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单词 disbar
释义

Definition of disbar in English:

disbar

verbdisbarred, disbarring, disbars dɪsˈbɑːdɪsˈbɑr
[with object]
  • 1Expel (a barrister) from the Bar, so that they no longer have the right to practise law.

    a disciplinary tribunal directed that he should be disbarred
    Example sentencesExamples
    • The former lawyer was convicted of attempted grand larceny concerning a client's missing funds and disbarred in 1987.
    • Ten days later the lawyer was committed to a state mental institution for substance abuse and was eventually disbarred.
    • An investigation revealed that 33 defendants sentenced to death had been represented by attorneys who had been disbarred or suspended.
    • Untruthful police and expert witnesses should be charged and lawyers disbarred or otherwise disciplined.
    • Once a wealthy lawyer, he is now disbarred, broke and recently evicted from the hotel he has been living in since leaving the family.
    • In one-third of those cases, the report showed, the lawyer who represented the death penalty defendant at trial or on appeal had been or was later disbarred or otherwise sanctioned.
    • After investigations into at least 20 complaints against him by his law clients, the attorney was disbarred and convicted of attempted grand larceny.
    • And prosecutors who engage in such behavior usually end up being disbarred.
    • If found guilty of breaching the requirements of the code of conduct, which require barristers to act independently at all times, he could be reprimanded, suspended from practice or even disbarred.
    • A lawyer who commits a felony and is disbarred is surely less deserving of our concern than an applicant who committed a similar crime years before studying law.
    • I suspect that there are lawyers who have been disbarred because of less offensive courtroom buffoonery.
    • In some states, a fifth of the attorneys who have represented defendants in capital cases have subsequently been suspended, disbarred or arrested.
    • He was a horrible attorney, and he's been disbarred.
    • He subsequently surrendered his law license in 1988 and was disbarred after an investigation.
    • However she still takes on his case, risking exposure and being disbarred.
    • And had they been inclined, they could have had him disbarred.
    • If found guilty by the tribunal, he could be disbarred from practising law in the country.
    • If you're already a lawyer and you get a conviction you can be disbarred but no one has ever tried to become a lawyer with a past conviction.
    • Because she was convicted of a felony, she was immediately disbarred, ending a career in law that spanned four decades.
    • He blames his attorney, who was disbarred during the case, for that one.
  • 2Exclude (someone) from something.

    competitors wearing rings will be disbarred from competition
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Then, a law is established assigning a monetary amount as the limit of an oligarchic regime, thus disbarring anyone whose property falls below the assigned value.
    • They would usually pass such reports to the General Teaching Council, who can warn, suspend or disbar teachers.
    • Only those regions, such as England, Germany, and Luxembourg, disbarred for reasons of climate, have resisted joining this particular club on any significant scale.
    • A code of practice, which required a midwife to be insured would thus effectively disbar her from practising privately, says Chris.
    • Of course, this doesn't disbar you from the option of guided dives, either from the shore or from one of the dive centre's day boats.
    • I would question the validity of systems that disbar quality staff from progressing.
    • The rational system would be to engage consultants as employees of public hospitals, and to disbar them from all private practice.
    • This immediately disbarred him from continuing on his methadone programme.
    • The complaint focused on his unethical efforts to disbar his colleagues from international forums for daring to contradict his views.
    • It does not disbar the person from standing for whomever he or she wishes to stand for in the future.
    • During that time, the electrician will be disbarred from carrying out any but minor works.
    • That is the question for the 14-year-old girl, who feels that virginity disbars her from the cool crowd.
    • Sarah died tragically young five years later, but not before marrying an English army officer - an act which came to disbar her from nationalism's pantheon of tragic Irish heroines.
    • Suppliers found to have transgressed with any pattern of regularity will be disbarred from tendering for the next two years’ contract.
    • Certain age groups or regions might be disbarred for legal reasons, for example, and making this clear from the outset could save you a lot of trouble later.
    • Our main means of managing competing interests is disclosure, but sometimes the conflict is so strong that it disbars somebody from being an author or a reviewer.
    • Any member exceeding this level will be disbarred from play until at least one more member attains an equal level.
    • A once brilliant surgeon, who left the city to work in Aboriginal communities, his life went to pieces after an error on a young patient resulted in his leaving medicine rather than being disbarred.
    • I think the people out there who want to make submissions should not be disbarred or prevented from making submissions on matters that are not in the bill at the moment.
    • Most referees will immediately disbar any player found guilty of trying these sort of tricks.
    Synonyms
    keep out, deny access to, shut out, debar, bar, ban, prohibit, put an embargo on, embargo

Derivatives

  • disbarment

  • noun dɪsˈbɑːm(ə)ntdɪsˈbɑrmənt
    • I'm not sure the disbarment incrementally adds that much more to the punishment he's personally suffered.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • And it's not a permanent disbarment; it's a chance to start over again and become productive members of society.
      • So I've been thinking: shouldn't political science have its equivalent to disbarment or excommunication?
      • The president will have an opportunity to defend himself against the disbarment proceeding.
      • Violations such as these can lead to disciplinary measures, including removal from the bench and even disbarment.

