remission

suomi-englanti sanakirja

remission englannista suomeksi

  1. suoritus

  2. remissio

  3. palauttaminen

  4. anteeksianto

  1. anteeksianto, synninpäästö

  2. lyhennys, osasuoritus, osamaksu

  3. remissio, elpymävaihe, lievetä / lieveneminen

  4. siirtää / siirtäminen

  5. Substantiivi

remission englanniksi

  1. A pardon of a sin; the forgiveness of an offence, or relinquishment of a (legal) claim or a debt.

  2. (synonyms)

    (antonyms)

  3. (quote-book) by (w),(nb...)|date=(J2G)|oclc=1126428435|passage=Moreouer the perfit beleue of this article, worketh in all true chriſten people, aloue to continue in this vnitie, and afeare to be caſte out of the ſame, and it worketh in them that be ſinners and repentant, great comforte, and conſolacion, to obteine remiſſion of ſinne, by vertue of Chriſtes paſſion, and adminiſtracion of his ſacramentes at the miniſters handes, ordained for that purpoſe, (..)

  4. (quote-book) Translated into English(nb...)|location=London|publisher=Imprinted by H. L. and are to be sold by Arthur Iohnson,(nb...)|year=1617|section=section 6 (To Whom Remission of Sinnes is Giuen)|page=614|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=5nE9AQAAMAAJ&pg=PA614|oclc=54203254|passage=''Remiſsion of ſins is giuen to all the elect, and them alone'', becauſe it is giuen to them all and alone who beleeue; and none beleeue, but the elect onely; for the reprobate neuer haue true faith and beleefe: therefore they neuer obtaine remiſsion of their ſinnes.

  5. (quote-book)|location=London|publisher=Printed for John Wyat,(nb...)|year=1712|pages=41–42|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=m3QPU0P8Hy8C&pg=PA41|oclc=4423078|passage=So then it is not the Power of preaching and baptizing, which is here given the Apoſtles, but as the Fathers interpret the Place, a peculiar Power of pronouncing, as God's deputed Judges, Pardon and Remiſſion to the Penitent, a Power of abſolving from Sins, in the Name of God, all ſuch as penitently confeſs unto them: (..)

  6. (quote-hansard)’s Dividends, &c.|editor=&91;(w)&93;|report=the United Kingdom|The Parliamentary History of England, from the Earliest Period to the Year 1803.(nb...)|location=London|publisher=Printed by Curson Hansard|Thomas Curson Hansard,(nb...) for Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, & Brown; ''et al.''|date=4 August 1784|year_published=1815|volume=XXIV|column=1327|columnurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=-lE6AQAAMAAJ&pg=PA1327|oclc=20121995|passage=And as to the remission of the interest of the debt of the Company, the right hon. gentleman knew, that public policy and expediency rendered a remission of the interests of all the debts due to the public equally necessary.

  7. (quote-book) In Two Volumes|location=Albany, N.Y.|publisher=Printed and published by H. C. Southwick & Co.(nb...)|date=12 April 1813|volume=I|section=VIII|page=179|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=_vBGAQAAIAAJ&pg=RA1-PA179-IA2|oclc=949888779|passage=''And it be further enacted'', That if it shall appear to the comptroller that any payments of quit rents or certificates given for the remission of quit rent in pursuance of any former law of the state shall have been credited by mistake to the wrong patent or lot, (..) it shall be the duty of the comptroller on discovering the same, to rectify all such mistakes (..)

  8. (quote-book) A fee remission is a full or partial fee waiver of the fees that become payable when an individual uses these services.

  9. A lessening of amount due, as in either money or work, or intensity of a thing.

  10. (quote-book); and sold by Cadell (publisher)|Thomas Cadell,(nb...)|year=1790|pages=103–104|pageurl=https://books.google.com.sg/books?id=yDJ0l0Up8MEC&pg=PA103|oclc=751716715|passage=Preceptors have all aſſented to this one principle,—that diſcipline , and amuſement ſhould alternately ſucceed each other. (..) You may relax your care, but the youthful mind will be full occupied, and more earneſtly buſied in the career of voluntary play, than on any impoſed taſk. During the remiſſions of ſchool the mind is only tranſferred from one object to another: (..)

  11. (quote-hansard) (of the Exchequer)|title=Naval and Military Pensions|editor=Curson Hansard|Thomas Curson Hansard|report=the United Kingdom|The Parliamentary Debates:(nb...)|house=of Commons of the United Kingdom|House of Commons|location=London|publisher=Printed by T. C. Hansard,(nb...); for Baldwin, Cradock, and Joy; ''et al.''|date=24 May 1822|year_published=1823|volume=VII (New Series)|column=743|columnurl=https://books.google.com.sg/books?id=TQlAAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA743|oclc=729577511|passage=His objection, at an early period of the session, to the motion of the hon. member for Wareham, besides the general objection at that time to the remission of any taxes, was, that it would throw the trade into confusion by a partial remission. The remission he had now to propose was to a much greater extent.

  12. (quote-journal); sold by Sherwood and Co., and Simpkin and Marshall,(nb...)|month=February|year=1836|volume=XI|issue=63|page=99|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=0DFGAAAAcAAJ&pg=PA99|oclc=219831900|passage=This gentleman in March, 1833, was applied to by Messrs. Charles and George Palmer, who solicited a remission of the annual ''jumma'' or tax upon their farms, to the amount of 24,000 rupees. Mr. Alexander Imlach, who, (..) was at least acquainted with, and acted up to the spirit of the law, expressed his incompetency to grant the remission.

