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

WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
CASE; Cases; CASE (disambiguation); Case (disambiguation); Case, Missouri
Найдено результатов: 2645
case         
CHEMICAL COMPOUND
CaSe
I. INSTANCES AND OTHER ABSTRACT MEANINGS
(cases)
Frequency: The word is one of the 700 most common words in English.
1.
A particular case is a particular situation or incident, especially one that you are using as an individual example or instance of something.
Surgical training takes at least nine years, or 11 in the case of obstetrics...
One of the effects of dyslexia, in my case at least, is that you pay tremendous attention to detail...
The Honduran press published reports of eighteen cases of alleged baby snatching.
N-COUNT: oft in N, N of n
2.
A case is a person or their particular problem that a doctor, social worker, or other professional is dealing with.
...the case of a 57-year-old man who had suffered a stroke...
Some cases of arthritis respond to a gluten-free diet...
Child protection workers were meeting to discuss her case.
N-COUNT
3.
If you say that someone is a sad case or a hopeless case, you mean that they are in a sad situation or a hopeless situation.
I knew I was going to make it-that I wasn't a hopeless case.
N-COUNT: adj N
4.
A case is a crime or mystery that the police are investigating.
Mr. Hitchens said you have solved some very unusual cases.
N-COUNT
5.
The case for or against a plan or idea consists of the facts and reasons used to support it or oppose it.
He sat there while I made the case for his dismissal...
Both these facts strengthen the case against hanging...
She argued her case.
N-COUNT: usu sing, oft N for/against n
6.
In law, a case is a trial or other legal inquiry.
It can be difficult for public figures to win a libel case...
The case was brought by his family, who say their reputation has been damaged by allegations about him.
N-COUNT
see also test case
7.
You say in any case when you are adding something which is more important than what you have just said, but which supports or corrects it.
The concert was booked out, and in any case, most of the people gathered in the square could not afford the price of a ticket.
= anyway, besides
PHRASE: PHR with cl [emphasis]
8.
You say in any case after talking about things that you are not sure about, to emphasize that your next statement is the most important thing or the thing that you are sure about.
Either he escaped, or he came to grief. In any case, he was never seen again.
= at any rate
PHRASE: PHR with cl [emphasis]
9.
If you do something in case or just in case a particular thing happens, you do it because that thing might happen.
In case anyone was following me, I made an elaborate detour...
PHRASE
10.
If you do something or have something in case of a particular thing, you do it or have it because that thing might happen or be true.
Many shops along the route have been boarded up in case of trouble.
PREP-PHRASE: PHR n
11.
You use in case in expressions like 'in case you didn't know' or 'in case you've forgotten' when you are telling someone in a rather irritated way something that you think is either obvious or none of their business.
She's nervous about something, in case you didn't notice...
PHRASE: PHR with cl [feelings]
12.
You say in that case or in which case to indicate that what you are going to say is true if the possible situation that has just been mentioned actually exists.
Members are concerned that a merger might mean higher costs, in which case they would oppose it.
PHRASE: PHR with cl
13.
You can say that you are doing something just in case to refer vaguely to the possibility that a thing might happen or be true, without saying exactly what it is.
I guess we've already talked about this but I'll ask you again just in case.
PHRASE: PHR with cl
14.
You say as the case may be or whatever the case may be to indicate that the statement you are making applies equally to the two or more alternatives that you have mentioned.
They know how everything works-or doesn't work, as the case may be.
PHRASE
15.
If you say that a task or situation is a case of a particular thing, you mean that it consists of that thing or can be described as that thing.
It's not a case of whether anyone would notice or not.
PHRASE
16.
If you say that something is a case in point, you mean that it is a good example of something you have just mentioned.
In many cases religious persecution is the cause of people fleeing their country. A case in point is colonial India.
PHRASE
17.
If you say that something is the case, you mean that it is true or correct.
You'll probably notice her having difficulty swallowing. If this is the case, give her plenty of liquids...
Consumers had hoped the higher prices would mean more goods in stores. But that was not the case.
PHRASE: V inflects
18.
If you say that someone is on the case, you mean that they are aware of a particular problem and are trying to resolve it.
The CompuServe management is on the case now, and it looks as if things will return to normal soon.
PHRASE
II. CONTAINERS
(cases)
1.
A case is a container that is specially designed to hold or protect something.
...a black case for his spectacles.
N-COUNT: oft n N
2.
A case is a suitcase.
N-COUNT
3.
A case of wine or other alcoholic drink is a box containing a number of bottles, usually twelve, which is sold as a single unit.
N-COUNT: oft N of n
III. GRAMMAR TERM
(cases)
1.
In the grammar of many languages, the case of a group such as a noun group or adjective group is the form it has which shows its relationship to other groups in the sentence.
N-COUNT
2.
CASE         
CHEMICAL COMPOUND
CaSe
CASE         
CHEMICAL COMPOUND
CaSe
Common Application Service Element (Reference: ISO, OSI)
case         
CHEMICAL COMPOUND
CaSe
case1
¦ noun
1. an instance of a particular situation; an example of something occurring: a case of mistaken identity.
the situation affecting or relating to a particular person or thing: I'll make an exception in your case.
