verb
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
a court dismisses/throws out sth (=refuses to allow or consider something)
▪ The court dismissed his appeal against conviction.
be discharged/dismissed from the army
▪ He developed epilepsy, a condition which led to him being discharged from the army.
be dismissed from a post (=be told to leave)
▪ As a result of the scandal, he was dismissed from his post.
deny/dismiss an accusation
▪ The government denied accusations of corruption.
dismiss a report (=refuse to consider it because you believe it is not true)
▪ A Treasury official yesterday dismissed the reports as ‘pure speculation’.
dismiss speculation (=say that it is not true)
▪ He dismissed speculation that he might run for president.
dismiss the charges (=say that a court case should not continue)
▪ If there is insufficient evidence, the court will dismiss the charges.
dismiss/sack an employee (=stop employing them because they have behaved badly or broken a rule)
▪ Seven employees were dismissed for misconduct.
dismiss/throw out a case (=officially stop it from continuing)
▪ The case was thrown out by New York state’s highest court.
dismiss/throw out/turn down an appeal (=not give permission for a decision to be changed)
▪ The taxpayer's appeal was dismissed and the penalty upheld.
reject/dismiss a notion
▪ Aristotle rejected the notion that the body and the soul are separate.
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADVERB
as
▪ This absence of feeling, I dismissed as damaged nerve endings.
▪ Some one had proposed something about her sister accompanying her on blocks, but that scheme was quickly dismissed as too complicated.
▪ But Timothy Gedge couldn't be dismissed as easily as that.
▪ The concept of reason and all speculation about personal opinion would ever after be dismissed as tribal, beliefs fabricated by sects.
▪ Intellectuals were dismissed as uncreative and unproductive.
▪ After a brief debate in the parliament, his scheme was dismissed as inappropriate.
▪ Such students may seem to lack initiative and may even be dismissed as dull.
▪ Her successes are dismissed as tawdry, her claims to original exploration comprehensively deflated.
unfairly
▪ The tribunal ruled she was unfairly dismissed from her £14,000-a-year job at the union's regional headquarters in Edge Lane, Liverpool.
▪ Once the protection is acquired, the employee can make a claim that he or she has been unfairly dismissed.
▪ If a person is unfairly dismissed he may be awarded compensation.
▪ He said something about they'd been unfairly dismissed.
▪ Three remedies are available for persons found to have been unfairly dismissed: reinstatement, re-engagement or compensation.
▪ They will both claim that they were unfairly dismissed because the other was the culprit but that is not the issue.
▪ I came to reinstate two young girls who were dismissed unfairly from my household.
▪ Employees are scared to enforce their rights because if they did they would be unfairly dismissed.
■ NOUN
action
▪ I would allow the appeal and dismiss the plaintiffs' action.
▪ The Supreme Court last June dismissed an action brought by six members of Congress, saying they lacked legal standing.
▪ That does not mean that we should dismiss the need for action beyond the investigation of the events themselves.
▪ A federal judge had dismissed the action, and the appeals court overturned that decision.
▪ The judge dismissed the action but the Court of Appeal allowed the plaintiffs' appeal and granted the declaration sought.
allegation
▪ The resistance movement dismissed the allegations.
▪ Microsoft dismissed the allegations as unfounded, saying its practices were specifically allowed by the consent decree.
▪ The chief justice's supporters dismiss the allegations of racism as preposterous.
appeal
▪ Failure to attend Court on said date may result in the appeal being dismissed, and a warrant issued for your apprehension.
▪ In my view the appeal should be dismissed.
▪ In my judgment, it is impossible to say that that decision is wrong and this appeal will be dismissed.
▪ The taxpayer's appeal was dismissed and the penalty upheld.
▪ I would allow the appeal and dismiss the plaintiffs' action.
▪ The taxpayer's appeal was accordingly dismissed.
▪ The Court of Appeal similarly dismissed the taxpayers' further appeal.
application
▪ I therefore dismiss the father's application.
▪ The Divisional Court dismissed the applications.
▪ On 18 March the judge dismissed the applications.
▪ On that ground he dismissed the father's application for the return of the child.
▪ Potts J. dismissed the defendants' application to strike out the statement of claim as disclosing no reasonable cause of action.
▪ For the reasons which I have given, I would dismiss this application for judicial review.
argument
▪ Now, one can dismiss Mr Toner's argument as special pleading.
▪ The judge dismissed arguments by Collins that release of the pretrial hearing documents would inevitably cause jurors to learn about their contents.
