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1 crime
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2 Crime
subs.Guilt: P. and V. αἰτία, ἡ.Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Crime
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3 crime
έγκλημα -
4 crime
έγκλημα -
5 evil
['i:vl] 1. adjective(very bad; wicked; sinful: evil intentions; an evil man; He looks evil; evil deeds; an evil tongue.) κακός,μοχθηρός2. noun1) (wrong-doing, harm or wickedness: He tries to ignore all the evil in the world; Do not speak evil of anyone.)2) (anything evil, eg crime, misfortune etc: London in the eighteenth century was a place of crime, filth, poverty and other evils.)•- evil-- evilly
- evilness
- evil-doer -
6 impeach
[im'pi: ](to accuse of a crime, especially to accuse a person who works for the government of a crime against the State.) κατηγορώ -
7 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.) αθώος2) ((of an action etc) harmless or without harmful or hidden intentions: innocent games and amusements; an innocent remark.) αθώος,άκακος3) (free from, or knowing nothing about, evil etc: an innocent child; You can't be so innocent as to believe what advertisements say!) αφελής•- innocence -
8 jury
['‹uəri]plural - juries; noun1) (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.) ένορκοι2) (a group of judges for a competition, contest etc: The jury recorded their votes for the song contest.) ελλανόδικος επιτροπή•- juror- juryman -
9 solve
[solv]1) (to discover the answer to (a problem etc): The mathematics teacher gave the children some problems to solve.) λύνω2) (to clear up or explain (a mystery, crime etc): That crime has never been solved.) λύνω -
10 accomplice
(a person who helps another, especially in crime: The thief's accomplice warned him that the police were coming.) συνεργός, συναυτουργός -
11 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?) άλλοθι -
12 arson
(the crime of setting fire to (a building etc) on purpose.) εμπρησμός -
13 atrocious
[ə'trəuʃəs]1) (very bad: Your handwriting is atrocious.) αισχρός, κάκιστος2) (extremely cruel: an atrocious crime.) βάρβαρος, απάνθρωπος, ωμός•- atrocity -
14 baffling
adjective a baffling crime.) δυσεπίλυτος -
15 bigamy
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16 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.) ομολογώ- confessional
- confessor -
17 confession
[-ʃən]1) (acknowledgment of a crime or fault: The youth made a confession to the police officer.) ομολογία2) ((an) act of confessing one's sins to a priest: She went to confession every Friday.) εξομολόγηση -
18 confront
1) (to bring face to face with: He was confronted with the evidence of his crime.) φέρνω αντιμέτωπο2) (to face in a hostile manner; to oppose: They confronted the enemy at dawn.) αντιμετωπίζω• -
19 convict
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20 criminal
['kriminl]1) (concerned with crime: criminal law.) ποινικός2) (against the law: Theft is a criminal offence.) ποινικός, αξιόποινος, παράνομος3) (very wrong; wicked: a criminal waste of food.) εγκληματικός
См. также в других словарях:
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