- extradite from
- phr. v. ส่งผู้ร้ายหรือคนไม่ดีจากrelated: ส่งข้ามแดนจาก
English-Thai dictionary. 2014.
English-Thai dictionary. 2014.
extradite — v. (D; tr.) to extradite from; to * * * [ ekstrədaɪt] to (D; tr.) to extradite from … Combinatory dictionary
extradite — ex·tra·dite / ek strə ˌdīt/ vt dit·ed, dit·ing 1: to deliver up to extradition 2: to obtain the extradition of ex·tra·dit·abil·i·ty /ˌek strə ˌdī tə bi lə tē/ n ex·tra·dit·able / ek strə ˌdī tə bəl/ adj … Law dictionary
extradite — ► VERB ▪ hand over (a person accused or convicted of committing a crime in a foreign state) to the jurisdiction of that state. DERIVATIVES extraditable adjective extradition noun. ORIGIN from French extradition, from tradition delivery … English terms dictionary
Extradite — Ex tra*dite, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Extradited}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Extraditing}.] To deliver up by one government to another, as a fugitive from justice. See {Extradition}. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
extradite — 1864, back formation from EXTRADITION (Cf. extradition). Related: Extradited; extraditing … Etymology dictionary
extradite — ex|tra|dite [ˈekstrədaıt] v [T] [Date: 1800 1900; Origin: extradition (19 21 centuries), from French, from Latin traditio handing over ; TRADITION] to use a legal process to send someone who may be guilty of a crime back to the country where the… … Dictionary of contemporary English
extradite — [19] Extradite is a back formation from extradition [19]. This was borrowed from French extradition, which was a coinage (apparently of Voltaire’s) based on Latin ex ‘out’ and tradītiō ‘handing over, deliverance’ (source of English tradition).… … The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins
extradite — [[t]e̱kstrədaɪt[/t]] extradites, extraditing, extradited VERB If someone is extradited, they are officially sent back to their own or another country to be tried for a crime that they have been accused of. [FORMAL] [be V ed to/from n] He was… … English dictionary
extradite — [19] Extradite is a back formation from extradition [19]. This was borrowed from French extradition, which was a coinage (apparently of Voltaire’s) based on Latin ex ‘out’ and tradītiō ‘handing over, deliverance’ (source of English tradition). Cf … Word origins
extradite — [ ɛkstrədʌɪt] verb hand over (a person accused or convicted of a crime) to the jurisdiction of the foreign state in which the crime was committed. Derivatives extraditable adjective extradition noun Origin C19 (back form. from extradition): from… … English new terms dictionary
extradite — transitive verb ( dited; diting) Etymology: back formation from extradition Date: 1864 1. to deliver up to extradition 2. to obtain the extradition of … New Collegiate Dictionary