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1 suspension
suspension [sə'spenʃən]∎ the suspension of hostilities/payments la suspension des hostilités/des paiements(b) (temporary dismissal → from office, political party, club, team) suspension f; (→ from job) suspension f, mise f à pied; (→ from school, university) exclusion f provisoire∎ independent suspension suspension f à roues indépendantes∎ in suspension en suspension►► suspension bridge pont m suspendu;Cars suspension bush bague f de suspension;suspension cable câble m porteur;Technology suspension chain chaîne f de suspension;suspension file hamac m, dossier m suspendu;Cars suspension geometry géométrie f de la suspension;Typography & Grammar suspension points points mpl de suspension -
2 suspension
1 ( postponement) (of meeting, trial, services) interruption f ; (of talks, hostilities, payments, quotas) suspension f ; suspension of play Sport interruption f ;2 ( temporary dismissal) ( of employee) suspension f (from de) ; (of footballer, athlete) suspension f (from de) ; ( of pupil) exclusion f temporaire (from de) ; suspension from duty suspension de fonctions ; after her suspension from duty, she… après avoir été suspendue de ses fonctions, elle… ; she wants to appeal against her suspension elle veut faire appel contre la mesure de suspension prise contre elle ;3 Aut suspension f ; -
3 suspension
suspension [səsˈpen∫ən]1. nouna. [of payment, constitution, talks, licence] suspension f ; [of programme, service] interruption f provisoirec. (in car) suspension f2. compounds* * *[sə'spenʃn]1) ( postponement) (of meeting, trial, services, match) interruption f; (of talks, hostilities, payments, quotas) suspension f2) ( temporary dismissal) gen suspension f; ( of pupil) exclusion f temporaire -
4 cessation
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5 suspend
1 ( hang) suspendre (from à) ; to be suspended in midair/time être suspendu dans le vide/le temps ;2 ( float) to be suspended in [balloon, feather] flotter dans [air] ; [particles] être en suspension dans [gel] ;3 ( call off) suspendre [talks, hostilities, aid, trade, trial] ; interrompre [transport services, meeting] ; to suspend play Sport interrompre le match ;4 ( reserve) réserver [comment, judgment] ; to suspend disbelief accepter les invraisemblances ; to suspend (one's) judgment réserver son jugement ;5 ( remove from activities) suspendre [employee, official] (from de) ; suspendre [footballer, athlete] (from de) ; exclure [qn] temporairement [pupil] (from de) ; to be suspended from duty être suspendu de ses fonctions ;6 Fin to suspend shares suspendre la cotation d'un titre ;7 Jur her sentence was suspended elle a été condamnée avec sursis ; he was given an 18 month sentence suspended for 12 months il a été condamné à 18 mois de prison avec un an de sursis.
См. также в других словарях:
suspension of hostilities — index peace Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
suspension — sus|pen|sion [səˈspenʃən] n ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(stopping something)¦ 2¦(making somebody leave)¦ 3¦(part of a vehicle)¦ 4¦(liquid)¦ ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1.) ¦(STOPPING SOMETHING)¦[U] when something is officially stopped for a period of time suspension of ▪ Both sides… … Dictionary of contemporary English
suspension — A temporary stop, a temporary delay, interruption, or cessation. Thus, we speak of a suspension of the writ of habeas corpus, of a statute, of the power of alienating an estate, of a person in office, etc. A temporary cutting off or debarring one … Black's law dictionary
truce — truce, *cease fire, armistice, peace are comparable when they mean a state of suspension of hostilities or an agreement for suspending hostilities. The first three terms are commonly interchangeable and each of them can sometimes replace peace,… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
Minor campaigns of 1815 — On 1 March 1815 Napoleon Bonaparte escaped from his imprisonment on the isle of Elba, and launched a bid to recover his empire. A confederation of European powers pledged to stop him. During the period known as the Hundred Days Napoleon chose to… … Wikipedia
William McKinley: War Message — ▪ Primary Source The Spanish government sincerely wished to avoid war with the United States but faced tremendous internal problems coupled with a military situation in Cuba that had gotten out of control. In an effort to appease the … Universalium
truce — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) n. armistice, peace, respite, delay; cessation, lull. See pacification. II (Roget s IV) n. Syn. armistice, peace agreement, respite, lull, amnesty, treaty of peace, terms, suspension of arms, pause,… … English dictionary for students
armistice — /ahr meuh stis/, n. a temporary suspension of hostilities by agreement of the warring parties; truce: World War I ended with the armistice of 1918. [1655 65; < F < ML armistitium, equiv. to L armi (comb. form of arma ARM2) + stitium a stopping… … Universalium
Truce of God — • A temporary suspension of hostilities, as distinct from the Peace of God which is perpetual Catholic Encyclopedia. Kevin Knight. 2006. Truce of God Truce of God … Catholic encyclopedia
Israel — /iz ree euhl, ray /, n. 1. a republic in SW Asia, on the Mediterranean: formed as a Jewish state May 1948. 5,534,672; 7984 sq. mi. (20,679 sq. km). Cap.: Jerusalem. 2. the people traditionally descended from Jacob; the Hebrew or Jewish people. 3 … Universalium
Convention — Con*ven tion, n. [L. conventio: cf. F. convention. See {Convene}, v. i.] 1. The act of coming together; the state of being together; union; coalition. [1913 Webster] The conventions or associations of several particles of matter into bodies of… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English