dismissal

dismissal
dismissal [{{t}}dɪs'mɪsəl]
noun
(a) (from work → of employee) licenciement m, renvoi m; (→ of magistrate, official) destitution f, révocation f;
dismissal with/without notice licenciement m avec/sans préavis
(b) (of proposal, theory, explanation) rejet m; (of danger) mépris m;
the police's dismissal of the telephone call le fait que la police n'ait pas pris le coup de téléphone au sérieux
(c) {{}}Law{{}} (of case) fin f de non-recevoir; (of request, appeal) rejet m;
the judge's dismissal of the case met with widespread approval la fin de non-recevoir rendue par le juge a été accueillie avec satisfaction;
dismissal of the charge non-lieu m;
the dismissal of the charges against you le non-lieu qui a été prononcé en votre faveur

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  • Dismissal — Dis*miss al, n. Dismission; discharge. [1913 Webster] Officeholders were commanded faithfully to enforce it, upon pain of immediate dismissal. Motley. [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • dismissal — 1806, formed on model of refusal, etc., from DISMISS (Cf. dismiss) + AL (Cf. al) (2); replacing earlier dismission (1540s) …   Etymology dictionary

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  • dismissal — An order or judgment finally disposing of an action, suit, motion, etc., without trial of the issues involved. Such may be either voluntary or involuntary. Fed.R. Civil P. 41. A release or discharge from employment. @ involuntary dismissal Under… …   Black's law dictionary

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