  13. (quote-book) Used in Yale College. Heretofore Published as the Grammar of Caspar Frederic Hachenberg.|edition=stereotype|location=Hartford, Conn.|publisher=Belknap & Hamersley|year=1837|page=211|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=lOJFAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA211|oclc=16774636|passage=In every polysyllabic word, there is a sharpened percussion of the voice on some one of the syllables, and a comparative remission on the rest. This percussion was called by the Greeks the ''acute accent'', and the remission, the ''grave accent''.

  14. A reduction or cancellation of the penalty for a criminal offence; in particular, the reduction of a prison sentence as a recognition of the prisoner's good behaviour.

  15. (quote-book) 1684|title=Cobbett|Cobbett’s Complete Collection of State Trials and Proceedings for High Treason and Other Crimes and Misdemeanors from the Earliest Period to the Present Time|location=London|publisher=Printed by Curson Hansard|Thomas Curson Hansard,(nb...); for Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, & Co.; ''et al.''|year=1684|year_published=1811|volume=X (A.D. 1680–1685)|column=693|columnurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=cbVCAAAAcAAJ&pg=PA693|oclc=712066713|passage=That Mr. Carstairs answer all interrogatories that shall be put to him, betwixt and the first of October next, upon his great oath. That which being done, he shall have his majesty's full pardon and remission, for his life, limb, estate, and fame.

  16. (quote-book)|location=Edinburgh|publisher=Printed for & Robinson|Archibald Constable and Company|date=24 February 1767|year_published=1811|volume=XXIX–XXX|section=division III (Public Instrument, How Far Probative), section IV (Decrees, Acts of Court, &c.), case no. 429|page=12543|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=F-VCAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA12543|oclc=77850501|passage=At common law, the criminal was bound to assyth the party whom he had injured; no special statute was necessary to establish a point received and understood; but a doubt might be entertained, how far crimes were not entirely abolished by a remission, so as not only to stop the punishment of the law, but to exclude the claim of damages. To obviate this doubt was the intention of these various statutes, which provide that assythment shall be due, notwithstanding a remission.

  17. An abatement or lessening of the manifestations of a disease; a period where the symptoms of a disease are absent.

  18. (ux)

  19. (quote-book)|location=London|publisher=Printed for Murray (publisher)|John Murray,(nb...)|year=1791|page=182|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=9UoPVzFfgnwC&pg=PA182|oclc=755090001|passage=It was always dangerous, though perhaps leſs ſo, than other ſymptoms which was leſs alarming, particularly if it ſuffered increaſe and diminution with the paroxyſms and remiſſions of the diſeaſe.

  20. (quote-hansard)|house=House of Lords|location=London|publisher=Printed by Curson Hansard|Thomas Curson Hansard,(nb...); for Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, & Browne; ''et al.''|date=20 December 1810|year_published=1811|volume=XVIII|column=215|columnurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=Qps9AAAAcAAJ&pg=PA215|oclc=1113233627|passage=When Dr. Willis speaks of relapses, does he mean relapses after a cessation of the disorder, or after a remission of the disorder?—Certainly after a remission, his Majesty's disorder has never ceased.

  21. (quote-book); sold by Longman & Co., Whittaker & Co., and Simpkin & Marshall|year=1840|section=paragraph IX|page=92|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=xWkFAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA92|oclc=812348414|passage=Sometimes also (smallcaps) fevers infest the body without any remission, so that there is no time afforded either for food or physic.

  22. (quote-journal)|month=July|year=1902|volume=XLVIII|issue=166 (number 202 overall)|page=506|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=l_cGAQAAIAAJ&pg=PA506|issn=0368-315X|oclc=1026602405|passage=Yet again, in true general paralysis, remissions occur, and in these remissions most of the pupillary symptoms disappear, to return with the onset of fresh activity of the disease.

  23. (quote-book) (imprint)|Saunders|year=2014|volume=XV|section=section IV (Oncology and Hematology)|page=381|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=KlJKAgAAQBAJ&pg=PA381|column=1|isbn=978-1-4377-2689-3|passage=When lymphoma is being treated, the fundamental goals of chemotherapy are to introduce a complete and durable (>6 months) first remission (termed ''induction''), to reinduce a remission when the disease recurs (or the patient experiences relapse) following remission (termed ''reinduction''), and, finally, to induce remission when the cancer fails to respond to induction or reinduction therapy using drugs not included in the initial protocols (termed ''rescue'').

  24. An act of remitting, returning, or back|sending back.

  25. A referral of a case back to another (especially a lower or inferior) of law; a remand, a remittal.

  26. (quote-book) Brief for the State of New Jersey Oppositing Petition for Writ of Certiorari|series=Supreme Court of the United States|seriesvolume=no. 429|location=Newark, N.J.|publisher=Arthur W. Cross|month=October term|year=1953|page=9|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=q_z-6cVfwBUC&pg=RA23-PA9|passage=It was held by the Court of Errors and Appeals that the remission of the case to the trial court for clarification of the verdict was justified, and that the record, as corrected, clearly indicated that the recommendation of life imprisonment should apply only to Rannelli and not to Merra.

  27. (spectroscopy) Reflection or scattering of light by a material; reemission.

  28. To change the mission of; to provide with a new mission.

  29. {{quote-book|en|year=2010|author=United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Appropriations. Subcommittee on Defense|title=Department of Defense Appropriations for Fiscal Year 2011|page=32

  30. {{quote-text|en|year=2014|author=Stella L. McNeer|title=He Is Able: God Is Our Only Hope in the Storms of Life

  31. (infl of)

  32. (l)

  33. (l) (pardon of a sin; the forgiveness of an offense)