Origin

Mid 16th century (in sense 2): from dis- 'away' + bar1.

 
 

Definition of disbar in US English:

disbar

verbdisˈbärdɪsˈbɑr
[with object]
  • 1usually be disbarredExpel (a lawyer) from the Bar, so that they no longer have the right to practice law.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Once a wealthy lawyer, he is now disbarred, broke and recently evicted from the hotel he has been living in since leaving the family.
    • He subsequently surrendered his law license in 1988 and was disbarred after an investigation.
    • And had they been inclined, they could have had him disbarred.
    • If found guilty by the tribunal, he could be disbarred from practising law in the country.
    • After investigations into at least 20 complaints against him by his law clients, the attorney was disbarred and convicted of attempted grand larceny.
    • Untruthful police and expert witnesses should be charged and lawyers disbarred or otherwise disciplined.
    • If found guilty of breaching the requirements of the code of conduct, which require barristers to act independently at all times, he could be reprimanded, suspended from practice or even disbarred.
    • A lawyer who commits a felony and is disbarred is surely less deserving of our concern than an applicant who committed a similar crime years before studying law.
    • However she still takes on his case, risking exposure and being disbarred.
    • An investigation revealed that 33 defendants sentenced to death had been represented by attorneys who had been disbarred or suspended.
    • I suspect that there are lawyers who have been disbarred because of less offensive courtroom buffoonery.
    • The former lawyer was convicted of attempted grand larceny concerning a client's missing funds and disbarred in 1987.
    • In one-third of those cases, the report showed, the lawyer who represented the death penalty defendant at trial or on appeal had been or was later disbarred or otherwise sanctioned.
    • Ten days later the lawyer was committed to a state mental institution for substance abuse and was eventually disbarred.
    • He was a horrible attorney, and he's been disbarred.
    • If you're already a lawyer and you get a conviction you can be disbarred but no one has ever tried to become a lawyer with a past conviction.
    • And prosecutors who engage in such behavior usually end up being disbarred.
    • Because she was convicted of a felony, she was immediately disbarred, ending a career in law that spanned four decades.
    • In some states, a fifth of the attorneys who have represented defendants in capital cases have subsequently been suspended, disbarred or arrested.
    • He blames his attorney, who was disbarred during the case, for that one.
  • 2Exclude (someone) from something.

    competitors wearing rings will be disbarred from competition
    Example sentencesExamples
    • It does not disbar the person from standing for whomever he or she wishes to stand for in the future.
    • Of course, this doesn't disbar you from the option of guided dives, either from the shore or from one of the dive centre's day boats.
    • Our main means of managing competing interests is disclosure, but sometimes the conflict is so strong that it disbars somebody from being an author or a reviewer.
    • During that time, the electrician will be disbarred from carrying out any but minor works.
    • Sarah died tragically young five years later, but not before marrying an English army officer - an act which came to disbar her from nationalism's pantheon of tragic Irish heroines.
    • Only those regions, such as England, Germany, and Luxembourg, disbarred for reasons of climate, have resisted joining this particular club on any significant scale.
    • They would usually pass such reports to the General Teaching Council, who can warn, suspend or disbar teachers.
    • Most referees will immediately disbar any player found guilty of trying these sort of tricks.
    • Then, a law is established assigning a monetary amount as the limit of an oligarchic regime, thus disbarring anyone whose property falls below the assigned value.
    • Suppliers found to have transgressed with any pattern of regularity will be disbarred from tendering for the next two years’ contract.
    • This immediately disbarred him from continuing on his methadone programme.
    • A once brilliant surgeon, who left the city to work in Aboriginal communities, his life went to pieces after an error on a young patient resulted in his leaving medicine rather than being disbarred.
    • That is the question for the 14-year-old girl, who feels that virginity disbars her from the cool crowd.
    • I would question the validity of systems that disbar quality staff from progressing.
    • The rational system would be to engage consultants as employees of public hospitals, and to disbar them from all private practice.
    • A code of practice, which required a midwife to be insured would thus effectively disbar her from practising privately, says Chris.
    • The complaint focused on his unethical efforts to disbar his colleagues from international forums for daring to contradict his views.
    • Any member exceeding this level will be disbarred from play until at least one more member attains an equal level.
    • I think the people out there who want to make submissions should not be disbarred or prevented from making submissions on matters that are not in the bill at the moment.
    • Certain age groups or regions might be disbarred for legal reasons, for example, and making this clear from the outset could save you a lot of trouble later.
    Synonyms
    keep out, deny access to, shut out, debar, bar, ban, prohibit, put an embargo on, embargo

Origin

Mid 16th century (in disbar (sense 2)): from dis- ‘away’ + bar.

 
 
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更新时间:2024/12/23 0:39:18