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1 penalty
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2 amnistie
amnistie [amnisti]feminine noun━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━There is an amnistie in France when a new president takes office. Penalties for minor offences (especially parking fines) are waived.* * *amnistinom féminin amnesty ( en faveur de for)* * *amnisti nf* * *amnistie nf amnesty (en faveur de for); loi d'amnistie amnesty law.ⓘ Amnistie It is usual after the election of the Président de la République for an amnesty to be granted in which certain categories of offenders have their penalties reviewed. This can mean suspension of fines, reduced sentences or early release.[amnisti] nom fémininl'amnistie des contraventionstraditional waiving of parking fines by French president after a presidential electionUntil 2002 parking fines were traditionally waived by the French president immediately after a presidential election. This is known as l'amnistie des contraventions. -
3 amnistié
amnistie [amnisti]feminine noun━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━There is an amnistie in France when a new president takes office. Penalties for minor offences (especially parking fines) are waived.* * *amnistinom féminin amnesty ( en faveur de for)* * *amnisti nf* * *amnistie nf amnesty (en faveur de for); loi d'amnistie amnesty law.ⓘ Amnistie It is usual after the election of the Président de la République for an amnesty to be granted in which certain categories of offenders have their penalties reviewed. This can mean suspension of fines, reduced sentences or early release.————————, amnistiée [amnistje] nom masculin, nom féminin[prisonnier] amnestied prisoner[exilé] amnestied exile -
4 parité
parité [paʀite]feminine noun* * *The law of parité, passed in early 2000, stipulates that political parties should put forward an equal number of male and female candidates at all elections, from municipal to European levels. Parties failing to comply are subject to financial penalties which take the form of a reduction in their public funding. The law however only applies to communes with over 3500 inhabitants* * *paʀite nf1) (parité hommes-femmes) male-female parity, equal numbers of men and womenla parité hommes-femmes — male-female parity, equal numbers of men and women
2) ÉCONOMIE parity* * *parité nf2 ( en politique) male-female parity.parité du change parity of exchange.ⓘ Parité The law of parité, passed in early 2000, stipulates that political parties should put forward an equal number of male and female candidates at all elections, from municipal to European levels. Parties failing to comply are subject to financial penalties which take the form of a reduction in their public funding. The law however only applies to communes with over 3500 inhabitants.[parite] nom féminin1. [concordance - entre des rémunérations] parity, equality ; [ - entre des monnaies, des prix] parity ; [ - entre des concepts] comparability -
5 condamner
condamner [kɔ̃dαne]➭ TABLE 1 transitive verb• condamner qn à mort/pour meurtre to sentence sb to death/for murderb. ( = interdire, blâmer) [+ livre, action, idées, personne] to condemnc. [+ théorie] to put an end tod. ( = obliger) condamner à [+ silence, attente] to condemn toe. ( = fermer) [+ porte, fenêtre] to block ; (avec briques) to brick up ; (avec planches) to board up ; [+ pièce] to lock up ; [+ portière de voiture] to lock* * *kɔ̃dane1) Droit ( infliger une peine à) to sentenceil a été condamné à quatre mois de prison avec sursis — he was given a four-month suspended sentence
2) ( interdire) [loi, article] to punish [vol, trafic]3) ( désapprouver fortement) [personne, pays] to condemn [acte, décision]4) ( astreindre à)5) ( sceller) to seal up [fenêtre, porte]; ( fermer à clé) to shut up [pièce]; to lock [portières]6) ( ruiner) to spell death for [société, industrie]7) ( déclarer incurable)* * *kɔ̃dɒne vt1) (= blâmer) to condemnLe gouvernement a condamné cette décision. — The government condemned this decision.
2) DROIT to sentenceIl a été condamné à deux ans de prison. — He was sentenced to two years in prison.
3)4) [porte, ouverture] to fill in, to block up* * *condamner verb table: aimer vtr1 Jur ( infliger une peine à) to sentence; condamner qn à une amende to fine sb; elle a été condamnée à 1 000 euros d'amende she was fined 1,000 euros; condamner qn à deux ans de réclusion to sentence sb to two years' imprisonment; il a été condamné à quatre mois de prison avec sursis he was given a four-month suspended sentence; condamner qn à mort to sentence sb to death; condamner qn pour vol to convict sb of theft; condamner qn par défaut or contumace to sentence sb in absentia;2 ( interdire) [loi, article] to punish [vol, trafic]; la législation condamne le racisme/la bigamie the law punishes racism/bigamy;3 ( désapprouver fortement) [personne, pays, groupe] to condemn [acte, attitude, décision];4 ( astreindre à) to condemn (à to); être condamné au silence to be condemned to silence; il se voit condamné à un choix difficile/à un rôle secondaire he's being forced to make a difficult choice/to play a secondary role; condamner qn à faire to compel sb to do; il est condamné à attendre/coopérer he is obliged to wait/cooperate;5 ( bloquer) ( définitivement) to seal up [fenêtre, porte, entrée]; ( fermer à clé) to shut up [pièce]; to lock [portières];6 fig ( ruiner) to spell death for [société, industrie, secteur]; les nouvelles technologies ont condamné l'artisanat the new technologies spell death for the traditional crafts;7 ( déclarer incurable) les médecins l'ont condamné the doctors have given up hope of saving him.[kɔ̃dane] verbe transitif1. DROIT [accusé] to sentencecondamner quelqu'un à mort/aux travaux forcés to sentence somebody to death/to hard labourcondamné à trois mois de prison pour... sentenced to three months' imprisonment for...condamner quelqu'un par défaut/par contumace to sentence somebody by default/in absentiafaire condamner quelqu'un to get ou to have somebody convicted3. [désapprouver - attentat, propos] to express disapproval ofcondamner quelqu'un pour avoir fait ou d'avoir fait quelque chose to blame somebody for having done somethingl'expression est condamnée par les puristes the use of the phrase is condemned ou is disapproved of by purists4. [accuser] to condemn5. [suj: maladie incurable] to condemn6. [murer - porte, fenêtre] to block up (separable), to seal off (separable) ; [ - pièce] to close up (separable)7. [obliger] -
6 pénalités de remboursement anticipé
Dictionnaire Français-Anglais > pénalités de remboursement anticipé
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7 Casier judiciaire
put bluntly, a casier judiciaire is a criminal record. Every adult citizen in France has a casier judiciaire, but fortunately this does not mean that everyone in France has a criminal record in the English sense of the term. Most people have what is known as a 'casier judiciaire vierge', litterally a virgin criminal record, i.e. an empty criminal record or no criminal record. All information is held in a central database at Nantes; the information logged in a person's casier judiciaire includes sentences passed by the courts, information concerning personal bankruptcy, and certain civil or administrative penalties. This information is not public, but elements, known as an 'extrait de casier judiciaire' can be made available to the courts, or to the authorities, for example when a person is applying for a public sector job for which a clean record is required.Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Casier judiciaire
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8 cumul des peines
accumulation of penalties (or accumulative sentences)Dictionnaire juridique, politique, économique et financier > cumul des peines
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9 peines accessoires
Dictionnaire juridique, politique, économique et financier > peines accessoires
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10 sanctions administratives
Dictionnaire juridique, politique, économique et financier > sanctions administratives
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