▪ In his latest book on fertility decline, J.A. Banks dismisses the argument that fertility control results from economically rational behaviour.
▪ Most readers have had a predilection to dismiss the arguments and speculations.
case
▪ Once again the magistrate dismissed the case against him.
▪ As a result of this incident, Mailloux was dismissed and took his case to court.
▪ The police had summonsed the wrong man, and the court dismissed the case against him.
▪ As a result, the bankruptcy court dismissed their case in September 1993&038;.
▪ She did so, and he dismissed the case.
▪ But a judge dismissed the criminal case a few months later, because the statute of limitations had expired.
▪ Then the original examining magistrate was dismissed from the case for making such a muddle of it.
▪ Allstate, which declined to comment on the suit, settled in November after a judge refused to dismiss the case.
charge
▪ Winter denies the allegation and those who know him dismiss the charge as absurd.
▪ In September, the committee dismissed three charges against Gingrich but at least four more are unresolved.
▪ I shall probably even dismiss the charges against you.
▪ Cuyahoga County judge Patrick Curran ruled police had no right searching Mesa's car and dismissed the gun charge.
▪ The court dismissed the charge against him when the prosecution offered no evidence.
▪ When prosecutors refused to disclose information about their procedures, a federal district judge dismissed the charges against the five defendants.
▪ At the hearing of the information, the stipendiary magistrate dismissed the charge.
▪ A grand jury decided Wednesday to dismiss charges against the first Texan to shoot and kill some one with a licensed concealed handgun.
claim
▪ But a judge dismissed her compensation claim.
▪ She said it would be premature to dismiss the racketeering claim or rule out damages.
▪ But it could also be used to dismiss the claims, even of empiricists, that they knew how nature works.
▪ He dismissed as unreasonable her claim that she should have enough to buy her own farm.
▪ We can not dismiss claims about, say, alternative medicine or acupuncture a priori.
▪ Is that a reason to dismiss them or their claims?
▪ At first instance the trial judge dismissed the claim.
▪ Nolan J. dismissed the claim but the Court of Appeal, by a majority, reversed his decision.
court
▪ The police had summonsed the wrong man, and the court dismissed the case against him.
▪ Finding that the superintendent was carrying out an official duty when making these comments, the court dismissed the suit against him.
▪ The court dismissed the charge against him when the prosecution offered no evidence.
▪ As a result, the bankruptcy court dismissed their case in September 1993&038;.
▪ The Divisional Court dismissed the applications.
▪ The Supreme Court last June dismissed an action brought by six members of Congress, saying they lacked legal standing.
▪ A lower court has already dismissed their cases.
▪ McNamee back to the court that dismissed his previous appeal in 1991.
employee
▪ The protest was held in opposition to government plans to dismiss 25,000 state employees in order to reduce fiscal spending by 42 percent.
▪ Even if the reason is economic, technical or organisational the employer must still act reasonably in selecting and dismissing each employee.
▪ An employer who wants to dismiss an employee must give proper notice.
▪ Given that redundancy is a fair reason for dismissing an employee, a redundant employee can not usually claim unfair dismissal.
▪ Therefore, a purchaser would avoid automatically assuming liabilities by requiring a vendor to dismiss all or some employees prior to completion.
▪ A Charter of Rights for Employees, including making it unlawful to dismiss an employee for industrial action.
▪ The employers learned of the letters and summarily dismissed the employees for gross misconduct.
▪ It was held that the employer was entitled to summarily dismiss the employee for this unauthorized use of the password.
government
▪ Gavin, since been dismissed by local government union Nalgo, was a full-time union official representing thousands of council employees.
▪ On Aug. 6, 1990, the President dismissed the Bhutto government and ordered fresh elections to be held on Oct. 24.
▪ At present, the president has the constitutional power to dismiss an elected government for large scale misdemeanours.
▪ His views were dismissed by the government, which portrayed the riots as merely criminal acts.
▪ But this has failed to deliver results because each dismissed government has been replaced by a yet more irresponsible one.
hand
▪ Yet there are a few hints that the possibility of specific performance even of these judgments should not be dismissed out of hand.
▪ The bankrupt cattle barons dismissed thousands of hired hands, who were forced to find new careers.
▪ But you want to try these pickups before you dismiss them out of hand.
▪ That is an unlikely enough scenario to dismiss out of hand, though.
▪ That idea can be dismissed out of hand.
▪ After dismissing it out of hand, the neighbor called back the same night and said it might be worth considering.
▪ But he hardly dismisses experiential knowledge out of hand.
idea
▪ I dismissed the idea that Tam and Richie might have found their own way there.
