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1 offence
1) ((any cause of) anger, displeasure, hurt feelings etc: That rubbish dump is an offence to the eye.) forargelse, krenkelse2) (a crime: The police charged him with several offences.) forseelse, lovovertredelsekrenkelsesubst. \/əˈfens\/ eller offense1) ( jus) forseelse, rettsbrudd, rettskrenkelse, straffbar handling, lovovertredelse, forbrytelse2) ( overført) brudd, synd3) forargelse, harme, vrede, sinne4) fornærmelse, krenkelse5) ( militærvesen) angrep, offensiv6) ( sport) angrep7) ( bibelsk) forargelsecatch in the offence gripe på fersk gjerningcommit an offence ( jus) bryte lovencriminal offence ( jus) forbrytelsegive\/cause offence (to) vekke anstøt (hos), støte, vekke forargelse (hos)no offence (was meant)! det var ikke ille ment!, ta det ikke ille opp!offence against property ( jus) forbrytelse mot formuesrettigheter, vinningsforbrytelseoffences against public order ( jus) forbrytelser mot den alminnelige ro og ordenoffence against the person ( jus) forbrytelse mot person, legemsbeskadigelse, legemsfornærmelseoffences against the state ( jus) forbrytelser mot statens sikkerhetposture of offence angrepsstillingpunishable offence ( jus) straffbar handlingtake offence ta ille opptake offence at ta anstøt av, finne noe støtende, bli fornærmet overwar of offence angrepskrig (det at en stat går til væpnet angrep på en annen stat)weapons of offence angrepsvåpen
См. также в других словарях:
offense — of·fense or of·fence /ə fens/ n 1: a violation of the law; esp: a criminal act nor shall any person be subject for the same offense to be twice put in jeopardy U.S. Constitution amend. V see also lesser included offense 2 … Law dictionary
offense — noun 1) he denied having committed any offense Syn: crime, illegal/unlawful act, misdemeanor, breach of the law, felony, wrongdoing, wrong, misdeed, peccadillo, sin, transgression, infringement; Law malfeasance; informal no no; archaic trespass;… … Thesaurus of popular words
offense — LAW the US spelling of offence * * * offense UK US /əˈfens/ noun US ► OFFENCE(Cf. ↑offence) … Financial and business terms
offense — noun /ʌˈfɛns,ɒˈfɛns/ a) The act of offending; a crime or sin; an affront or injury. b) The state of being offended or displeased; anger; displeasure. Ant: def … Wiktionary
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
offense — or offence noun Etymology: Middle English, from Anglo French, from Latin offensa, from feminine of offensus, past participle of offendere Date: 14th century 1. a. obsolete an act of stumbling b. archaic a cause or occasion of sin ; stumbling… … New Collegiate Dictionary
offense — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) n. insult, affront, discourtesy; aggression, attack; transgression, fault, crime, sin, wrong. See guilt, illegality. II (Roget s IV) n. 1. [A misdeed] Syn. misdemeanor, malfeasance, transgression; see… … English dictionary for students
offense — 1 noun (C, U) the usual American spelling of offence 2 noun (U) AmE the part of a game such as football concerned with getting points and winning: The Bears are going to have work on their offense this season. opposite defense 2 … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
offense — UK [əˈfens] / US noun [uncountable] 1) a) American the part of a game such as american football that involves trying to score points b) the members of a team in a game such as American football whose job is to try to score points 2) the American… … English dictionary
first offense — noun first charge, first crime, first criminal violation, first violation Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
statutory offense — noun crimes created by statutes and not by common law • Syn: ↑statutory offence, ↑regulatory offense, ↑regulatory offence • Hypernyms: ↑crime, ↑offense, ↑criminal offense, ↑criminal offence, ↑ … Useful english dictionary