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1 estafa
Del verbo estafar: ( conjugate estafar) \ \
estafa es: \ \3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) presente indicativo2ª persona singular (tú) imperativoMultiple Entries: estafa estafar
estafa sustantivo femenino
estafar ( conjugate estafar) verbo transitivo estafale algo a algn to defraud sb of sth, swindle sb out of sth
estafa sustantivo femenino swindle: lo encontraron culpable de estafa, he was found guilty of fraud
estafar verbo transitivo to swindle, cheat, trick: estafaron a un pensionista y le dejaron sin sus ahorros, they swindled the pensioner out of his entire savings ' estafa' also found in these entries: Spanish: cambiazo - camelo - engaño - timo - robo English: cheat - con - fraud - rip-off - scam - show up - swindle - confidence -
2 culpable
(deserving blame; guilty: She was the one who committed the crime but he was culpable also.) culpable
culpable adjetivo [ser] ‹ persona› guilty; ser culpable de algo to be to blame for sth; ( Der) to be guilty of sth ■ sustantivo masculino y femeninob) (de problema, situación):
culpable
I mf culprit, offender
II adjetivo guilty Jur declararse culpable, to plead guilty ' culpable' also found in these entries: Spanish: confesar - declararse - desdecirse - desenmascarar - estafa - instigación - negarse - reo - tal - tendencia - declarar - descubrir - responsable English: blame - blameworthy - convict - culprit - definitely - espionage - fault - find - fraud - guilty - incompetence - manslaughter - neglect - plead - admit - party - plea - shametr['kʌlpəbəl]1 culpableculpable ['kʌlpəbəl] adj: culpableadj.• culpable adj.'kʌlpəbəl ['kʌlpǝbl]1.ADJ frm culpable2.CPDculpable homicide N — homicidio m sin premeditación
* * *['kʌlpəbəl]
См. также в других словарях:
Fraud — • In the common acceptation of the word, an act or course of deception deliberately practised with the view of gaining a wrong and unfair advantage Catholic Encyclopedia. Kevin Knight. 2006. Fraud Fraud … Catholic encyclopedia
fraud — [fro:d US fro:d] n [Date: 1300 1400; : Old French; Origin: fraude, from Latin fraus deceiving ] 1.) [U and C] the crime of deceiving people in order to gain something such as money or goods tax/insurance/credit card etc fraud ▪ He s been charged… … Dictionary of contemporary English
Fraud Act 2006 — The Fraud Act 2006 (2006 c.35) is an Act of Parliament in the United Kingdom, affecting England and Wales and Northern Ireland. It was given Royal Assent on 8th November 2006, and came into effect on 15th January 2007. [The Fraud Act 2006… … Wikipedia
guilty — adj. 1 feeling/showing guilt VERBS ▪ feel, look ADVERB ▪ extremely, really, very ▪ horribly, incredibly … Collocations dictionary
fraud — 01. He was arrested and charged with [fraud] after trying to use someone else s credit card. 02. He was fined for tax [fraud] for not including his waitering tips on his income tax form. 03. If you ask me, these psychics who appear on television… … Grammatical examples in English
fraud — [frɔːd ǁ frɒːd] noun [countable, uncountable] LAW a method of illegally getting money from a person or organization, often using clever and complicated methods: • Should audits be expected to detect every fraud? • He had a criminal conviction for … Financial and business terms
guilty — 1 adj guilt·i·er, est 1: having committed a crime: justly charged with a specified crime guilty of larceny 2: involving guilt or culpability guilty knowledge guilty 2 n 1: a plea of a c … Law dictionary
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Securities fraud — Securities fraud, also known as stock fraud and investment fraud, is a practice in which investors make purchase or sale decisions on the basis of false information, frequently resulting in losses, in violation of the securities laws. [… … Wikipedia
Serious Fraud Office — Serious Fraud Of|fice, the SFO a British government department whose job is to examine complicated cases of ↑fraud (=dishonest business practices) to find out whether businesses have cheated or made money in illegal ways. The SFO has the right to … Dictionary of contemporary English
E-mail fraud — Fraud has existed perhaps as long or longer than money. Any new sociological change can engender new forms of fraud, or other crime. Almost as soon as e mail became widely used, it began to be used to defraud people via E mail fraud. E mail fraud … Wikipedia