-
1 unfair
unfair [‚ʌn'feə(r)](advantage, decision, treatment) injuste; (system) injuste, inique; (judgement) inique; (competition, play) déloyal;∎ to be unfair to sb se montrer injuste envers qn;∎ to have an unfair advantage over everybody else être injustement avantagé par rapport à tous les autres;∎ he has been put at an unfair disadvantage il a été désavantagé►► Commerce unfair competition concurrence f déloyale;Industry unfair dismissal licenciement m abusif;∎ he's claiming unfair dismissal il prétend avoir fait l'objet d'un licenciement abusif -
2 unfair
unfair [ˈʌnˈfεər]* * *[ʌn'feə(r)] -
3 unfair
unfair adj [person, action, decision, advantage, comparison, treatment] injuste (to, on envers ; to do de faire) ; [play, tactics] irrégulier/-ière ; Comm [trading] frauduleux/-euse ; [competition] déloyal ; it is unfair that he should go ou for him to go ce n'est pas juste qu'il aille. -
4 unfair dismissal
-
5 unfair
unfair competition concurrence f déloyale;unfair dismissal licenciement m abusif;unfair trading pratiques f pl déloyales -
6 unfair
-
7 unfair dismissal
noun Law licenciement m abusif -
8 unfair competition
concurrence f déloyale -
9 unfair dismissal
licenciement m abusif -
10 unfair trading
pratiques f pl déloyales -
11 unfair competition
concurrence déloyale (JD) -
12 unfair
déloyal, injuste -
13 unfair competitive advantage
avantage m concurrentiel injusteEnglish-French legislative terms > unfair competitive advantage
-
14 unfair practice
pratique f déloyale -
15 a raw deal
(unfair treatment.) sale coup -
16 not cricket
(unfair; not sportsmanlike.) qui n'est pas loyal -
17 agree
agree [əˈgri:]a. ( = consent) accepterb. ( = admit) reconnaîtrec. ( = come to an agreement) convenir ( to do sth de faire qch ) ; [+ time, price] se mettre d'accord sur• the delivery was three days later than agreed la livraison a été effectuée trois jours après la date convenuea. ( = hold same opinion) être d'accordb. ( = come to terms) se mettre d'accord• to agree about or on sth se mettre d'accord sur qchc. [ideas, stories, assessments] concorder* * *[ə'griː] 1.transitive verb (prét, pp agreed)I agree it sounds unlikely — ça a l'air peu probable, j'en conviens
it's dangerous, don't you agree? — c'est dangereux, tu ne crois pas?
3) ( consent)4) (settle on, arrange) se mettre d'accord sur [date, price, candidate, solution]2.intransitive verb (prét, pp agreed)1) ( hold same opinion) être d'accord ( with avec; about, on sur; about doing pour faire)‘I agree!’ — ‘je suis bien d'accord!’
2) ( reach mutual understanding) se mettre d'accord, tomber d'accord (about, on sur)3) ( consent) accepterto agree to — consentir à [plan, suggestion, terms]
4) (hold with, approve)to agree with — approuver [belief, idea, practice]
6) ( suit)to agree with somebody — [climate, weather] être bon pour quelqu'un; [food] réussir à quelqu'un
7) Linguistics s'accorder ( with avec; in en)3.agreed past participle adjective [date, time, venue, amount, budget, rate, terms, signal] convenuto be agreed on — être d'accord sur [decision, statement, policy]
-
18 competition
competition [‚kɒmpɪˈtɪ∫ən]━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━‼|/b] The translation for [b]competition is not always compétition.* * *[ˌkɒmpə'tɪʃn]1) [U] gen, Commerce concurrence f, compétition f ( between entre)in competition with — en concurrence or compétition avec ( for pour)
3) ( competitors) concurrence f, compétition f -
19 discriminate
discriminate [dɪsˈkrɪmɪneɪt]( = make unfair distinction) introduire une discrimination* * *[dɪ'skrɪmɪneɪt]1) ( act with prejudice) établir une discrimination ( against envers; in favour of en faveur de)2) ( distinguish)to discriminate between — faire une or la distinction entre
-
20 dismissal
dismissal [dɪsˈmɪsəl]* * *[dɪs'mɪsl]1) (of employee, worker) licenciement m; ( of servant) renvoi m; ( of civil servant) révocation f; (of manager, minister) destitution funfair dismissal —
2) (of idea, threat) refus m de prendre quelque chose en considération3) Law (of appeal, claim) rejet m
См. также в других словарях:
unfair — un‧fair [ˌʌnˈfeə◂ ǁ ˈfer◂] adjective 1. not right or fair: • The new taxation system was widely regarded as unfair. • poverty wages and unfair working conditions 2. not giving a fair opportunity to everyone: • The current law is not equitable,… … Financial and business terms
unfair competition — un·fair com·pe·ti·tion n: the common law tort of passing off one s goods as another s; broadly: any of various torts (as disparagement) that interfere with the business prospects of a competitor or injure consumers Merriam Webster’s Dictionary of … Law dictionary
Unfair business practices — encompass fraud, misrepresentation, and oppressive or unconscionable acts or practices by business, often against consumers and are prohibited by law in many countries. For instance, in the European Union, each member state must regulate unfair… … Wikipedia
unfair dismissal — A statutory claim under the Employment Rights Act 1996. An employee who has been dismissed can make a claim to an Industrial Tribunal that he has been unfairly dismissed. If the employer is unable to show that the dismissal was fair, based on a… … Law dictionary
Unfair prejudice in United Kingdom company law — is a statutory form of action that may be brought by aggrieved shareholders against their company. Under the Companies Act 2006 the relevant provision is s.994, the identical successor to s.459 Companies Act 1985. Unfair prejudice actions have… … Wikipedia
unfair dismissal — ➔ dismissal * * * unfair dismissal UK US noun [C or U] (also wrongful dismissal) ► HR, WORKPLACE a situation in which an employer orders someone to leave their job, when there is not a good reason to do so: »She decided to launch proceedings for… … Financial and business terms
Unfair dismissal — is the term used in English, Welsh and Scottish Law to describe an employer s action when terminating an employee s employment contrary to the requirements of the Employment Rights Act 1996. The concept of Unfair Dismissal therefore has a… … Wikipedia
unfair contract terms — certain provisions in contracts (and in some non contractual provisions) that are controlled by legislation because they are unfair (as defined). In UK law, provision is now made to regulate unfair contract (and other) terms by the Unfair… … Law dictionary
unfair labor practice — n: any of various acts by an employer or labor organization that violate a right or protection under applicable labor laws ◇ The unfair labor practices that are specified in the National Labor Relations Act are the following: 1) the interference … Law dictionary
unfair — I adjective biased, fraudulent, inequitable, iniquitous, jaundiced, not equitable, one sided, prejudiced, unequal, uneven, unjust, unprincipled, unreasonable, unsporting, weighted associated concepts: unfair advantage, unfair claim practices,… … Law dictionary
Unfair — アンフェア (Unfair) Genre Policier Drama japonais : アンフェア Réalisateur Kobayashi Yoshinori, Ueda Yasushi, Takahashi Nobuyuki, Nemoto Kazumasa Scénariste Satou Shimako Studio … Wikipédia en Français