parole
parole 英 [pəˈrəʊl] 美 [pəˈroʊl]
n. 语言;誓言,诺言;释放宣言 vt. 有条件释放,假释;使假释出狱;宣誓后释放
进行时:paroling 过去式:paroled 过去分词:paroled 第三人称单数:paroles 名词复数:paroles
- If you're in prison, after serving a few years you might be let out on parole, a promise to be good and check in regularly.
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- n. 语言;誓言,诺言;释放宣言
- vt. 有条件释放,假释;使假释出狱;宣誓后释放
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1. If convicted, he faces life in prison with no chance of parole.
如果罪名成立,他将面临无假释机会的终身监禁。
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2. Then he was notified that the shooter was up for his parole hearing.
然后,他被告知将会为那个杀人犯举行假释听证会。
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3. Magpie shouldn’t have been there, see, because it’s a part of the condition of his parole that he stays away from friends and relatives and ex-convicts and just about everybody.
还有些问题,”埃尔吉说,“喜鹊本不应该在那儿,你知道,因为这是他的假释条件的一部分,那就是他要离开朋友、亲戚和以前的囚犯,差不多是所有的人。
- parole (n.) 1610s, "word of honor," especially "promise by a prisoner of war not to escape," from French parole "word, speech" (in parole d'honneur "word of honor") from Vulgar Latin *paraula "speech, discourse," from Latin parabola "comparison," from Greek parabole "a comparison, parable," literally "a throwing beside," hence "a juxtaposition" (see parable). Sense of "conditional release of a prisoner before full term" is first attested 1908 in criminal slang.
- parole (v.) 1716, from parole (n.). Originally it was what the prisoner did ("pledge"); its transitive meaning "put on parole" is first attested 1782. Related: Paroled; paroling.
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