Unit 4
Transcription
Unit 4
Unit 4 Growing Concerns (TB: pp 73-92) Wordlist 1. a modicum of sth € formal a small amount of something, especially a good quality; v•ike hulk, natuke. a modicum of common sense 2. absolve € v to say publicly that someone is not guilty or responsible for something; vabaks kuulutama. He cannot be absolved of all responsibility for the accident. 3. alert € v to officially warn someone in authority about a problem or danger so that they are ready to deal with it; hoiatama. The school immediately alerted the police. 4. alleged [€'led€d] € adj formal an alleged crime, fact etc is one that someone says has happened or is true, although it has not been proved; v•idetav. alleged offence/crime/incident; their alleged involvement in international terrorism 5. anticipate € v to think about something that is going to happen; to expect that something will happen and be ready for it; ennetama, ette aimama. A skilled waiter can anticipate a customer's needs. 6. acquit € v to give a decision in a court of law that someone is not guilty of a crime; ‚igeks m‚istma. All the defendants were acquitted. n acquittal 7. articulate € adj able to talk clearly and effectively about things, especially difficult subjects [ƒ inarticulate]; selgesti v•ljendatud, k‚neosav. You have to be articulate to be good at debating. 8. assassination € n the act of murdering a famous and important person (usu for political reasons); Flowers were laid to commemorate the anniversary of the assassination of John Lennon 9. assault € n the crime of physically attacking someone; kallaletung. Assaults on public transportation workers have doubled in the last 10 years. 10. attempted murder € an act of trying to kill or harm someone; atentaat. He pleaded guilty to attempted murder. 11. baffling € adj something that is baffling is difficult to understand or explain; n‚utukstegev, arusaamatu. 12. bail € n money that is given to a court when someone is allowed to stay out of prison until their trial; kautsjon. He is not likely to be granted bail. 13. barrister € n a lawyer in Britain who can argue cases in the higher law courts; advokaat, k‚rgem advokaat. In 1976 there were 3,881 barristers and 31,250 practising solicitors, compared with 109,547 police officers. 14. boom € v if business, trade, or a particular area is booming, it is increasing and being very successful; ‚itsema, h•sti minema. Business was booming, and money wasn't a problem. to flourish Upstream Advanced 17. brawler € n a person who fights in a noisy way, especially in a public place; kakleja. 18. capacity € n the amount of something that a factory, company, machine etc can produce or deal with; v‚imsus, tootlikkus. The factory has been working at full capacity. to a full capacity 19. capital punishment € death penalty; surmanuhtlus. He seems to become especially intense when questioning turns to the issue of capital punishment. 20. charge sb with sth € accuse someone officially of committing a crime 21. civil liberties € n the right of all citizens to be free to do whatever they want while respecting the rights of other people and obeying the law; kodaniku‚igus. The Westerners, on the other hand, envisaged progress towards civil liberty and economic justice along Western lines. 22. claim € n a statement that something is true, even though it has not been proved; avaldus, v•ide. The investment management arm of Winston Royal is facing another claim of mismanagement of a client’s staff pension fund. 23. clerical € adj relating to office work, especially work such as keeping records or accounts; kontori-, a clerical error, clerical workers 24. confer € v formal to discuss something with other people, so that everyone can express their opinions and decide on something; n‚u pidama, kaaluma. Franklin leant over and conferred with his lawyers. 25. congestion € n a situation in which a place is crowded with people, vehicles or a network is busy due to some device (mobile phones); „lekoormatus, ummistus. 26. contempt of court € n disobedience or disrespect towards a court of law; kohtukorralduse mittet•itmine; kohtu solvamine. He was jailed for 7 days for contempt of court. 27. community service € work that is not paid that someone does to help other people, sometimes as punishment for a crime, „hiskondlik t……. 28. compatible € ideas or systems that can exist together; likely to have good relations because of being similar; kokkusobiv, „hilduv. 