▪ They can always find a disease organism somewhere as a way of dismissing the idea of air pollution.
▪ And them she suddenly wondered if her son and Lee ... she dismissed the idea equally swiftly; she would know.
▪ New Democrat Gore dismissed the idea.
▪ This has led some doctors to dismiss the whole idea of chemical sensitivity and claim that all such patients are hyperventilating.
▪ Yet why should we dismiss the idea out of hand as some advocates of megalithic spirituality seem to do?
▪ If they don't, one should dismiss the idea of cars unable to get out of the garage as sensational rubbish-mongering.
▪ Coldly, he had dismissed the idea.
judge
▪ But a judge dismissed her compensation claim.
▪ It was also last month that a federal judge refused to dismiss the state lawsuit against Desert Diamond Casino.
▪ The judge dismissed the solicitors' summons.
▪ But a judge dismissed the criminal case a few months later, because the statute of limitations had expired.
▪ On 18 March the judge dismissed the applications.
▪ When prosecutors refused to disclose information about their procedures, a federal district judge dismissed the charges against the five defendants.
▪ At first instance the trial judge dismissed the claim.
▪ Allstate, which declined to comment on the suit, settled in November after a judge refused to dismiss the case.
minister
▪ The Prime Minister appoints ministers, reshuffles Cabinets, dismisses ministers, and promotes ministers.
▪ Tanay himself was officially dismissed as Defence Minister on March 6 and was replaced by Maj.-Gen.
▪ He was dismissed as Minister of Justice by Banda in 1964.
▪ Haughey dismissed two ministers before the no confidence vote.
notion
▪ Novick dismisses this notion without difficulty: the plan was considered, and found to be impractical.
▪ There are some who dismiss the notion that results from the East will have much effect on California.
▪ Regretfully, Gwendolen dismissed the notion.
▪ Horton dismisses any notion that his students are being bribed to stay in school.
▪ After initially reading the manuscript, David Kaczynski said he dismissed the notion that his brother was the Unabomber.
▪ Florin dismissed any notion of martial law-like conditions prevailing.
▪ Such accounts dismiss any notion of reproduction and treat consumption as wholly, as opposed to relatively, autonomous.
possibility
▪ Unlike a lot of linguists, I would not dismiss the possibility.
▪ He did not dismiss the possibility of signing a junior-college player.
▪ During the meeting she had completely dismissed that possibility.
post
▪ When the story was published, he was dismissed from his post, and had great difficulty raising money for further excavations.
reason
▪ Some state laws specifically provide that tenured teachers can be dismissed for economic reasons.
▪ Seven cases were dismissed for various reasons at the civil hearing held before Sheriff Alexander Jessop.
▪ Riffling: Can a teacher be dismissed for economic reasons?
▪ They'd give you low-paying-jobs, reduce your salary or simply dismiss you with no reasons given.
suggestion
▪ Mr Withington dismissed suggestions the company might face a growing number of smuggling cases.
▪ The facts here being admittedly extreme, the Court of Appeal could dismiss this suggestion without difficulty.
▪ He dismissed suggestions of disarray over the arrangements to supply £500 million worth of programmes for next year's schedule.
▪ For those who dismiss the suggestion, a warning.
▪ It dismisses suggestions that acid rain is a key factor in declining tree health.
teacher
▪ A dismissed teacher may seek a review of the dismissal before an arbitrator.
▪ Examining past, present, and projected student enrollments in one district, the school board voted to dismiss four teachers.
▪ Despite the apparent vagueness of this term, courts have ruled that it is a valid ground for dismissing teachers.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ One leader dismissed the conference's findings on the environment as unproven.
▪ Richards dismissed criticism that the Red Cross has not educated the public about AIDS.
▪ The argument for higher tariffs cannot be dismissed out of hand.
▪ The judge dismissed most of the police evidence, saying it was clearly fabricated.
▪ The murder charge against Beckwith has been dismissed.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ After careful consideration of all the evidence and relevant law the Tribunal either upholds or dismisses the appeal.
▪ He dismissed newspaper reports that he had expressed concern about the possibility of a recession.
▪ That is how it dismisses the coal industry.
▪ The company, which has dismissed most of its staff, said it had debt of $ 274 million.
▪ The thin man poked the children and asked questions which the doctor dismissed.
▪ We can not dismiss evil as some vague spiritual force that presides outside of human behavior.
▪ When this became tiresome, he tried to dismiss the game altogether, only to find that he could not.