dismiss [dɪ'smɪs] verb FORGET 忘记 IMPROVER transitive ■to decide that something or someone is not important and not worth considering 对…不予理会,摒弃,(从头脑中)去除•I think he'd dismissed me as an idiot within five minutes of meeting me.我认为他和我见面五分钟后就把我归入了傻瓜之列。 •Let's not just dismiss the idea before we've even thought about it.我们还是别不假思索就把这种想法排除在外。 •Just dismiss those thoughts from your mind - they're crazy and not worth thinking about.别去管那些想法了——那些想法太离谱,不值得考虑。 [dɪ'smɪs] verb END JOB 终止工作 transitive often passive ■to remove someone from their job, especially because they have done something wrong (尤指因做错事)使免职,将…解职,解雇•He has been dismissed from his job for incompetence.他因无法胜任工作而被解职。 [dɪ'smɪs] verb SEND AWAY 打发走 transitive ■to formally ask or order someone to leave 遣散;解散•The teacher dismissed the class early because she had a meeting.老师因要去开会而提前下课。 transitive ■When a judge dismisses a court case, he or she formally stops the trial, often because there is not enough proof that someone is guilty (常指法官因证据不足而)驳回,不受理•The defending lawyer asked that the charge against his client be dismissed.辩护律师请求驳回对其委托人的指控。 |