1dismiss sb/sth (as sth) to decide not to think about sth/sb 不予考虑:
He dismissed the idea as nonsense.他认为那种意见是一派胡言,不加考虑。
2dismiss sb (from sth) to order an employee to leave his/her job 解雇;开除:
He was dismissed for refusing to obey orders.他因拒绝服从命令而被解雇。☞ Fire and sack are less formal words for dismiss. dismiss用于正式场合,非正式场合多用fire或sack。
3 to send sb away 解散;准许离开:
The lesson ended and the teacher dismissed the class.课上完了,老师宣布下课。
4 (used in law) to say that a trial or court case should not continue, usually because there is not enough evidence (用于法律)驳回,不受理(通常因证据不足):
The case was dismissed.这个案子被驳回。 ➔dismissal /dɪsˈmɪsl ||; dɪsˈmɪsḷ/ noun [C,U]
She was hurt at their dismissal of her offer of help.她主动表示要帮助,但却遭到他们拒绝,这使她很难过。a case of unfair dismissal被不公正地驳回的案子
dismiss/dIsˋmIs; dIsˈmIs/v [T] 1 to refuse to consider someone's idea or opinion because you think it is not serious, true, or important 拒绝考虑﹐不予接受: dismiss sb/sth as sth He dismissed the idea as impossible. 他认为那个想法是不可能的而不予考虑。2 formal to make someone leave their job【正式】解雇﹐开除: If you’re late again you’ll be dismissed! 如果再迟到﹐你就会被解雇!3 to send someone away or allow them to go 让〔某人〕离开﹔解散: Classes will be dismissed early tomorrow. 明天会早放学。 —dismissal n [C,U]
dismissdismissdismissesdismisseddismissingverb (dismisses, dismissing, dismissed)1(formal) to make somebody leave their jobsame meaningsack or fire: He was dismissed for stealing money from the company.2to allow somebody to leave a place: The lesson finished and the teacher dismissed the class.