29. creed € n a set of beliefs or principles; usk, t‚ekspidamised. religious creed. Marxism has never been weaker as a political creed. 30. crook € n informal a dishonest person or a criminal; kelm, suli. The crooks got away across the park. 31. cross-reference € n a note that tells the reader of a book to go to another place in the book, to get further information; viide, ristviide. The book has clear cross-references and a good index. 32. culprit € n the person who is guilty of a crime or doing something wrong; s„„dlane. Police finally managed to catch the culprit. HTG 15. borough ['b€r€]€ n a town, or part of a large city, that is responsible for managing its own schools, hospitals, roads; linnaosa. the borough of Brooklyn in New York City. 16. brandish € v written to wave something around in a dangerous or threatening way, especially a weapon; vehkima. A man leapt out brandishing a kitchen knife. 1 33. deportation – n making someone leave a country and return to the country they came from, usually because they do not have a legal right to stay; maalt väljasaatmine. the deportation of illegal immigrants 34. detain – v to officially prevent someone from leaving a place; vahi all hoidma, kinni pidama. Two suspects have been detained by the police for questioning. 35. deter – v to stop someone from doing something, by making them realize it will be difficult or have bad results; ära hoidma, eemale peletama. deter somebody from (doing) something. The security camera was installed to deter people from stealing. 36. digit – n one of the written signs that represent the numbers 0 to 9; three-digit/four-digit etc number; number, numbrikoht. 4305 is a four-digit number. 37. discharge – v a situation in which someone who has been accused of a crime is judged to be not guilty and officially allowed to leave prison or a court of law; vabastama. Florence W was to be handed over to her father as soon as he was discharged from prison. 38. dismiss – v if a judge dismisses a court case, he or she stops it from continuing; laiali saatma. The case was dismissed owing to lack of evidence. 39. displace – v to force someone to leave their own country and live someone else; välja tõrjuma. Fifty thousand people have been displaced by the fighting. displaced personümberasustatu, maapagulane 40. domestic violence – violence in a family, especially from a husband to his wife; koduvägivald. 41. do sth against one’s better judgment – do sth even though you are not sure that it is a good idea 42. eliminate – v to completely get rid of something that is unnecessary or unwanted; kõrvaldama, likvideerima. The credit card eliminates the need for cash or cheques. 43. embezzlement – n stealing money from a company where you work; raha kõrvaldamine. Two managers were charged with embezzlement of $400,000. 44. eminently – adv formal completely and without a doubt - use this to show approval; silmapaistvalt. Woods is eminently suitable for the job. 45. encapsulate – v to express or show something in a short way that gives the most important facts or ideas [= sum up]; kokkuvõtvalt väljendama. The words of the song neatly encapsulate the mood of the country at that time. 46. felony – n serious crime such as murder or robbery; kriminaalkuritegu. Leach was charged with sexual assault, which is a felony in Connecticut. 47. fiscal – adj formal relating to money, taxes, debts etc that are owned and managed by the government; riigikassasse puutuv, rahandus-. a fiscal crisis, a fiscal year 48. foot the bill – informal to pay for something, especially something expensive that you do not want to pay for; arvet kinni maksma: He ordered drinks and then left me to foot the bill! 49. fraud – n the crime of deceiving people in order to gain something such as money or goods; pettus. tax/insurance/credit card etc fraud. He's been charged with tax fraud. 50. gauge [geid€] traffic speed – v to measure speed using a piece of equipment and method; kiirust mõõtma. The firm gauges traffic speed. gauge – n an instrument for 51. 52. 53. 54. 