an incident under official investigation by the police.
2. an instance of a disease, injury, or problem.
a person or their particular problem as a subject of medical or welfare attention.
3. a legal action, especially one that is to be decided in a court of law.
a set of facts or arguments supporting one side in such a legal action.
a legal action that has been decided and may be cited as a precedent.
4. a set of facts or arguments supporting one side of a debate or controversy.
5. Grammar any of the inflected forms of a noun, adjective, or pronoun that express the semantic relation of the word to other words in the sentence.
such a relation whether indicated by inflection or not.
Phrases
be the case be so.
on (or off) someone's case informal continually (or no longer) criticizing or harassing someone.
Origin
ME: from OFr. cas, from L. casus 'fall', related to cadere 'to fall'.
--------
case2
¦ noun
1. a container designed to hold or protect something.
the outer protective covering of a natural or manufactured object.
2. a suitcase.
3. a box containing twelve bottles of wine or other drink, sold as a unit.
4. Printing a partitioned container for loose metal type.
each of the two forms, capital or minuscule, in which a letter of the alphabet may be written or printed.
¦ verb
1. enclose within a case.
2. informal reconnoitre (a place) before carrying out a robbery.
Origin
ME: from OFr. casse, chasse (mod. caisse 'trunk, chest', chasse 'reliquary, frame'), from L. capsa, related to capere 'to hold'.
case         
CHEMICAL COMPOUND
CaSe
I. n.
1.
Covering, sheathe, capsule.
2.
Box.
3.
State, condition, situation, plight, predicament.
4.
Instance, particular occurrence, example, specific instance.
5.
Circumstance, condition, contingency, event.
6.
Suit, action, cause, process, trial.
7.
Question, matter of inquiry, subject of discussion.
8.
Declension-form, case-ending, inflection, form.
II. v. a.
1.
Cover (with a case), protect, wrap, encase, enclose, envelop.
2.
Box, put in a box or case, pack, pack up.
CASE         
CHEMICAL COMPOUND
CaSe
case         
CHEMICAL COMPOUND
CaSe
I
n.
legal action
argument
1) to hear, try a case (the court will not hear this case)
2) to argue, plead a case (the lawyer argued the case skillfully)
3) to make (out), present, state; take a case (she made out a good case for her client; the president took his case to the people)
4) to lose; win a case
5) to decide; settle a case (they settled the case out of court)
6) to rest one's case ('to cease introducing evidence') (the defense lawyer rested her case)
7) to dismiss, throw out a case (the judge dismissed the case)
8) an airtight, ironclad, open-and-shut, watertight; clear; strong; weak case
9) a civil; criminal; pending; test case
10) a case goes to trial
11) a case against (we had an airtight case against him)
12) (misc.) to have a good case ('to have a convincing argument') (often ironic)
crime, felony
13) to break, crack, solve a case (the detective broke the case)
14) to investigate, work on a case (the police worked on the case for a year)
instance, occurrence, example
15) to cite a case
16) an attested; authenticated; borderline; celebrated; clear; flagrant; hypothetical; isolated, rare; open-and-shut ('easily settled'); similar; special case
17) (med.) an acute; advanced; chronic; hopeless; lingering; mild; terminal case
18) to be the case ('to be so')
19) in a certain case (in this case; in any case; in case of emergency)
20) a case in point ('a pertinent case')
inflectional form
21) to govern, take a case (certain Russian verbs take the dative case)
22) the ablative; accusative; dative; genitive; instrumental; locative; oblique; prepositional; vocative case
misc.
23) a basket case ('smb. without arms or legs or who is in a completely hopeless situation'); as the case may be
II
n.
container
cover
an attach?; display; jewelry; packing; pillow; watch case
CASE         
CHEMICAL COMPOUND
CaSe
Computer Aided Software Engineering
Case         
CHEMICAL COMPOUND
CaSe
·vi To propose hypothetical cases.
II. Case ·noun Chance; accident; hap; opportunity.
III. Case ·vt To strip the skin from; as, to case a box.
IV. Case ·noun A small fissure which admits water to the workings.
V. Case ·noun An inclosing frame; a casing; as, a door case; a window case.
VI. Case ·noun A shallow tray divided into compartments or "boxes" for holding type.
VII. Case ·vt To cover or protect with, or as with, a case; to Inclose.
VIII. Case ·noun A box and its contents; the quantity contained in a box; as, a case of goods; a case of instruments.
IX. Case ·noun A patient under treatment; an instance of sickness or injury; as, ten cases of fever; also, the history of a disease or injury.
X. Case ·noun The matters of fact or conditions involved in a suit, as distinguished from the questions of law; a suit or action at law; a cause.
XI. Case ·noun A box, sheath, or covering; as, a case for holding goods; a case for spectacles; the case of a watch; the case (capsule) of a cartridge; a case (cover) for a book.
XII. Case ·noun That which befalls, comes, or happens; an event; an instance; a circumstance, or all the circumstances; condition; state of things; affair; as, a strange case; a case of injustice; the case of the Indian tribes.
XIII. Case ·noun One of the forms, or the inflections or changes of form, of a noun, pronoun, or adjective, which indicate its relation to other words, and in the aggregate constitute its declension; the relation which a noun or pronoun sustains to some other word.
case         
CHEMICAL COMPOUND
CaSe
n. short for a cause of action, lawsuit, or the right to sue (as in "does he have a case against Jones?"). It is also shorthand for the reported decisions (appeals, certain decisions of federal courts and special courts such as the tax court) which can be cited as precedents. Thus, "in the case of Malarkey v. Hogwash Printing Company, the court stated the rule as:."

Википедия

Case

Case or CASE may refer to: