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to+punish+sb

  • 1 punish

    1) (to cause to suffer for a crime or fault: He was punished for stealing the money.) (nu)bausti
    2) (to give punishment for: The teacher punishes disobedience.) (nu)bausti už
    - punishment
    - punitive

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > punish

  • 2 be hard on

    1) (to punish or criticize severely: Don't be too hard on the boy - he's too young to know that he was doing wrong.) būti griežtam su
    2) (to be unfair to: If you punish all the children for the broken window it's a bit hard on those who had nothing to do with it.) būti neteisingam kieno nors atžvilgiu

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > be hard on

  • 3 penalise

    1) (to punish (someone) for doing something wrong (eg breaking a rule in a game), eg by the loss of points etc or by the giving of some advantage to an opponent: The child was penalized for her untidy handwriting.) (nu)bausti
    2) (to punish (some wrong action etc) in this way: Any attempt at cheating will be heavily penalized.) (nu)bausti

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > penalise

  • 4 penalize

    1) (to punish (someone) for doing something wrong (eg breaking a rule in a game), eg by the loss of points etc or by the giving of some advantage to an opponent: The child was penalized for her untidy handwriting.) (nu)bausti
    2) (to punish (some wrong action etc) in this way: Any attempt at cheating will be heavily penalized.) (nu)bausti

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > penalize

  • 5 chastise

    (to punish by beating etc.) bausti, lupti

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > chastise

  • 6 discipline

    ['disiplin] 1. noun
    1) (training in an orderly way of life: All children need discipline.) disciplina, tvarka
    2) (strict self-control (amongst soldiers etc).) disciplina
    2. verb
    1) (to bring under control: You must discipline yourself so that you do not waste time.) disciplinuoti, drausminti
    2) (to punish: The students who caused the disturbance have been disciplined.) nubausti

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > discipline

  • 7 make an example of

    (to punish as a warning to others: The judge decided to make an example of the young thief and sent him to prison for five years.) nubausti ką, kad būtų pamoka kitiems

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > make an example of

  • 8 merciful

    adjective (willing to forgive or to punish only lightly: a merciful judge.) gailestingas

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > merciful

  • 9 pay back

    1) (to give back (to someone something that one has borrowed): I'll pay you back as soon as I can.) grąžinti (pinigus)
    2) (to punish: I'll pay you back for that!) atsilyginti

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > pay back

  • 10 threat

    [Ɵret]
    1) (a warning that one is going to hurt or punish someone: He will certainly carry out his threat to harm you.) grasinimas
    2) (a sign of something dangerous or unpleasant which may be, or is, about to happen: a threat of rain.) grėsmė
    3) (a source of danger: His presence is a threat to our plan/success.) grėsmė, pavojus

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > threat

См. также в других словарях:

  • Punish Yourself — Dark Omen II Festival, 2006 Pays d’origine …   Wikipédia en Français

  • punish — [pun′ish] vt. [ME punischen < extended stem of OFr punir < L punire, to punish < poena, punishment, penalty: see PENAL] 1. to cause to undergo pain, loss, or suffering for a crime or wrongdoing 2. to impose a penalty on a wrongdoer for… …   English World dictionary

  • Punish — Pun ish, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Punished}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Punishing}.] [OE. punischen, F. punir, from L. punire, punitum, akin to poena punishment, penalty. See {Pain}, and { ish}.] 1. To impose a penalty upon; to afflict with pain, loss, or… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • punish — pun·ish / pə nish/ vt 1: to impose a penalty on for a fault, offense, or violation 2: to inflict a penalty for the commission of (an offense) in retribution or retaliation or as a deterrent vi: to inflict punishment pun·ish·abil·i·ty /ˌpə ni shə… …   Law dictionary

  • punish — punish, chastise, castigate, chasten, discipline, correct mean to inflict pain, loss, or suffering upon a person for his sin, crime, or fault. Punish implies imposing a penalty for violation of law, disobedience of authority, or intentional… …   New Dictionary of Synonyms

  • punish yourself — phrase to do something that makes you suffer Why punish yourself by working harder than you need to? Thesaurus: to cause problems for yourselfsynonym Main entry: punish …   Useful english dictionary

  • punish — mid 14c., from O.Fr. puniss , extended prp. stem of punir to punish, from L. punire inflict a penalty on, cause pain for some offense, earlier poenire, from poena penalty, punishment (see PENAL (Cf. penal)). Colloquial meaning to inflict heavy… …   Etymology dictionary

  • Punish my Heaven — Allgemeine Informationen Genre(s) Melodic Death Metal, Thrash Metal Gründung 2008 Website …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • punish by pecuniary penalty — index fine Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …   Law dictionary

  • punish with death — index execute (sentence to death) Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …   Law dictionary

  • punish — [v] penalize for wrongdoing abuse, attend to, batter, beat, beat up, blacklist, castigate, chasten, chastise, correct, crack down on*, cuff, debar, defrock, discipline, dismiss, do in, execute, exile, expel, fine, flog, give a going over*, give… …   New thesaurus

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