55. measuring the size or amount of something, = indicator; mõõteriist. hold in custody – v keep someone in prison until they go to court for trial; vahi all hoidma. A man is being held in police custody in connection with the murder. homicide – AmE the crime of killing someone; mõrv. 70 per cent of homicides take place within the family. imminent – adj an event that is imminent, especially an unpleasant one, will happen very soon; paratamatu, möödapääsmatu, lähenev. imminent danger/threat/death/disaster. Some of the buildings were in a state of imminent collapse. n imminence impartial – adj not involved in a particular situation, and therefore able to give a fair opinion or piece of advice; erapooletu, objektiivne. We offer impartial advice on tax and insurance. implement – v to take action or make changes that you have officially decided should happen; kehtestama, täide viima. We have decided to implement the committee's recommendations in full. implement a policy/plan/decision. We have decided to implement the committee's recommendations in full. inadequacy – n the failure to be of the quantity or quality needed for a particular purpose; puudulikkus, ebapiisavus. incentive – n something that encourages you to work harder, start a new activity etc; stiimul, ajend. Awards provide an incentive for young people to improve their skills. create/provide/give somebody an incentive inmate – n someone who is kept in a prison, mental hospital or other institution; vang, kongikaaslane. More than half the inmates were there for some sort of violent crime. intelligence – n information about the secret activities of foreign governments, the military plans of an enemy; salaluure. According to our intelligence, further attacks were planned. in the interim – in the period of time between two events [= meanwhile] or while waiting for sth permanent of final to become available; vahepeal, ajutiselt. The child will be adopted but a relative is looking after him in the interim. integrity – n he quality of being honest and strong about what you believe to be right; ausus, terviklikkus. personal, professional, political integrity a man of great moral integrity invasion of privacy – n a situation in which someone tries to find out details about another person's private affairs in a way that is upsetting and often illegal; eraellu tungimine. Moreover the whole notion of testing employees is an invasion of privacy. invasive – adj intrusive; annoying because of being too close, too noisy, or too involved in people’s personal life; sissetungiv. HTG 56. 57. 58. 59. 60. 61. 62. 63. 2 64. issue – n a subject or problem that is often discussed or argued about, especially a social or political matter that affects the interests of a lot of people; probleem, vaidlusküsimus. Abortion is a highly controversial issue. 65. jaywalking – n crossing the street in a wrong place; vales kohas tee ületamine. 66. juror – n a member of a jury; vandekohtunik. But the panel deadlocked on manslaughter charges, with nine jurors favoring acquittal. 67. Justice of the Peace – n JP someone who judges less serious cases in small law courts and, in the US, can perform marriage ceremonies; rahukohtunik. He has been a Justice of the Peace for 27 years. = magistrate 68. juvenile delinquency – n crimes committed by young people, kuritegevus. n juvenile delinquent 69. kidnapping – n taking sb illegally by force and holding sb against their will in order to gain sth, usually money (called ransom); inimrööv. The police were informed about series of kidnappings in this area. 70. legislation – n a law or a set of laws; seadusandlus. 71. lenient ['li:ni€nt]– adj not strict in the way you punish someone or in the standard you expect; leebe, armuline. the lenient sentences handed down by some judges. 72. liability – n legal responsibility for something, especially forr paying money that is owed, or for damage or injury; kohustus, võlakohustus. Tenants have legal liability for any damage they cause. 73. libel ['laib(€)l]– n writing and publishing untrue statements about someone to damage their reputation; kirjalik laim. Holt sued the newspaper for libel. 74. littering – n leaving rubbish in a public place; prügi mahaviskamine. 75. loitering with intent – n remaining in a public place without an obvious reason [= hang about, hang around]; aega surnuks lööma, “hängima”. Five or six teenagers were loitering with intent in front of the newsagent's. with intent – jur tahtlikult 76. make a killing – informal to make a lot of money in a short time; kasulikku tehingut tegema; kasu lõikama : He made a killing on the stock exchange. 77. mandatory ['m•nd€t(€)ri] – adj if something is mandatory, the law says it must be done [= compulsory, obligatory]; sunduslik, kohustuslik. Drug smuggling carries a mandatory death sentence. 