- disobey someone
- (v) soosoo.
English-Mandinka dictionary. 2009.
English-Mandinka dictionary. 2009.
disobey — UK [ˌdɪsəˈbeɪ] / US verb [intransitive/transitive] Word forms disobey : present tense I/you/we/they disobey he/she/it disobeys present participle disobeying past tense disobeyed past participle disobeyed to deliberately do the opposite of what… … English dictionary
disobey — dis|o|bey [ ,dısə beı ] verb intransitive or transitive to deliberately do the opposite of what someone in authority has told you to do, or deliberately not obey a rule: If you continue to disobey the rules, you will be punished. They knew he was … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
disobey — [[t]dɪ̱səbe͟ɪ[/t]] disobeys, disobeying, disobeyed VERB When someone disobeys a person or an order, they deliberately do not do what they have been told to do. [V n] ...a naughty boy who often disobeyed his mother and father... [V n] He urged… … English dictionary
disobey — verb (I, T) to refuse to do what someone with authority tells you to do, or refuse to obey a rule or law: Remember you re in the army; if you disobey orders you ll get a court martial … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
disobey — dis|o|bey [ˌdısəˈbeı, ˌdısəu US ˌdısə , ˌdısou ] v [I and T] to refuse to do what someone with authority tells you to do, or refuse to obey a rule or law ≠ ↑obey ▪ punishment for disobeying orders … Dictionary of contemporary English
disobey — [ˌdɪsəˈbeɪ] verb [I/T] to deliberately not pay attention to a rule or an order from someone in authority Syn: defy Ant: obey … Dictionary for writing and speaking English
act against someone's orders — disobey orders, not do what one was told … English contemporary dictionary
line — [[t]la͟ɪn[/t]] ♦ lines, lining, lined 1) N COUNT A line is a long thin mark which is drawn or painted on a surface. Draw a line down that page s center. ...a dotted line... The ball had clearly crossed the line. 2) N COUNT: usu pl The lines on… … English dictionary
flat — 1 adjective flatter, flattest 1 SURFACE smooth and level, without raised or hollow areas, and not sloping or curving: a flat bottomed boat | a perfectly flat sandy beach | flat as a pancake (=very flat): The countryside near there is flat as a… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
trespass — tres·pass 1 / tres pəs, ˌpas/ n [Anglo French trespas violation of the law, actionable wrong, from Old French, crossing, passage, from trespasser to go across, from tres across + passer to pass]: wrongful conduct causing harm to another: as a: a… … Law dictionary
Lawrence Kohlberg's stages of moral development — constitute an adaptation of a psychological theory originally conceived of by the Swiss psychologist Jean Piaget. Kohlberg began work on this topic while a psychology postgraduate student at the University of Chicago,[1] and expanded and… … Wikipedia