dismiss
51motion to dismiss — A motion asking the judge to throw out one or more claims or an entire lawsuit. Sometimes, the plaintiff or a prosecutor makes a motion to dismiss a case because it has been settled out of court. Sometimes, the defendant files a motion to dismiss …
52Lord Dismiss Us — infobox Book | name = Lord Dismiss Us title orig = translator = image caption = author = Michael Campbell cover artist = country = United Kingdom language = English series = genre = Novel publisher = William Heinemann release date = 1967 media… …
53Motion to dismiss in the interest of justice — The motion to dismiss in the interest of justice is a provision of the New York Criminal Procedure Law, CPL § 210.40; since being interpreted in People v. Clayton,[1] it has been known as a Clayton motion . Contents 1 Background 2 Terms 2.1 …
54motion to dismiss — request to cancel, request to void …
55Dismissed — 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… …
56Dismissing — 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… …
57wave something aside — DISMISS, reject, brush aside, shrug off, disregard, ignore, discount, play down; informal pooh pooh. → wave * * * dismiss something as unnecessary or irrelevant he waved the objection aside and carried on * * * ˌwave sthaˈside/aˈway derived to… …
58dismissory — dismissˈory adjective • • • Main Entry: ↑dismiss …
59brush off — dismiss, remove; send away …
60fire someone — dismiss a person from a job …