78. manslaughter – n the crime of killing someone illegally but not deliberately; ettekavatsemata tapmine. She was cleared of murder but found guilty of manslaughter. 79. misdemeanour [,misdi'mi:n€] – n a crime that is not very serious; formal a bad or unacceptable action that is not very serious; väärtegu. A misdemeanour has been committed but the offender has not been caught. 80. mitigation n– if you say something in mitigation, you try to make someone's crime or mistake seem less serious or show that they were not completely responsible; leevendus, kergendavad asjaolud. The captain added, in mitigation, that the engines may have been faulty. adj mitigatory ['mitig€t•:ri] 81. MoT - The Ministry of Transport test (more usually: MOT - pronounced by spelling out the letters); a test in Britain that all cars more than three years old must pass every year in order to show that they are still safe to be driven tehnoülevaatus. My car's just failed its MOT. An MOT certificate 82. mugging – n attacking and robbing someone in the street; röövimine. Crime is on the increase, especially mugging and burglary. 83. net – adj the total amount of money after taxes or costs have been removed; neto. The net profit (=after taxes, costs etc) was up 16.3% last month. 84. out-of-court settlement – an agreement between the people involved in a legal argument that an amount of money will be paid without the case being decided officially in a law court; kohtuväline lahend. But Education Department lawyers made the out-ofcourt settlement and agreed to pay his £12,000 costs. 85. overwhelmingly – adv used for emphasizing the amount of strength of sth; largely; ülekaalukalt. Congress voted overwhelmingly in favor of the bill. 86. parole – n permission for someone to leave prison, on the condition that they promise to behave well; tingimisi vabastamine. on parole He was released on parole after serving two years. 87. perjury ['p‚:d€(€)ri] – n the crime of telling a lie after promising to tell the truth in a court of law, or a lie told in this way: valetunnistus. Hall was found guilty of perjury. 88. perpetrator ['p‚:pitreit€] – n formal someone who does something morally wrong or illegal; (kuriteo) toimepanija. The perpetrators were never caught. v perpetrate 89. persistent – adj continuing to exist or happen, especially for longer than is usual or desirable; püsiv, järjekindel. persistent efforts to bring the warring factions together 90. plead guilty or innocent – to say in a court of law whether you are guilty of a crime or not; süüd tunnistama, süüd mitte tunnistama. 91. precision – n accuracy; the quality of being accurate and exact; täpsus. The work was carried out with military precision. 92. presumption of innocence – the belief that a person is innocent until proved guilty; jur süütuse presumptsioon (eeldus) 93. probation – n a system by which someone who has committed a crime is not sent to prison but has to agree not to break the law again and let a probation officer check their behaviour for a specific period of time; tingimisi vabastamine, katseaeg, kriminaalhooldus. The judge sentenced Jennings to three years' probation. put/place somebody on probation HTG 3 94. probation officer € n someone whose job is to watch, advise, and help people who have broken the law and are on probation; kriminaalhooldusametnik. Carolyn worked the North Branch as a probation officer. 95. prohibit € v to say that an action is illegal or not allowed [= ban, forbid]; keelustama, •ra keelama. Smoking is strictly prohibited inside the factory. n prohibition 96. promote € v to attract people†s attention to a product or event by advertising; to support or encourage sth; reklaamima, edendama. She's in London to promote her new book. 97. prosecutor € n a lawyer who is trying to prove in a court of law that someone is guilty of a crime; prokur…r. A special prosecutor was appointed to deal with that particular case. 98. prompt action € immediate or quick action 99. raise money € collect money for a particular purpose; raha koguma (eriti heategevuseks) 100. remand € v to send someone back from a court of law, to wait for their trial; eelvangistusse tagasi saatma. Smith was remanded in custody (=kept in prison) until Tuesday. 101. retain € v to store or keep something inside something else; to remember information; s•ilitama, salvestama. A lot of information can be retained in your computer 102. revocation € n formal the act of officially saying that a law, decision, or agreement is no longer legal; t„histamine, tagasiv‚tmine. His license was revoked for selling alcohol to minors. 