Haettu sana löytyi näillä lähdekielillä:
| Käännös | Konteksti |
|---|
| Substantiivit |
| 1. | | laki |
Määritelmät
Substantiivit
- Security, usually a sum of money, exchanged for the release of an arrested person as a guarantee of that person's appearance for trial.
- A hoop, ring or handle (especially of a kettle or bucket).
- (legal, UK) Release from imprisonment on payment of such money.
- A stall for a cow (or other animal) (usually tethered with a semi-circular hoop).
- A hinged bar as a restraint for animals, or on a typewriter.
- (legal, UK) The person providing such payment.
- (chiefly Australia and New Zealand) A frame to restrain a cow during milking or feeding.
- A bucket or scoop used for removing water from a boat etc.
- A hoop, ring, or other object used to connect a pendant to a necklace.
- (obsolete) Custody; keeping.
- (cricket) One of the two wooden crosspieces that rest on top of the stumps to form a wicket.
- (furniture) Normally curved handle suspended between sockets as a drawer pull. This may also be on a kettle or pail, as the wire bail handle shown in the drawing.
Verbit
- (rare) To confine.
- To secure the head of a cow during milking.
- To secure the release of an arrested person by providing bail.
- (slang) To exit quickly.
- (Australia, New Zealand) To secure (a cow) by placing its head in a bail for milking.
- (informal) To fail to meet a commitment.
- (legal) To release a person under such guarantee.
- (legal) To hand over personal property to be held temporarily by another as a bailment.
- (Australia, New Zealand) To keep (a traveller) detained in order to rob them; to corner (a wild animal); loosely, to detain, hold up. (Usually with up.)
- (nautical, transitive) To remove (water) from a boat by scooping it out.
- (nautical, transitive) To remove water from (a boat) by scooping it out.
- To set free; to deliver; to release.
Esimerkit
- "No one bails on Bennie Milagros. No one, comprende? I'm gonna hold you to that midnight run — "
- With his engine in flames, the pilot had no choice but to bail out.
- If the ball hits the wicket and the bails fall off, the batsman is out.
- The transition over the rooftop would have been quicker if Sellers had not been bailed up by a particularly hostile spiritual presence speaking Swedish.
- But until he had poured enough milk into the vat above the separator, I drove unmilked cows into the bail where he had previously milked and released one. He moved from one bail to the other to milk the next one I had readied. I drove each cow into the empty bail, chained her in, roped the outer hind leg then washed and massaged the udder and teats.
- I reached across beneath the cow to attach a metal bail to each end of the strap so that the bail hung about 5 inches below the cow's belly.[...]While stroking and talking to the cow, I reached under and suspended the machine on the bail beneath the cow, with its four suction cups dangling to one side.
- Ten men thus sufficed for the milking of three hundred cows in five bails, instead of the thirty men who would normally have been employed by conventional methods.
- More recently, the fixed bail, sometimes called the ‘milking parlour’, with either covered or open yards, has had a certain vogue and some very enthusiastic claims have been made for this method of housing.
- A guy who bails on his young wife and son the way he did. Leaving us to fend for ourselves.
- "We'll just tell Peter that you got called back to work. He bails on vacations all the time for that reason."
- The Teacher Home Visit Program takes a huge commitment—time, energy, patience, diplomacy. Quite a few schools[...] have tried it and bailed.
- And I ain't got no help. Goddamn Fitch bails on me, scrambles over to Finance.
- The Eighth Amendment to the US Constitution forbids excessive bail, and state bail laws are usually designed to prevent discrimination in setting bail.
- With his engine in flames, the pilot had no choice but to bail.
- Ne none there was to rescue her, ne none to bail.
- By the help of a small bucket and our hats we bailed her out.
- to bail a boat
- to bail water out of a boat
- buckets [...] to bail out the water
- to bail cloth to a tailor to be made into a garment; to bail goods to a carrier
- For the first time, the arrests broadened beyond payments to police, with a Ministry of Defence employee and a member of the Armed forces held by police before also being bailed to a date in May.
- Silly Faunus now within their bail.
- The bail of a canoe [...] made of a human skull.
- The purpose of bail is to ensure the return of the accused at subsequent proceedings. If the accused is unable to make bail, he or she is detained in jail.
Taivutusmuodot