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1 waive
weiv1) (to give up or not insist upon (eg a claim or right): He waived his claim to all the land north of the river.) renunciar (a), prescindir (de)2) (not to demand or enforce (a fine, penalty etc): The judge waived the sentence and let him go free.) no aplicartr[weɪv]to waive one's rights: renunciar a sus derechosto waive the rules: no aplicar las reglasv.• desistir de v.• renunciar v.weɪvtransitive verb (frml)a) ( not apply) \<\<rule\>\> no aplicar*; \<\<condition\>\> no exigir*b) ( renounce) \<\<right/privilege\>\> renunciar a[weɪv]VT1) (=not claim) [+ right, claim, fee] renunciar a2) (=exonerate from) [+ payment of loan, interest] exonerar de3) (=suspend) [+ regulation] no aplicar; [+ condition, restriction] no exigir* * *[weɪv]transitive verb (frml)a) ( not apply) \<\<rule\>\> no aplicar*; \<\<condition\>\> no exigir*b) ( renounce) \<\<right/privilege\>\> renunciar a -
2 waive
vt.1 renunciar a (rights, claim); no aplicar (rule)2 abandonar, descartar, desechar, renunciar a.3 dispensar de una obligación.(pt & pp waived) -
3 waive notice
v.renunciar a la observancia del plazo de preaviso. -
4 waive time
s.renuncia al plazo legal.v.renunciar al plazo. -
5 aplicar
aplicar ( conjugate aplicar) verbo transitivo 1 (frml) ‹pomada/maquillaje/barniz› to apply (frml) 2 ‹ sanción› to impose; ‹ descuento› to allow; 3 ‹método/sistema› to put into practice verbo intransitivo (Col, Ven) to apply;◊ aplicar a un puesto/una beca to apply for a job/a scholarshipaplicarse verbo pronominal to apply oneself
aplicar verbo transitivo to apply ' aplicar' also found in these entries: Spanish: dar English: administer - apply - dab - lay on - reapply - rub in - slap on - spray - double - pioneer - prime - rub - waive -
6 exigir
exigir ( conjugate exigir) verbo transitivo
exigir verbo transitivo to demand ' exigir' also found in these entries: Spanish: cobrar - condición - fiar - reclamar - reivindicar - requerir English: absorb - call - call for - claim - demand - exact - expect - levy - necessitate - need - press - ransom - require - command - over - waive -
7 prescindir
prescindir ( conjugate prescindir) verbo intransitivo 1 ( arreglárselas sin) prescindir DE algo/algn to do without sth/sb 2 ( omitir) prescindir de algo ‹de detalles/formalidades› to dispense with sth
prescindir verbo intransitivo
1 (arreglárselas sin) to do without: podemos prescindir del coche, we can do without the car
2 (deshacerse de) to dispense with: debemos prescindir de lo superfluo, we must dispense with unnecessary things
3 (no hacer caso) to disregard: prescindió de sus consejos, he disregarded his advice ' prescindir' also found in these entries: Spanish: pasar - tabla English: dispense with - do without - go without - set aside - spare - waive - dispense - do - set -
8 renunciar
renunciar ( conjugate renunciar) verbo intransitivo ( dimitir) to resign; renunciar A algo ‹ a puesto› to resign sth; ‹ a derecho› to relinquish sth, renounce sth (frml); ‹ a título› to give up sth, relinquish sth; ‹ a trono› to renounce sth
renunciar verbo intransitivo
1 (a un derecho, bien) to renounce, give up: renunció a la felicidad, he renounced happiness
renunciamos a la herencia, we relinquished the inheritance
2 (a un vicio, placer, proyecto) to give up: tendré que renunciar a los dulces, I've got to stop eating sweets
renunciamos a ir de viaje, we gave up travelling
3 (no aceptar) to decline
4 (a un cargo) to resign ' renunciar' also found in these entries: Spanish: abdicar - sacrificar - desechar - desprender - hablar - macana - opinar - voluntad English: abandon - disclaim - forgo - relinquish - renounce - resign - surrender - withdraw - drop - forsake - stand - step - waive -
9 waiving
s.1 el acto de proscribir a una mujer: recusación de la protección de las leyes a una mujer. (judicial)2 dispensa, desistimiento.ger.gerundio del verbo WAIVE.
См. также в других словарях:
waive — / wāv/ vt waived, waiv·ing [Anglo French waiver weiver, literally to abandon, forsake, from waif weif forlorn, stray, probably from Old Norse veif something loose or flapping] 1: to relinquish (as a right or privilege) voluntarily and… … Law dictionary
waive — [weɪv] verb [transitive] LAW to state officially that a right, rule etc can be ignored in a particular case: • The government has waived restrictions on dealing in foreign currencies. • American Express offered to waive fees for additional cards… … Financial and business terms
Waive — Waive, n. [See {Waive}, v. t. ] 1. A waif; a castaway. [Obs.] Donne. [1913 Webster] 2. (O. Eng. Law) A woman put out of the protection of the law. See {Waive}, v. t., 3 (b), and the Note. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Waive — Waive, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Waived}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Waiving}.] [OE. waiven, weiven, to set aside, remove, OF. weyver, quesver, to waive, of Scand. origin; cf. Icel. veifa to wave, to vibrate, akin to Skr. vip to tremble. Cf. {Vibrate}, {Waif}.] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
waive — means ‘to give up (a right or claim) voluntarily’, as in waiving an immunity or waiving formalities. It is not formally confused with the more familiar verb wave except in phrasal verbs such as waive aside and waive away (= to put aside as if… … Modern English usage
Waive — Waive, v. i. To turn aside; to recede. [Obs.] [1913 Webster] To waive from the word of Solomon. Chaucer. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
waive — (v.) c.1300, from Anglo Fr. weyver to abandon, waive, O.Fr. weyver, guever to abandon, give back, probably from a Scandinavian source akin to O.N. veifa to swing about, from P.Gmc. *waibijanan (see WAIF (Cf. waif)). In Middle English legal… … Etymology dictionary
waive — [weıv] v [T] [Date: 1200 1300; : Old North French; Origin: weyver, from waif; WAIF] to state officially that a right, rule etc can be ignored ▪ She waived her right to a lawyer … Dictionary of contemporary English
waive — [ weıv ] verb transitive to choose to officially ignore a rule, right, or claim: The defendant has waived his right to a jury trial. Museum entrance fees have been waived (=not charged) … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
waive — cede, yield, resign, abandon, surrender, *relinquish, leave Analogous words: *forgo, forbear, sacrifice: concede, *grant, allow Contrasted words: *demand, claim, require, exact: assert, *maintain, defend … New Dictionary of Synonyms
waive — [v] give up; let go abandon, allow, cede, defer, delay, disclaim, disown, dispense with, forgo, grant, hand over, hold off, hold up, leave, neglect, postpone, prorogue, put off, refrain from, reject, relinquish, remit, remove, renege, renounce,… … New thesaurus