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21 poner una denuncia
(v.) = file + police report* * *(v.) = file + police reportEx: Filing a false police report is a felony, punishable by one to three years in prison.
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22 presentar una denuncia
to lodge a complaint* * *(v.) = file + police report* * *(v.) = file + police reportEx: Filing a false police report is a felony, punishable by one to three years in prison.
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23 denunciable
adj.1 fit to be denounced.2 indictable, punishable, that may be denounced, that may be terminated.* * *► adjetivo1 which may be reported* * *ADJ [delito] indictable, punishable -
24 castigador
• castigator• castigatory• chastiser• chastising• punishable crime• punishable offense• punishing• punishment -
25 delito punible
• punishability• punishable• punishable offense• punisher -
26 delito punible
m.punishable offense, punishable crime. -
27 crimen
m.1 crime.cometer un crimen to commit a crimesería un crimen dejar al bebé solo (informal) it would be criminal o a crime to leave the baby on its own¡ese corte de pelo es un crimen! (informal) that haircut is awful o criminal!crimen de guerra war crimecrimen organizado organized crimecrimen pasional crime of passion, crime passionnel2 transgression of the law, offense, evildoing, misdeed.3 delinquency, vitium, crime, wrongdoing.* * *► nombre masculino (pl crímenes)1 (delito) crime2 (asesinato) murder\crimen pasional crime of passion* * *noun m.* * *SM1) (=asesinato) murder; (=delito grave) crimecrimen pasional — crime of passion, crime passionnel frm
2) * (=barbaridad)* * *a) ( delito grave) serious crime; ( asesinato) murderb) (fam) (pena, lástima) crime (colloq)qué crimen! — it's wicked o criminal
* * *= crime, felony, criminality.Ex. Some headings are vague and without scope notes to define them: ROBBERS AND OUTLAWS; crime AND CRIMINALS; ROGUES AND VAGABONDS.Ex. Every state has its own statutes and codes that may make the theft or mutilation of library materials a misdemeanor or even a felony.Ex. Matters of civility rather than criminality are the focus of the discussion.----* cometer un crimen = commit + murder.* crímen de guerra = war crime.* crimen organizado = organised crime.* escena del crimen = scene of the crime.* escenario del crimen = scene of the crime.* lugar del crimen = scene of the crime.* * *a) ( delito grave) serious crime; ( asesinato) murderb) (fam) (pena, lástima) crime (colloq)qué crimen! — it's wicked o criminal
* * *= crime, felony, criminality.Ex: Some headings are vague and without scope notes to define them: ROBBERS AND OUTLAWS; crime AND CRIMINALS; ROGUES AND VAGABONDS.
Ex: Every state has its own statutes and codes that may make the theft or mutilation of library materials a misdemeanor or even a felony.Ex: Matters of civility rather than criminality are the focus of the discussion.* cometer un crimen = commit + murder.* crímen de guerra = war crime.* crimen organizado = organised crime.* escena del crimen = scene of the crime.* escenario del crimen = scene of the crime.* lugar del crimen = scene of the crime.* * *1 (delito grave) serious crime; (asesinato) murderes un crimen tirar así la comida it's a crime to throw away food like that¡qué crimen ponerle ese nombre a la criatura! it's wicked o criminal to give the child a name like that ( colloq)Compuestos:war crimeviolent crimela lucha contra el crimen organizado the fight against organized crimecrime passionel, crime of passion* * *
crimen sustantivo masculino ( delito grave) serious crime;
( asesinato) murder;
crimen pasional crime of passion;
es un crimen tirar esta comida it's a crime to throw away this food;
¡qué crimen! it's wicked o criminal
crimen sustantivo masculino serious crime
Esp murder
' crimen' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
acordonar
- alguna
- alguno
- autor
- autora
- confesar
- consumarse
- denunciar
- desalmada
- desalmado
- desentrañar
- escena
- evidencia
- exonerar
- inducir
- nefanda
- nefando
- pagar
- siglo
- testigo
- brutal
- cometer
- compinche
- escalofriante
- esclarecer
- espantoso
- horroroso
- involucrar
- monstruoso
- pasional
- precintar
- repugnante
- resolver
- suceso
English:
admission
- admit
- apprehend
- associate
- baffle
- close
- cold-blooded
- commission
- commit
- copycat
- cover
- cover up
- crime
- disown
- divorce
- epidemic
- eyewitness
- foul
- full-scale
- grievous
- haul
- hideous
- indiscriminate
- innocent
- involvement
- mastermind
- passion
- plot
- punishable
- rampant
- report
- rope off
- scene
- sex crime
- undiscovered
- vicious
- gang
- hang
- perpetrator
- such
