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1 halo
'heiləuplural - halo(e)s; noun1) (a ring of light round the sun or moon.)2) (a similar ring of light round the head of a holy person in a picture etc.)ringI1) glorie, nimbus, stråleglans, aura2) ( overført) glorie, stråleglans3) ( naturfenomen) solring, månering, lysrand, halo4) ( fotografi) lysrefleks, glorie(dannelse)halo effect ( psykologi) haloeffektIIverb \/ˈheɪləʊ\/omgi med glorie, danne glorie -
2 suspended sentence
noun (a prison sentence that will take effect only if the criminal commits a (similar) crime again.) betinget domsubst. eller suspension of sentence( jus) betinget dom
См. также в других словарях:
Effect of psychoactive drugs on animals — Drugs administered to a spider affect its ability to build a web.[1] … Wikipedia
effect — ▪ I. effect ef‧fect 1 [ɪˈfekt] noun 1. [countable, uncountable] the way in which an action, event, or person changes someone or something: • Inflation is having a disastrous effect on the economy. demonˈstration efˌfect [singular] … Financial and business terms
effect — I. noun Etymology: Middle English, from Anglo French & Latin; Anglo French, from Latin effectus, from efficere to bring about, from ex + facere to make, do more at do Date: 14th century 1. a. purport, intent b. basic meaning ; essence … New Collegiate Dictionary
Effect of Reality — The effect of reality is a textual device identified by Roland Barthes the purpose of which was to establish literary texts as realistic. Barthes suggested that this textual device established the realism of the text through the use of the… … Wikipedia
effect — [14] Etymologically, an effect is that which is ‘accomplished’ or ‘done’. The word comes (probably via Old French effect) from effectus, the past participle of Latin efficere ‘perform, accomplish, complete’, or literally ‘work out’. This was a… … The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins
effect — [14] Etymologically, an effect is that which is ‘accomplished’ or ‘done’. The word comes (probably via Old French effect) from effectus, the past participle of Latin efficere ‘perform, accomplish, complete’, or literally ‘work out’. This was a… … Word origins
effect — The result or consequence of an action. [L. efficio, pp. effectus, to accomplish, fr. facio, to do] abscopal e. a reaction produced following irradiation but occurring outside the zone of actual radiation absorption. additive e. an e. wherein two … Medical dictionary
similar — 1. adjective /ˈsɪmələ,ˈsɪməlɚ/ a) Having traits or characteristics in common; alike, comparable. b) Of geometrical figures including triangles, squares, ellipses, arcs and more complex figures, having the same shape but possibly different size,… … Wiktionary
Lake-effect snow — Lake Effect redirects here. For the American literary journal, see Lake Effect (journal). Lake effect precipitation coming off Lake Erie and into Western New York, as seen by NEXRAD radar, October 12–13, 2006 … Wikipedia
Phaser (effect) — A phaser is an audio signal processing technique used to filter a signal by creating a series of peaks and troughs in the frequency spectrum. The position of the peaks and troughs is typically modulated so that they vary over time, creating a… … Wikipedia
Mozart effect — The Mozart effect can refer to: A set of research results that indicate that listening to Mozart s music may induce a short term improvement on the performance of certain kinds of mental tasks known as spatial temporal reasoning; [1] Popularized… … Wikipedia