the world; Do not speak evil of anyone.) (de) rău
    2) (anything evil, eg crime, misfortune etc: London in the eighteenth century was a place of crime, filth, poverty and other evils.) fla­gel
    - evilly
    - evilness
    - evil-doer

    English-Romanian dictionary > evil

  • 4 impeach

    [im'pi: ]
    (to accuse of a crime, especially to accuse a person who works for the government of a crime against the State.) a pune sub acuzare (în vederea destituirii)

    English-Romanian dictionary > impeach

  • 5 innocent

    ['inəsnt]
    1) (not guilty (of a crime, misdeed etc): A man should be presumed innocent of a crime until he is proved guilty; They hanged an innocent man.) inocent
    2) ((of an action etc) harmless or without harmful or hidden intentions: innocent games and amusements; an innocent remark.) nevinovat
    3) (free from, or knowing nothing about, evil etc: an innocent child; You can't be so innocent as to believe what advertisements say!) inocent
    - innocence

    English-Romanian dictionary > innocent

  • 6 jury

    ['‹uəri]
    plural - juries; noun
    1) (a group of people legally selected to hear a case and to decide what are the facts, eg whether or not a prisoner accused of a crime is guilty: The verdict of the jury was that the prisoner was guilty of the crime.)
    2) (a group of judges for a competition, contest etc: The jury recorded their votes for the song contest.)
    - juryman

    English-Romanian dictionary > jury

  • 7 solve

    [solv]
    1) (to discover the answer to (a problem etc): The mathematics teacher gave the children some problems to solve.) a soluţiona
    2) (to clear up or explain (a mystery, crime etc): That crime has never been solved.) a elucida

    English-Romanian dictionary > solve

  • 8 accomplice

    (a person who helps another, especially in crime: The thief's accomplice warned him that the police were coming.) complice

    English-Romanian dictionary > accomplice

  • 9 alibi

    (the fact or a statement that a person accused of a crime was somewhere else when it was committed: Has he an alibi for the night of the murder?) alibi

    English-Romanian dictionary > alibi

  • 10 arson

    (the crime of setting fire to (a building etc) on purpose.) incendiere preme­ditată

    English-Romanian dictionary > arson

  • 11 atrocious

    [ə'trəuʃəs]
    1) (very bad: Your handwriting is atrocious.) oribil
    2) (extremely cruel: an atrocious crime.) atroce
    - atrocity

    English-Romanian dictionary > atrocious

  • 12 baffling

    adjective a baffling crime.) deru­tant; enigmatic

    English-Romanian dictionary > baffling

  • 13 bigamy

    ['biɡəmi]
    (marriage to two wives or two husbands at once (a crime in some countries): He's been charged with committing bigamy.) bigamie
    - bigamous

    English-Romanian dictionary > bigamy

  • 14 confess

    [kən'fes]
    (to make known that one is guilty, wrong etc; to admit: He confessed (to the crime); He confessed that he had broken the vase; It was stupid of me, I confess.) a măr­turisi
    - confessional
    - confessor

    English-Romanian dictionary > confess

  • 15 confession

    [-ʃən]
    1) (acknowledgment of a crime or fault: The youth made a confession to the police officer.) mărturisire
    2) ((an) act of confessing one's sins to a priest: She went to confession every Friday.) confe­siune

    English-Romanian dictionary > confession

  • 16 confront

    1) (to bring face to face with: He was confronted with the evidence of his crime.) a se confrunta (cu)
    2) (to face in a hostile manner; to oppose: They confronted the enemy at dawn.) a înfrunta

    English-Romanian dictionary > confront

  • 17 convict

    1. [kən'vikt] verb
    (to prove or declare (someone) guilty: She was convicted of theft.) con­damnat
    2. ['konvikt] noun
    (a person serving a sentence for a crime: Two of the convicts have escaped from prison.) condamnare

    English-Romanian dictionary > convict

  • 18 criminal

    ['kriminl]
    1) (concerned with crime: criminal law.) penal
    2) (against the law: Theft is a criminal offence.) penal
    3) (very wrong; wicked: a criminal waste of food.) criminal, strigător la cer

    English-Romanian dictionary > criminal

  • 19 culpable

    (deserving blame; guilty: She was the one who committed the crime but he was culpable also.) culpabil, vinovat

    English-Romanian dictionary > culpable

  • 20 denounce

    (to accuse publicly (of a crime etc): He was denounced as a murderer.) a denunţa

    English-Romanian dictionary > denounce

См. также в других словарях:

  • crime — [ krim ] n. m. • 1160; lat. crimen « accusation » 1 ♦ Sens large Manquement très grave à la morale, à la loi. ⇒ attentat, 1. délit, faute, 1. forfait , infraction, 3. mal, péché. Crime contre nature. « L intérêt que l on accuse de tous nos crimes …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • crime — / krīm/ n [Middle French, from Latin crimen fault, accusation, crime] 1: conduct that is prohibited and has a specific punishment (as incarceration or fine) prescribed by public law compare delict, tort 2: an offense against public law …   Law dictionary

  • crime — W2S2 [kraım] n [Date: 1200 1300; : Latin; Origin: crimen judgment, accusation, crime ] 1.) [U] illegal activities in general ▪ We moved here ten years ago because there was very little crime. ▪ Women commit far less crime than men. ▪ Police… …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • crime — CRIME. s. m. Action meschante & punissable par les loix. Crime capital. grand crime. crime atroce, detestable. crime enorme. crime inoüi, noir, irremissible. commettre, faire un crime. faire un crime à quelqu un de quelque chose, pour dire,… …   Dictionnaire de l'Académie française

  • crime — CRIME. s. m. Mauvaise action que les lois punissent. Crime capital. Grand crime. Crime atroce, détestable. Crime énorme. Crime inouï, noir, irrémissible. Commettre, faire un crime. Punir un crime. Pardonner un crime. Abolir un crime. L abolition… …   Dictionnaire de l'Académie Française 1798

  • 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

  • crime — [kraɪm] noun LAW 1. [countable] a dishonest or immoral action that can be punished by law: • Insider trading is a crime here and in the U.S. 2. [uncountable] illegal activities in general: • We moved here ten years ago because there was very… …   Financial and business terms

  • Crime — (kr[imac]m), n. [F. crime, fr. L. crimen judicial decision, that which is subjected to such a decision, charge, fault, crime, fr. the root of cernere to decide judicially. See {Certain}.] 1. Any violation of law, either divine or human; an… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Crime — 〈[kraım] m. 6 oder n. 15〉 I 〈zählb.〉 Verbrechen, Gewalttat II 〈unz.; Sammelbez. für〉 Kriminalität; →a. Sex and Crime [engl.] * * * Crime [kra̮im ], das; s [engl. crime < afrz. crime < lat. crimen = Verbrechen]: engl. Bez. für: Verbrechen,… …   Universal-Lexikon

  • crime — Crime, et cas qu on a commis, Crimen. Un crime pour lequel y a peine de mort, ou d infamie, Capitale facinus, vel crimen. Crime de lese majesté, Perduellio. Pour certain crime ou cas, Certo nomine maleficij. Commettre un crime, ou faire une faute …   Thresor de la langue françoyse

  • crime — mid 13c., sinfulness, from O.Fr. crimne (12c., Mod.Fr. crime), from L. crimen (gen. criminis) charge, indictment, accusation; crime, fault, offense, perhaps from cernere to decide, to sift (see CRISIS (Cf. crisis)). But Klein (citing Brugmann)… …   Etymology dictionary

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