103. riot € violent protest by a crowd of people; t•navarahutus, m•ss. A riot broke out after a police shooting of a local man. 104. road hog € n informal someone who drives badly or too fast without thinking about other people's safety; liiklusj‚hkard 105. rule € v to make an official decision about something, especially a legal problem; otsustama. The judge ruled that she should have custody of the children. 106. sentence € n a punishment that a judge gives to someone who is guilty of a crime; karistus, kohtuotsus. Berger is serving a life sentence for the murders. 107. slander € n a false spoken statement about someone, intended to damage the good reputation of that person; laim. Can a teacher sue a principal for slander for making critical remarks about his or her teaching techniques? 108. solicitor € n a type of lawyer in Britain who gives legal advice, prepares the necessary documents when property is bought or sold, and defends people, especially in the lower courts of law; jurist, advokaat. You need to see a solicitor. 109. spokesperson € someone whose job is to officially represent am organisation, e.g. in dealing with journalists; pressiesindaja. A spokesperson for the company read to waiting reporters from a prepared statement. connected with criminal activities. Under surveillance, surveillance cameras; valve, j•relvalve. 24-hour surveillance of the building 113. suspended sentence € n a punishment given by a court in which a criminal is told they will be sent to prison if they do anything else illegal within the time mentioned; tingimisi karistus, a two-year suspended sentence 114. tax disc - a small round piece of paper on a car windscreen in Britain that shows the driver has paid road tax 115. the dock € the part of a court of law where the person who is accused of a crime stands or sits; s„„pink. 116. to pose objections € to express your disagreement with sth; esitama vastuv•iteid 117. trafficking € n the buying and selling of illegal goods, especially drugs; hangeldamine, ebaseaduslik kauplemine. drug trafficking 118. trespassing € n illegally entering somebody†s property; kellegi maa-alale loata minema. She was arrested for trespassing on government property. 119. tribunal [trai'bju:n(‡)l] € n a type of court that is given official authority to deal with a particular situation or problem; tribunal, vahekohus. The case of your redundancy will be heard by an independent tribunal. 120. truancy € n when students deliberately stay away from school without permission. Fifteen miles away in Witney Henry Box School reported just three percent truancy. popitegemine HTG 110. suborn [s€'b•:n] – v to persuade someone to tell lies in a court of law or to do something else that is illegal, especially for money; (altk•emaksuga või muu vahendiga) kihutama, (er valevandele) meelitama, •ra ostma. an attempt to suborn a witness 111. substantial € adj large in amount or number [= considerable]; mahukas, oluline. We have the support of a substantial number of parents. 112. surveillance [s€'veil€n(t)s] € n when the police, army, etc watch a person or place carefully because they may be 121. truncheon ['tr€n(t)ƒ(‡)n] € n BrE a short thick stick carried by a police officer as a weapon; kumminui. Police at first used rubber truncheons to prevent them, but then stood back. 122. unprecedented € adj never having happened before, or never having happened so much: pretsedenditu, enneolematu. He took the unprecedented step of stating that the rumours were false. 123. usher € v to lead someone politely somewhere, e.g. into a room or towards a seat; juhatama. He ushered her into the room. 124. valid € adj a valid or agreement is legally or officially acceptable [ƒ invalid]; valid reason, argument that is based on what is reasonable or sensible; kehtiv, paikapidav, ‚ige. Police officers must have a valid reason for stopping motorists. 125. vandalism € n the crime of deliberately damaging things, especially public property. More than 40 people were arrested, some on suspicion of vandalism. 126. verdict € n an official decision made in a court of law by the jury, especially about whether someone is guilty or not guilty of a crime; kohtuotsus. The jury has retired to consider its verdict 127. violation € n an action that breaks a law, agreement, principle etc; (seadusest) „leastumine. Troops crossed the border in violation of the agreement. 4