Attempt - определение. Что такое Attempt
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Что (кто) такое Attempt - определение

OCCURS IF A CRIMINAL HAS AN INTENT TO COMMIT A CRIME AND TAKES A SUBSTANTIAL STEP TOWARD COMPLETING THE CRIME
Attempted; Attempt (crime); Crime of attempt; Attempt crime; Attempts; Criminal attempt; Criminal attempts; Attempted crime
Найдено результатов: 203
attempt         
(attempts, attempting, attempted)
Frequency: The word is one of the 700 most common words in English.
1.
If you attempt to do something, especially something difficult, you try to do it.
The only time that we attempted to do something like that was in the city of Philadelphia...
Before I could attempt a reply he added over his shoulder: 'Wait there.'
VERB: V to-inf, V n
2.
If you make an attempt to do something, you try to do it, often without success.
...a deliberate attempt to destabilise the defence...
It was one of his rare attempts at humour.
N-COUNT: usu with supp, oft N to-inf
3.
An attempt on someone's life is an attempt to kill them.
...an attempt on the life of the former Iranian Prime Minister.
N-COUNT: N on n
attempt         
I. v. a.
1.
Try, essay, make trial or experiment of.
2.
Undertake, go about, set about, take in hand, endeavor to accomplish.
3.
Assail, attack, assault, etc., which see.
II. v. n.
Try, strive, endeavor, seek, aim, make an attempt, make essay, do one's best, do all that in one lies, strain every nerve, leave no stone unturned.
III. n.
1.
Effort, trial, essay, endeavor, experiment, undertaking, enterprise.
2.
Attack, assault, onset.
attempt         
¦ verb make an effort to achieve or complete.
?try to climb to the top of (a mountain).
¦ noun an act of attempting.
?a bid to kill someone.
Derivatives
attemptable adjective
Origin
ME: from OFr. attempter, from L. attemptare, from ad- 'to' + temptare 'to tempt'.
attempt         
v. and n. to actually try to commit a crime and have the ability to do so. This means more than just thinking about doing a criminal act or planning it without overt action. It also requires the opportunity and ability. Attempts can include attempted murder, attempted robbery, attempted rape, attempted forgery, attempted arson, and a host of other crimes. The person accused cannot attempt to commit murder with an unloaded gun or attempt rape over the telephone. The attempt becomes a crime in itself, and usually means one really tried to commit the crime, but failed through no fault of himself or herself. Example: if a husband laces his wife's cocktail with cyanide, it is no defense that by chance the intended victim decided not to drink the deadly potion. One defendant claimed he could not attempt rape in an old Model A coupe because it was too cramped to make the act possible. The court threw out this defense. Sometimes a criminal defendant is accused of both the crime (e.g. robbery) and the attempt in case the jury felt he tried but did not succeed.
Attempt         
·vi To make an attempt;
- with upon.
II. Attempt ·vt To try to win, subdue, or overcome; as, one who attempts the virtue of a woman.
III. Attempt ·vt To try to move, by entreaty, by afflictions, or by temptations; to Tempt.
IV. Attempt ·vt To Attack; to make an effort or attack upon; to try to take by force; as, to attempt the enemy's camp.
V. Attempt ·noun A essay, trial, or endeavor; an undertaking; an attack, or an effort to gain a point; ·esp. an unsuccessful, as contrasted with a successful, effort.
VI. Attempt ·vt To make trial or experiment of; to Try; to endeavor to do or perform (some action); to Assay; as, to attempt to sing; to attempt a bold flight.
attempt         
I
n.
1) to make an attempt
2) to foil, thwart an attempt
3) an abortive, fruitless, futile, vain; all-out, concerted, last-ditch; bold, brazen, daring; crude; deliberate; feeble, halfhearted, weak; first; premature; successful attempt; repeated attempts
4) an attempt against, on (an attempt on smb.'s life)
5) an attempt at (an attempt at being funny)
6) an attempt to + inf. (we made an attempt to get in touch with them)
II
v.
1) (E) she attempted to find a job
2) (rare) (G) he attempted walking
3) (misc.) to attempt smt. in vain
attempted         
An attempted crime or unlawful action is an unsuccessful effort to commit the crime or action.
...a case of attempted murder...
ADJ: ADJ n
Attempted         
·Impf & ·p.p. of Attempt.
Suicide attempt         
ATTEMPT TO KILL ONESELF THAT RESULTS IN SURVIVAL
Parasuicide; Attempted suicide; Parasuicides; Suicide attempts; Parasuicidal; Attempting suicide; Attempted suicides; Tentanamen suicidii; Tentanamen suicidi; Nonfatal suicide attempt; Criminalization of suicide; Tentamen suicidii; Failed suicide attempt; Attempts suicide; Para suicide; Trying to commit suicide; Attempt suicide
A suicide attempt is an attempt to die by suicide that results in survival. It may be referred to as a "failed" or "unsuccessful" suicide attempt, though these terms are discouraged by mental health professionals for implying a suicide that results in death is a successful and positive outcome.
Escape Attempt         
BOOK BY ARKADI EN BORIS STROEGATSKI
An Attempt to Escape; Popytka k begstvu
Escape Attempt () is a 1962 science fiction novel by Soviet writers Boris and Arkady Strugatsky, set in the Noon Universe. The English translation was published in a single volume with the other Noon universe stories Space Mowgli and The Kid from Hell.

Википедия

Attempt

An attempt to commit a crime occurs if a criminal has an intent to commit a crime and takes a substantial step toward completing the crime, but for reasons not intended by the criminal, the final resulting crime does not occur. Attempt to commit a particular crime is a crime, usually considered to be of the same or lesser gravity as the particular crime attempted.: 669–671  Attempt is a type of inchoate crime, a crime that is not fully developed. The crime of attempt has two elements, intent and some conduct toward completion of the crime.

One group of theories in criminal law is that attempt to commit an act occurs when a person comes dangerously close to carrying out a criminal act, and intends to commit the act, but does not commit it. The person may have carried out all the necessary steps (or thought they had) but still failed, or the attempt may have been abandoned or prevented at a late stage. The attempt must have gone beyond mere planning or preparation, and is distinct from other inchoate offenses such as conspiracy to commit a crime or solicitation of a crime. There are many specific crimes of attempt, such as attempted murder, which may vary by jurisdiction. Punishment is often less severe than would be the case if the attempted crime had been carried out. Abandonment of the attempt may constitute a not guilty defence, depending partly on the extent to which the attempt was abandoned freely and voluntarily. Early common law did not punish attempts; the law of attempt was not recognised by common law until the case of b. Rex v. Scofield in 1784.: 669 

The essence of the crime of attempt in legal terms is that the defendant has failed to commit the actus reus (the Latin term for the "guilty act") of the full offense, but has the direct and specific intent to commit that full offense. The normal rule for establishing criminal liability is to prove an actus reus accompanied by a mens rea ("guilty mind") at the relevant time (see concurrence and strict liability offenses as the exception to the rule).