* * *crimen nm1. [delito] crime [serious];el autor del crimen [de asesinato] the murderer;cometer un crimen to commit a crimecrimen de Estado state crime;crimen de guerra war crime;crimen contra la humanidad crime against humanity;crimen organizado organized crime;crimen pasional crime of passion2. Fam [cosa horrible]es un crimen derrochar tanto dinero en una fiesta it's criminal to spend so much money on a party;¡ese corte de pelo es un crimen! that haircut is awful o criminal!;sería un crimen dejar al bebé solo it would be criminal o a crime to leave the baby on its own* * *m crime;crimen sexual sex crime* * ** * *crimen n1. (delito) crime2. (asesinato) murder -
28 denegación
f.1 denial, contradiction.2 denegation, denial, negation, refusal.3 dismissal.* * *1 (rechazo) refusal; (negación) denial\denegación de demanda DERECHO dismissal* * *noun f.denial, refusal* * *SF [de permiso, petición] refusal; [de derechos] denialdenegación de auxilio — (Jur) failure to offer assistance ( though legally bound to do so)
* * *femenino refusal* * *= disclaimer, denial.Ex. We have focussed on the essentials which are the skills through which we are equipped to undertake work which cannot (despite disclaimers to the contrary) be undertaken so efficiently or effectively by others.Ex. The obvious alternative would be denial of access to scholarly literature.* * *femenino refusal* * *= disclaimer, denial.Ex: We have focussed on the essentials which are the skills through which we are equipped to undertake work which cannot (despite disclaimers to the contrary) be undertaken so efficiently or effectively by others.
Ex: The obvious alternative would be denial of access to scholarly literature.* * *refusalCompuestos:failure to provide assistance ( when legally obliged to do so)denial of justice* * *denegación nfrefusal, rejectionDer denegación de auxilio = failure to assist the victims of an accident, punishable by law* * *f refusal* * * -
29 indebido
adj.undue, illegal, unlawful.* * *► adjetivo■ el uso indebido de hábitos religiosos es castigado por la ley unlawful wearing of religious habits is punishable by law* * *(f. - indebida)adj.undue, improper* * *ADJ (=injustificado) undue; (=incorrecto) improper; (=injusto) illegal, wrongful* * *- da adjetivoa) ( impropio)b) ( ilegal) wrongfulc) <acusación/multa> unjust* * *= undue.Ex. Some are poorly written giving either too much or too little data, and giving undue emphasis to the author's priorities.----* apropiación indebida = misappropriation, embezzlement.* multa por aparcamiento indebido = parking ticket.* para evitar su uso indebido por los niños = childproof.* proteger Algo para evitar su uso indebido por los niños = childproof.* uso indebido = misuse.* * *- da adjetivoa) ( impropio)b) ( ilegal) wrongfulc) <acusación/multa> unjust* * *= undue.Ex: Some are poorly written giving either too much or too little data, and giving undue emphasis to the author's priorities.
* apropiación indebida = misappropriation, embezzlement.* multa por aparcamiento indebido = parking ticket.* para evitar su uso indebido por los niños = childproof.* proteger Algo para evitar su uso indebido por los niños = childproof.* uso indebido = misuse.* * *indebido -da1 (incorrecto) improperel uso indebido de una medicina/palabra the improper use of a medicine/word2 (injustificado) wrongfulel uso indebido de los fondos del club improper o wrongful use of club fundsel uso indebido de la canción en un anuncio use of the song in a commercial without permission[ S ] prohibido el uso indebido bajo multa de 30 euros penalty for improper use: 30 euros3 ‹acusación/multa› unjust* * *
indebido,-a adjetivo
1 (improcedente) improper, wrong
2 Jur unlawful, illegal
' indebido' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
indebida
English:
parking offence
- parking ticket
- undue
- improper
- parking
* * *indebido, -a adj1. [ilegal] unlawful, wrongful;fue acusado de uso indebido de fondos he was accused of unlawful o improper use of funds2. [incorrecto] improper;el uso indebido de medicamentos the improper use of medicines* * *adj unjustified* * *indebido, -da adj: improper, undue♦ indebidamente adv -
30 penalizar
v.to penalize (gen) & (sport).El juez penó al ladrón The judge penalized the thief.* * *1 to penalize* * *VT1) (=sancionar) to penalize2) (Jur) to criminalize* * *verbo transitivo (Der) to penalize* * *= victimise [victimize, -USA], penalise [penalize, -USA], criminalise [criminalize, -USA].Ex. In the name of collegiality, students are victimized, considerable intellectual resources are being squandered, and the general public is deliberately misled.Ex. The author contends that this unfairly penalises any institution with limited finances, and contravenes the tradition of cooperation among Swiss libraries.Ex. The knowing transmission by telecommunications device of 'obscene or indecent' images or text to anyone under 18 years of age is criminalized.* * *verbo transitivo (Der) to penalize* * *= victimise [victimize, -USA], penalise [penalize, -USA], criminalise [criminalize, -USA].Ex: In the name of collegiality, students are victimized, considerable intellectual resources are being squandered, and the general public is deliberately misled.
