Перевод: с английского на польский

с польского на английский

prisoner+at+the+bar

  • 1 bar

    [bɑː(r)] 1. n
    ( place for drinking) bar m; ( counter) kontuar m; ( of metal etc) sztaba f; ( on window etc) krata f; ( of soap) kostka f; ( of chocolate) tabliczka f; ( obstacle) przeszkoda f; ( prohibition) zakaz m; ( MUS) takt m
    2. vt
    way, road zagradzać (zagrodzić perf); door, window barykadować (zabarykadować perf), ryglować (zaryglować perf); person odmawiać (odmówić perf) wstępu +dat; activity zabraniać (zabronić perf) or zakazywać (zakazać perf) +gen
    * * *
    1. noun
    1) (a rod or oblong piece (especially of a solid substance): a gold bar; a bar of chocolate; iron bars on the windows.) sztaba
    2) (a broad line or band: The blue material had bars of red running through it.) pasek
    3) (a bolt: a bar on the door.) zasuwa
    4) (a counter at which or across which articles of a particular kind are sold: a snack bar; Your whisky is on the bar.) bar, lada, kontuar
    5) (a public house.) bar
    6) (a measured division in music: Sing the first ten bars.) takt
    7) (something which prevents (something): His carelessness is a bar to his promotion.) przeszkoda
    8) (the rail at which the prisoner stands in court: The prisoner at the bar collapsed when he was sentenced to ten years' imprisonment.) barierka
    2. verb
    1) (to fasten with a bar: Bar the door.) ryglować
    2) (to prevent from entering: He's been barred from the club.) zakazać wstępu
    3) (to prevent (from doing something): My lack of money bars me from going on holiday.) uniemożliwiać
    3. preposition
    (except: All bar one of the family had measles.) oprócz
    - barman
    - bar code

    English-Polish dictionary > bar

  • 2 prisoner

    ['prɪznə(r)]
    n
    ( in prison) więzień/więźniarka m/f; ( during war etc) jeniec m

    to take sb prisonerbrać (wziąć perf) kogoś do niewoli

    * * *
    noun (anyone who has been captured and is held against his will as a criminal, in a war etc: The prisoners escaped from jail.) więzień

    English-Polish dictionary > prisoner

См. также в других словарях:

  • prisoner at the bar — index convict Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 prisoner at the bar n. A pe …   Law dictionary

  • prisoner at the bar — An accused person, while on trial before the court, is so called. One accused of crime, who is actually on trial, is in legal effect a prisoner at the bar, notwithstanding he has given bond for his appearance at the trial. He is a prisoner if… …   Black's law dictionary

  • bar — The court, in its strictest sense, sitting in full term. The presence, actual or constructive, of the court. Thus a trial at bar is one had before the full court, distinguished from a trial had before a single judge at nisi prius. So the case at… …   Black's law dictionary

  • bar — The court, in its strictest sense, sitting in full term. The presence, actual or constructive, of the court. Thus a trial at bar is one had before the full court, distinguished from a trial had before a single judge at nisi prius. So the case at… …   Black's law dictionary

  • Prisoner — Pris on*er, n. [F. prisonnier.] 1. One who is confined in a prison. Piers Plowman. [1913 Webster] 2. A person under arrest, or in custody, whether in prison or not; a person held in involuntary restraint; a captive; as, a prisoner at the bar of a …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Prisoner's base — Prisoner Pris on*er, n. [F. prisonnier.] 1. One who is confined in a prison. Piers Plowman. [1913 Webster] 2. A person under arrest, or in custody, whether in prison or not; a person held in involuntary restraint; a captive; as, a prisoner at the …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • bar — I n. counter or place where drinks are sold 1) to manage, operate, run a bar 2) to stop at a bar (on the way home); to drink at the bar; to drop into a bar 3) a cash (AE); cocktail; coffee (BE); gay; open ( free ); public (BE); salad; saloon… …   Combinatory dictionary

  • bar — [12] The history of bar cannot be traced back very far. Forms in various Romance languages, such as French barre (source of the English verb) and Italian and Spanish barra, point to a Vulgar Latin *barra, but beyond that nothing is known. The… …   The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins

  • bar — [12] The history of bar cannot be traced back very far. Forms in various Romance languages, such as French barre (source of the English verb) and Italian and Spanish barra, point to a Vulgar Latin *barra, but beyond that nothing is known. The… …   Word origins

  • prisoner — n. 1 a person kept in prison. 2 (in full prisoner at the bar) a person in custody on a criminal charge and on trial. 3 a person or thing confined by illness, another s grasp, etc. 4 (in full prisoner of war) a person who has been captured in war …   Useful english dictionary

  • prisoner —    Used to a prisoner in Shakespeare’s Measure for Measure and possibly in modern times to those held in custody. Nurse is a Neighbour, by Joanna Jones, quotes ‘Prisoner at the bar’, a phrase associated with old fashioned court room dramas. In… …   A dictionary of epithets and terms of address

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