Punishment
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punishment teriminin İngilizce Türkçe sözlükte anlamı
- ceza
Örnek Cümle:
Tom kesinlikle o tür cezayı hak edecek bir şey yapmadı.
-Tom certainly hadn't done anything that deserved that kind of punishment.
Örnek Cümle:
Raskolnikov, Dostoyevski tarafından yazılan Suç ve Ceza isimli kitabının baş kahramanıdır.
-Raskolnikov is the protagonist of the book of Crime and Punishment written by Dostoevsky.
- tecziye (Osmanlıca)
- ukubet
- cezalandırma
Örnek Cümle:
Bireysel suçların sonucunun ortak cezalandırma olması gerekir.
-The consequence of individual crimes should be collective punishment.
- zarar verme
- kötü davranma
- sert davranma {i}
- zahmet {i}
- hasar/ceza
- ağır çalıştırma {i}
- hırpalama {i}
- eziyet {i}
- yüklenme {i}
- cezalandırmak
- terbiye
- azab
- mücazat
- punish
- cezalandırmak
1986'ya kadar İngiltere'nin okullarında, çocukları kemerlerle, değneklerle ve sopalarla cezalandırmak yasaldı.
-Until 1986, in the schools of England, it was legal to punish children with belts, sticks, and clubs.
Lincoln güneyi cezalandırmak istemedi.
-Lincoln did not want to punish the south.
- punish
- cezaya çarptırmak
- punishment homework
- Ceza olarak verilen ev ödevi
- punishment contingency
- ceza ihtimali
- punishment purpose
- (Kanun) Cezalandırma amacı
- punishment book
- (Askeri) CEZA DEFTERİ: Bir bölük veya benzeri birlik komutanı tarafından tutulan ve içinde, erler tarafından işlenmiş bütün basit suçlarla bu suçlardan herhangi birine, Askeri Ceza ve Askeri Ceza Mahkemeleri Usulü Kanunu'nun 15 nci maddesine göre verilmiş cezalar bulunan kayıt defteri
- punishment book
- (Askeri) ceza defteri
- punishment execution
- ceza infaz
- punishment norm
- ceza normu
- punishment restricting freedom
- hürriyeti bağlayıcı ceza
- purpose of punishment
- (Kanun) Cezalandırma amacı
- punish
- {f} ceza vermek
- corporal punishment
- işkence
Ben işkenceye kesin olarak karşıyım.
-I'm firmly opposed to corporal punishment.
- punish
- dayak atmak
- impose punishment
- ceza uygulamak
- inflict punishment on
- cezalandırmak
- just punishment
- adil ceza
- need for punishment
- (Pisikoloji, Ruhbilim) cezalandırılma ihtiyacı
- punish
- azarlamak
- punish
- hesabını görmek
- punish
- oymak
- punish
- hakkından gelmek
- punish
- tekdir
- punish
- eziyet
- punish
- ceza uygulamak
- reduce the punishment
- cezayı indirmek
- serious capital punishment
- (Ticaret) büyük maddi ceza
- capital punishment
- idam cezası
- capital punishment
- ölüm cezası
- corporal punishment
- bedensel ceza
- corporal punishment
- dayak
- death punishment
- ölüm cezası
- disciplinary punishment
- disiplin cezası
- punish
- kötü biçimde dövmek
- punish
- hırpalamak
- punish
- cezalandır
O, yalan söylediği için cezalandırıldı.
-He was punished for lying.
Bay White sınavda kopye çektiği için çocuğu cezalandırdı.
-Mr White punished the boy for cheating on the examination.
- punish
- katlamak
- self punishment
- kendini cezalandırma
- collective punishment
- toplu ceza
- escape without punishment for
- ceza almadan kurtulmak
- extrajudicial punishment
- Yargısız infaz
- glutton for punishment
- ceza için öbür
- mild punishment
- hafif ceza
- pecuniary punishment
- para cezası
- punishments
- ceza
Ona korkunç cezalar söz verildi.
-Terrible punishments were promised her.