Ex: The author contends that this unfairly penalises any institution with limited finances, and contravenes the tradition of cooperation among Swiss libraries.Ex: The knowing transmission by telecommunications device of 'obscene or indecent' images or text to anyone under 18 years of age is criminalized.* * *penalizar [A4 ]vt1 ( Der) to penalize, make … punishable by law2 ( Dep) to penalize* * *
penalizar ( conjugate penalizar) verbo transitivo (Der) to penalize
penalizar verbo transitivo to penalize
' penalizar' also found in these entries:
English:
penalize
* * *penalizar vt1. [sancionar] to penalize2. [en deporte] to penalize* * *v/t penalize* * *penalizar {21} vt: to penalize -
31 reprobable
adj.1 reprehensible.2 punishable, objectionable, forbidden, reprehensible.* * *► adjetivo1 reproachable, reprehensible* * *ADJ reprehensible* * *adjetivo reprehensible* * *= objectionable, blameworthy, blamable [blameable].Ex. But adoption of the ISBD reintroduces repetition of the author's name before and after the title, which is particularly objectionable in the case of lengthy or complex corporate names.Ex. On this theory, people are praiseworthy for acts of good will and blameworthy for acts of ill will or lack of good will.Ex. He said like a true philosopher that the offences which are committed through desire are more blamable than those which are committed through anger.* * *adjetivo reprehensible* * *= objectionable, blameworthy, blamable [blameable].Ex: But adoption of the ISBD reintroduces repetition of the author's name before and after the title, which is particularly objectionable in the case of lengthy or complex corporate names.
Ex: On this theory, people are praiseworthy for acts of good will and blameworthy for acts of ill will or lack of good will.Ex: He said like a true philosopher that the offences which are committed through desire are more blamable than those which are committed through anger.* * *reprehensible* * *
reprobable adjetivo reprehensible
* * *reprobable adjreprehensible* * *adj reprehensible* * *reprobable adj: reprehensible, culpable -
32 delictiva
-
33 delictuoso
-
34 castigable
• filtration• final• legally liable• legally separate• penal• punish with violence• punishable crime -
35 delictivo
• felonious• punish with violence• punishable crime -
36 delictuoso
• felonious• punish with violence• punishable crime -
37 denunciable
• indicial• indicted• punish with violence• punishable crime• that matter of• that may be done away with• that may not be corrected -
38 establecido por prueba admisible
• legally interested• legally punishableDiccionario Técnico Español-Inglés > establecido por prueba admisible
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39 penable
• punish with violence• punishable crime -
40 penalidad
• forfeit• hardness scale• hardship index• punish with a ferule• punishable• suffering
См. также в других словарях:
Punishable — Pun ish*a*ble, a. [Cf. F. punissable.] Deserving of, or liable to, punishment; capable of being punished by law or right; said of person or offenses. [1913 Webster] That time was, when to be a Protestant, to be a Christian, was by law as… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
punishable — index culpable, delinquent (guilty of a misdeed), illegal, impermissible Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
punishable — 1530s, from PUNISH (Cf. punish) + ABLE (Cf. able) … Etymology dictionary
punishable — [pun′ish ə bəl] adj. liable to or deserving punishment punishability n … English World dictionary
punishable — adj. punishable by (punishable by death) * * * [ pʌnɪʃəb(ə)l] punishable by (punishable by death) … Combinatory dictionary
punishable — pun|ish|a|ble [ˈpʌnıʃəbəl] adj in law, a punishable act can be punished ▪ a punishable offence punishable by/with ▪ a crime punishable by death … Dictionary of contemporary English
punishable — pun|ish|a|ble [ pʌnıʃəbl ] adjective a punishable act will be punished because it is illegal: a punishable offense punishable by: a crime punishable by 20 years in prison … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
punishable — UK [ˈpʌnɪʃəb(ə)l] / US adjective a punishable act will be punished because it is illegal a punishable offence punishable by: a crime punishable by 20 years in prison … English dictionary
punishable — [[t]pʌ̱nɪʃəb(ə)l[/t]] ADJ: usu v link ADJ by/with n If a crime is punishable in a particular way, anyone who commits it is punished in that way. Treason in this country is still punishable by death... They called on the authorities to make… … English dictionary
punishable — adjective a punishable act may be punished by law, especially in a particular way: a punishable offence (+ by): Murder is punishable by death … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
punishable — adjective Able to be punished; appropriate for punishment. Littering in this area is punishable by a fine of up to $100 … Wiktionary