释义 |
capitulationenUK
ca·pit·u·la·tion C0088200 (kə-pĭch′ə-lā′shən)n.1. The act of surrendering or giving up: Lack of food and ammunition forced the capitulation of the rebels.2. A document containing the terms of surrender.3. An enumeration of the main parts of a subject; a summary.capitulation (kəˌpɪtjʊˈleɪʃən) n1. the act of capitulating2. a document containing terms of surrender3. a statement summarizing the main divisions of a subject caˈpitulatory adjca•pit•u•la•tion (kəˌpɪtʃ əˈleɪ ʃən) n. 1. the act of capitulating. 2. the document containing the terms of a surrender. 3. a list of the headings or main divisions of a subject; summary or enumeration. [1525–35; < Medieval Latin] ca•pit′u•la•to`ry (-ə ləˌtɔr i, -ˌtoʊr i) adj. ThesaurusNoun | 1. | capitulation - a document containing the terms of surrenderdocument, papers, written document - writing that provides information (especially information of an official nature) | | 2. | capitulation - a summary that enumerates the main parts of a topicsummary, sum-up - a brief statement that presents the main points in a concise form; "he gave a summary of the conclusions"recap, recapitulation, review - a summary at the end that repeats the substance of a longer discussion | | 3. | capitulation - the act of surrendering (usually under agreed conditions); "they were protected until the capitulation of the fort"surrender, fallloss - the act of losing someone or something; "everyone expected him to win so his loss was a shock" |
capitulationnoun surrender, yielding, submission, cave-in (informal) They criticised the government decision as a capitulation to terrorist organisations.capitulationnounThe act of submitting or surrendering to the power of another:submission, surrender.Translationscapitulate (kəˈpitjuleit) verb to surrender usually on agreed conditions. We capitulated to the enemy. (有條件)投降 (有条件)投降 caˌpituˈlation noun (有條件)投降 (有条件)投降 CapitulationenUK
Capitulation (1) The cessation of resistance by ground, air, and naval forces or part of them in theaters or other regions of military operations, fortresses, or fortified regions and inhabited localities or at sea or on naval bases and elsewhere upon conditions presented by the victor or agreed upon in negotiations between the commanders. Capitulation is, as a rule, accompanied by the surrender of all armament, military ships and aircraft, fortresses, fortified areas, and materiel to the enemy, while personnel become prisoners of the victor. (2) In international law, the cessation of armed struggle and the surrender of the armed forces of a belligerent state. Capitulation, as a rule, involves the imposition of political, economic, military, and other obligations on the state that has capitulated. An unconditional capitulation is usually signed if the armed forces have been completely routed and includes recognition of this fact by the defeated state and the surrender of all armed forces. The victorious state may temporarily assume supreme power and establish an occupation regime in the defeated state. After the unconditional capitulation of Hitlerite Germany and Japan at the end of World War II (1939–5) the Allies, in accordance with special agreements such as the Potsdam Declaration of July 26, 1945, carried out measures toward a democratization of the political regime in these countries, outlawed and disbanded criminal state organizations and political parties, and imposed economic, political, military, and other obligations on Germany and Japan. CapitulationenUK
CAPITULATION, war. The treaty which determines the conditions under which a fortified place is abandoned to the commanding officer of the army which besieges it. 2. On surrender by capitulation, all the property of the inhabitants protected by the articles, is considered by the law of nations as neutral, and not subject to capture on the high seas, by the belligerent or its ally. 2 Dall. CAPITULATION, civ.law. An agreement by which the prince and the people, or those who have the right of. the people, regulate the manner in which the government is to be administered. Wolff, Sec. 989. CapitulationenUK
CapitulationA situation in which a market gives back many or all of its previous gains. That is, prices drop significantly during a capitulation. Some investors believe that capitulation is an opportunity to buy because some securities tend to drop too much and will eventually recover nicely. However, capitulation can result in significant losses to those who already own the securities involved.capitulationenUK
Synonyms for capitulationnoun surrenderSynonyms- surrender
- yielding
- submission
- cave-in
Synonyms for capitulationnoun the act of submitting or surrendering to the power of anotherSynonymsSynonyms for capitulationnoun a document containing the terms of surrenderRelated Words- document
- papers
- written document
noun a summary that enumerates the main parts of a topicRelated Words- summary
- sum-up
- recap
- recapitulation
- review
noun the act of surrendering (usually under agreed conditions)SynonymsRelated Words |