- revenge; punishment, vengeance
- intikam, ceza, intikam
- to annul the punishment
- cezayı iptal etmek
- wheel of punishment
- ceza tekerleği
- accessory punishment
- (Kanun) fer'i ceza
- additional punishment
- (Kanun) mütemmim ceza
- company punishment
- (Askeri) BÖLÜK DİSİPLİN CEZASI: Bir bölük komutanı tarafından, askeri mahkemeye intikal ettirilmeden verilen disiplin cezaları. Buna "company discipline" de denir
- deducting from punishment
- (Kanun) cezadan mahsup etme
- dropped punishment
- (Kanun) düşmüş ceza
- duration of punishment
- (Kanun) ceza müddeti
- executed punishment
- (Kanun) infaz edilmiş ceza
- glutton for punishment
- (deyim) açgözlü
- glutton for punishment
- (deyim) eziyetli işler delisi
- imposing punishment
- (Kanun) ceza verme
- increasing of punishment
- (Kanun) cezanın arttırılması
- inflict punishment on
- -e ceza vermek/verdirmek
- liberty binding punishment
- hürriyeti bağlayıcı ceza
- nonjudicial punishment
- (Askeri) DİSİPLİN CEZASI: Bir komutanın, askeri mahkemede yargılamayı icap ettirmeyen bir suçtan dolayı, bir askeri şahsa verdiği hafif ceza veya uyguladığı ıslah tedbirleri
- physical punishment
- beden cezası
- principal punishment
- (Kanun) asıl ceza
- punish
- hırpalamak punishablecezalandırılır
- punish
- cefa
- punish
- ıstırap çektirmek
- punish
- cezaya layık
- punish
- {f} silip süpürmek
- punish
- tekdir etmek
- punish
- {f} yalayıp yutmak
- punish
- yola getirmek
- punish
- punishmentceza
- punish
- {f} dövmek
- punish
- dili zorluk
- punish
- şiddetle dövmek
- reciprocal punishment
- (Pisikoloji, Ruhbilim) karşılıklı ceza
- revoke the punishment
- (Kanun) cezayı kaldırmak
- severest punishment
- (Kanun) en ağır ceza
- suspension of punishment
- (Kanun) cezanın ertelenmesi
- suspension of punishment
- (Kanun) cezanın tecili
- the supreme punishment
- ölüm cezası
- the supreme punishment
- idam cezası
- type of punishment
- (Kanun) ceza türü
İlgili Terimler
punishment teriminin İngilizce İngilizce sözlükte anlamı
- A penalty to punish wrongdoing, especially for crime
- The act or process of punishing, imposing and/or applying a sanction
- A suffering by pain or loss imposed as retribution
- Any treatment or experience so harsh it feels like being punished
- any thing inflicted for a crime {n}
- You can use punishment to refer to severe physical treatment of any kind. Don't expect these types of boot to take the punishment that gardening will give them. see also capital punishment, corporal punishment. capital punishment corporal punishment strong and hard punishment
- A punishment is a particular way of punishing someone. The government is proposing tougher punishments for officials convicted of corruption
- A stimulus that decreases the probability that a previous behavior will occur again
- Punishment is a term from Psychological Learning Theory that has a precise meaning; it refers to something that causes a behavior to lessen in intensity There is nothing that is intrinsically punishing A thing is called punishing if, when it is applied, it results in the reduction of behavior that you want to reduce
- The punishment for failure to comply with a sentence or pay a fine on time is one degree higher than the original sentence or fine For disrupting court proceeedings, the minimum sentence is a minor fine, and the maximum is a major fine For violating a court order or injunction, the minimum sentence is a minor fine, and there is no maximum sentence
- The application of an aversive stimulus following some behavior designed to decrease the probability of that behavior
- Penalty for wrongdoing, especially for crime
- any event whose presence decreases the likelihood that ongoing behaviour will recur
- A negative consequence of a behavior, which leads to a decrease in the frequency of the behavior that produces it (p 211)
- A consequence that decreases the future probability of a response One type of punishment involves thepresentation of a nonprefered event following the misbehavior A second type of punishment involves the withdrawal of a positive reinforcer following the misbehavior
- The least effective way of changing someone's behaviour or improving their performance
- A penalty inflicted by a court of justice on a convicted offender as a just retribution, and incidentally for the purposes of reformation and prevention
- The adding of a negative stimulus in order to decrease a response (e g , spanking a child to decrease negative behavior)
- Any pain, suffering, or loss inflicted on a person because of a crime or offense
- Severe, rough, or disastrous treatment
- the act of punishing
- A process for weakening behavior which can take one of two forms First, an aversive or noxious stimulus can be made contingent on the response to be weakened Second, a positively reinforcing stimulus can be withheld or removed contingent on the response to be weakened
- The application of an aversive stimulus following some behavior designed to decrease the probability of that behavior [2]
- Punishment is the act of punishing someone or of being punished. a group which campaigns against the physical punishment of children I have no doubt that the man is guilty and that he deserves punishment
- Anything that decreases the likelihood of a response being offered
- An instrumental conditioning procedure in which an aversive stimulus is made contingent on a response (Anderson)
