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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
dismiss
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.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Dismiss

Dismiss \Dis*miss"\, n. Dismission. [Obs.]
--Sir T. Herbert.

Dismiss

Dismiss \Dis*miss"\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Dismissed; p. pr. & vb. n. Dismissing.] [L. dis- + missus, p. p. of mittere to send: cf. dimittere, OF. desmetre, F. d['e]mettre. See Demise, and cf. Dimit.]

  1. To send away; to give leave of departure; to cause or permit to go; to put away.

    He dismissed the assembly.
    --Acts xix. 41.

    Dismiss their cares when they dismiss their flock.
    --Cowper.

    Though he soon dismissed himself from state affairs.
    --Dryden.

  2. To discard; to remove or discharge from office, service, or employment; as, the king dismisses his ministers; the matter dismisses his servant.

  3. To lay aside or reject as unworthy of attentions or regard, as a petition or motion in court.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
dismiss

early 15c., from Latin dimissus, past participle of dimittere "send away, send different ways; break up, discharge; renounce, abandon," from dis- "apart, away" (see dis-) + mittere "send, let go" (see mission). Prefix altered by analogy with many dis- verbs. Dismit, in the same sense, is attested from late 14c. Related: Dismissed; dismissing.

Wiktionary
dismiss

vb. 1 (senseid en to discharge)(lb en transitive) To discharge; to end the employment or service of. 2 (lb en transitive) To order to leave. 3 (lb en transitive) To dispel; to rid one's mind of. 4 (lb en transitive) To reject; to refuse to accept. 5 (lb en transitive cricket) To get a batsman out. 6 (lb en transitive soccer) To give someone a red card; to send off.

WordNet
dismiss
  1. v. bar from attention or consideration; "She dismissed his advances" [syn: disregard, brush aside, brush off, discount, push aside, ignore]

  2. cease to consider; put out of judicial consideration; "This case is dismissed!" [syn: throw out]

  3. stop associating with; "They dropped her after she had a child out of wedlock" [syn: send packing, send away, drop]

  4. terminate the employment of; "The boss fired his secretary today"; "The company terminated 25% of its workers" [syn: fire, give notice, can, give the axe, send away, sack, force out, give the sack, terminate] [ant: hire]

  5. end one's encounter with somebody by causing or permitting the person to leave; "I was dismissed after I gave my report" [syn: usher out]

  6. declare void; "The President dissolved the parliament and called for new elections" [syn: dissolve]

Usage examples of "dismiss".

Josh himself apologized in profuse Aberdonian for not having been by her side to aid her, but she dismissed this with kind, if brusque, impatience.

Taking into account that Colton Wyndham was no addlebrained nitwit, Adriana had no recourse but to believe he had deliberately dismissed her earlier suggestion.

The Aedile had dismissed all of these allegations as fantasies, but then a boy had died after bloodletting, and the parents, mid-caste chandlers, had lodged a formal protest.

There was a culture in the Bureau that dismissed the work of earnest brick agents like Nancy Floyd and her colleagues in Minneapolis while rewarding the mean-spirited incompetence of supervisors.

HQMC complex, Sturgeon thought something was odd about the way Aguinaldo had checked the records then quickly dismissed him.

Apprehension warred with a sudden, iron determination to find out what that precious pair were up to, but I locked the warning away in the back of my mind, dimly thinking how Aiten would have mocked such uncharacteristic behavior but dismissing the notion.

These plausible explanations were not without their effect, and when Grimbart went on to declare that, ever since Nobel proclaimed a general truce and amnesty among all the animals of the forest, Reynard had turned hermit and spent all his time in fasting, almsgiving, and prayer, the complaint was about to be dismissed.

His eyes dismissed him and the older women, but sparked with interest when lighting on Amani, who had curled onto the bed beside her daughter, holding her close.

Chapter V Renewal of the feud between the Bishop and Don Gregorio -- Wholesale excommunications in Asuncion -- Cardenas in 1644 formulates his celebrated charges against the Jesuits -- The Governor, after long negotiations and much display of force, ultimately succeeds in driving out the Bishop -- For three years Cardenas is in desperate straits -- In 1648 Don Gregorio is suddenly dismissed, Cardenas elects himself Governor, and for a short time becomes supreme in Asuncion -- The Jesuits are forced to leave the town and to flee to Corrientes -- A new Governor is appointed in Asuncion -- He defeats Cardenas on the field of battle -- The latter is deprived of his power, and dies soon after as Bishop of La Paz The Governor, like a prudent soldier, was biding his time.

But, as both these claims of discovery present sufficient interest to the Australasian student, and are indirectly connected with our subject, we have not dismissed them entirely.

The sounds we dismissed as settlings of the earth along the distant coast, not alone because we did not attach too great importance to them, but because of the final thing that took place before Paul Tuttle officially took possession of the old house on the Aylesbury Road.

Kuwait, Jordan, Bahrain, and Qatar all have lively parliaments, which, though possessing little actual power, allow for popular participation in the process of government--and whose sentiments are not lightly dismissed by the true policy makers.

Guide Bikaner took one look at the scruffy, loutish Kaiti soldiers and suggested I dismiss them out of hand, since the least they could be was spies, and would certainly betray us at the earliest possible chance, and quite likely murder us as we slept.

A wandering tribe of the Blemmyes or Nubians invaded his solitary prison: in their retreat they dismissed a crowd of useless captives: but no sooner had Nestorius reached the banks of the Nile, than he would gladly have escaped from a Roman and orthodox city, to the milder servitude of the savages.

He was one of a few who had remained friends with Bremen when the Druid was dismissed from the Council.