- The New Testament lays down the general principles of good government, but contains no code of laws for the punishment of offenders Punishment proceeds on the principle that there is an eternal distinction between right and wrong, and that this distinction must be maintained for its own sake It is not primarily intended for the reformation of criminals, nor for the purpose of deterring others from sin These results may be gained, but crime in itself demands punishment (See MURDER; THEFT )
- discipline, penalty; fine, financial penalty {i}
- Deliberate infliction of harm as a moral sanction against offenders Punishment may be understood, designed, and applied according to any of the three major varieties of normative theory: retribution and reparation focus on satisfaction of duties, deterrence and prevention on securing desirable outcomes, and reform and rehabilitation on improving moral character Recommended Reading: Nigel Walker, Why Punish? (Oxford, 1991) {at Amazon com}; David A Hoekema, Rights and Wrongs: Coercion, Punishment and the State (Susquehanna, 1987) {at Amazon com}; Punishment, ed by John Simmons, Marshall En, Joshua Cohen, and Thomas Scanlon (Princeton, 1994) {at Amazon com}; Louis P Pojman and Jeffrey Reiman, The Death Penalty (Rowman & Littlefield, 1998) {at Amazon com}; and David Garland, Punishment and Modern Society: A Study in Social Theory (Chicago, 1993) {at Amazon com} Also see SEP, OCP, Hugo Adam Bedau, IEP, noesis, and BGHT
- A consequent stimulus that reduces the probability a behavior will occur
- Presentation of an aversive event or removal of a positive event following a response which decreases the frequency of that response
- an event that immediately follows a behavior and results in that behavior being reduced or eliminated
- Remember positive and negative reinforcement increasethe responses they follow Punishment is likely to decrease those responses
- punition
- wrath
- capital punishment
- punishment by death
- false punishment
- The act of penalizing someone for something that he or she did not commit. Unauthorized disciplinary action
- glutton for punishment
- One persistent in an effort in spite of harmful or unpleasant results
I should have quit this job long ago, but I guess I'm just a glutton for punishment.
- punish
- To cause to suffer for crime or misconduct, to administer disciplinary action
- punish
- To cause great harm to. (a punishing blow)
- punish
- To injure, as by beating; to pommel
- punish
- {v} to chastise, beat, inflict penalties
- glutton for punishment
- (deyim) A greedy person; someone who wants too much of something, such as food or drink, which will make him sick. "Fred eats so much red meat that he is a regular glutton for punishment."
- Crime and Punishment
- {i} famous Russian novel written by Dostoyevsky in 1866 about fear and regret of a student (Raskolnikoff) after he murdered an old woman for her money
- a punishment
- chastisement
- argumentation of punishment
- period in a legal trial when the lawyers debate on what punishment a criminal should receive
- capital punishment
- death sentence
- capital punishment
- Capital punishment is punishment which involves the legal killing of a person who has committed a serious crime such as murder. Most democracies have abolished capital punishment. The penalty of death for the commission of a crime. punishment which involves killing someone who has committed a crime death penalty. or death penalty Execution of an offender sentenced to death after conviction by a court of law of a criminal offense. Capital punishment for murder, treason, arson, and rape was widely employed in ancient Greece, and the Romans also used it for a wide range of offenses. It also has been sanctioned at one time or another by most of the world's major religions. In 1794 the U.S. state of Pennsylvania became the first jurisdiction to restrict the death penalty to first-degree murder, and in 1846 Michigan abolished capital punishment for all murders and other common crimes. In 1863 Venezuela became the first country to abolish capital punishment for all crimes. Portugal was the first European country to abolish the death penalty (1867). By the mid-1960s some 25 countries had abolished the death penalty for murder. During the last third of the 20th century, the number of abolitionist countries increased more than threefold. Despite the movement toward abolition, many countries have retained capital punishment, and some have extended its scope. In the U.S., three-fourths of the states and the federal government retain the death penalty, and death sentences are regularly carried out in China, Saudi Arabia, Singapore, and Iran. Supporters of the death penalty claim that life imprisonment is not an effective deterrent to criminal behaviour. Opponents maintain that the death penalty has never been an effective deterrent, that errors sometimes lead to the execution of innocent persons, and that capital punishment is imposed inequitably, mostly on the poor and on racial minorities
- collective punishment
- group punishment, penalization of an entire group
- corporal punishment
- the infliction of physical injury on someone convicted of committing a crime
- corporal punishment
- Corporal punishment is the punishment of people by hitting them. punishment that involves hitting someone, especially in schools and prisons capital punishment. Infliction of physical pain upon a person's body as punishment for a crime or infraction. Such penalties include beating, branding, mutilation, blinding, and the use of the stock and pillory. The term also denotes the physical disciplining of children in the schools and at home. From ancient times through the 18th century, corporal punishment was commonly used in instances that did not call for capital punishment, ostracism, or exile. But the growth of humanitarian ideals during the Enlightenment and afterward led to its gradual abandonment, and today it has been almost entirely replaced in the West by imprisonment or other nonviolent penalties. Several international conventions on human rights prohibit it. Beatings and other corporeal punishments continue to be administered in the prison systems of many countries. Whipping and even amputation remain prescribed punishments in some Middle Eastern and Asian societies. Corporal punishment of schoolchildren is still sanctioned in many states
- corporal punishment
- Disciplining students through physical punishment by a school employee
- corporal punishment
- Corporal punishment may be administered according to the district policy pertaining to this violation
- corporal punishment
- physical punishment, beatings
- corporal punishment
- A punishment for some violation of conduct which involves the infliction of pain on, or harm to the body A fine or imprisonment is not considered to be corporal punishment (in the latter case, although the body is confined, no punishment is inflicted upon the body) The death penalty is the most drastic form of corporal punishment and is also called capital punishment Some schools still use a strap to punish students Some countries still punish habitual thieves by cutting off a hand These are forms of corporal punishment, as is any form of spanking, whipping or bodily mutilation inflicted as punishment
- corporeal punishment
- physical punishment, beatings
- cruel and unusual punishment
- constitution; includes torture or degradation or punishment too severe for the crime committed
- cruel and unusual punishment
- punishment prohibited by the 8th amendment to the U
- cumulative punishment
- punishment to be put into effect after another previous one
- deterrent punishment
- disciplinary measure intended to discourage or prevent future offenses
- escape punishment
- evade retribution or penalty, avoid corrective discipline
- escaped punishment
- evaded retribution or penalty, avoided corrective discipline
- escaping from punishment
- avoid punishment
- expected punishment
- penalty determined by law, punishment that is generally accepted
- freedom from cruel and unusual punishment
- a right guaranteed by the 8th amendment to the US constitution
- harsh punishment
- cruel punishment, severe punishment
- ignorance of law does not exempt from punishment
- just because you don't know it's illegal does not mean that you do not get punished
- inflicted punishment
- carried out a punishment, punished (someone)
- infliction of punishment
- punishing, imposing of a punishment on (someone)
- instrument of punishment
- an instrument designed and used to punish a condemned person
- light punishment
- punishment that is not serious
- maximal punishment
- most severe punishment permissible by law
- meted out his punishment
- assigned his penalty, declared his punishment
- mild punishment
- punishment that is not harsh
- mitigated his punishment
- lessened the severity of his punishment, reduced his punishment
- mitigation of punishment
- lessening of the severity of a punishment
- pecuniary punishment
- fine paid as punishment
- punish
- impose a penalty on; inflict punishment on; "The students were penalized for showing up late for class"; "we had to punish the dog for soiling the floor again"
- punish
- {f} discipline, penalize
- punish
- with pain or loss; as, to punish murder or treason with death
- punish
- To dumb down severely or to the point of uselessness or near-uselessness
- punish
- To punish someone means to make them suffer in some way because they have done something wrong. According to present law, the authorities can only punish smugglers with small fines Don't punish your child for being honest
- punish
- To impose a penalty upon; to afflict with pain, loss, or suffering for a crime or fault, either with or without a view to the offender's amendment; to cause to suffer in retribution; to chasten; as, to punish traitors with death; a father punishes his child for willful disobedience
- punish
- To punish a crime means to punish anyone who commits that crime. The government voted to punish corruption in sport with up to four years in jail
- punish
- To deal with roughly or harshly; chiefly used with regard to a contest; as, our troops punished the enemy
- punish
- {f} amerce
- punish
- To inflict a penalty for (an offense) upon the offender; to repay, as a fault, crime, etc
- punishments
- plural of punishment
- reduce punishment
- lessen the severity of a punishment
- reduced punishment
- punishment that has been made less severe
- remit a punishment
- exempt from penalty
- reward and punishment
- method of rewarding good deeds and punishing transgressions, stick and carrot method
- self-punishment
- punishment inflicted on yourself
- severe punishment
- serious punishment, grave penalty, severe sentence
- the punishment was reduced
- the penalty was made less severe, the punishment was lessened
İlgili Terimler
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