Synonym: discharge, expel, send away. Antonym: employ. Similar words: transmission, missile, mission, missing, emission, euphemism, dismal, admission. Meaning: [dɪs'mɪs] v. 1. bar from attention or consideration 2. cease to consider; put out of judicial consideration 3. stop associating with 4. terminate the employment of 5. end one's encounter with somebody by causing or permitting the person to leave 6. declare void.
Random good picture Not show
121, They'd give you low-paying-jobs, reduce your salary or simply dismiss you with no reasons given.
122, Dismiss, suspend, or demote all or any employees who participate in such strike or violation. 2.
123, Or the board might transfer or dismiss an administrator for marrying a teacher.
124, The law requires courts to hold up most discovery proceedings until companies can file a motion to dismiss a suit.
125, Some dismiss these as myth in the sense of old wives' tales.
126, If they don't, one should dismiss the idea of cars unable to get out of the garage as sensational rubbish-mongering.
127, He argued that it is too simplistic, and indeed ethnocentric, to dismiss such peoples as irrational and unscientific.
128, While some dismiss Monahan as a fringe activist, she boasts of a close working relationship with the governor.
129, That is an unlikely enough scenario to dismiss out of hand, though.
130, Her speech is badly slurred, and the tendency is to dismiss her as a drunk or a druggie.
131, History will likely dismiss the shrill cries of the last few weeks and remember Dole as a steady voice of moderation.
132, Shareholders as the electorate are given the power to elect and dismiss their leaders, the directors.
133, The American desire for material goods caused Europeans to dismiss them as philistines.
134, This is because it is possible to dismiss fairly for a refusal to accept change.
135, Let puritans and pessimists damn, disapprove or dismiss these appetites; that is their loss.
136, He might one day get it into his head to dismiss Tom.
137, Accordingly, despite the width of the order and recognising that this is an exceptional case, I would dismiss this appeal.
138, Too often, uninformed adults discount and dismiss all the crucial steps children take en route to becoming independent readers.
139, An employer who wants to dismiss an employee must give proper notice.
140, Granted, the casual observer may dismiss this as impenetrable blarney.Sentencedict.com
141, This makes women cheaper to dismiss and makes them more vulnerable to redundancy.
142, However, it would be wrong to dismiss the initiative on these grounds as primarily a money-saving device.
143, But he did not simply dismiss religion on this score; rather he kept returning to reflect upon it.
144, At present, the president has the constitutional power to dismiss an elected government for large scale misdemeanours.
145, Service agreements sometimes include a provision entitling the company to dismiss in the event of long-term incapacity.
146, But you want to try these pickups before you dismiss them out of hand.
147, People generally dismiss the fashionable view - favoured by the Government - that one-parent families cause society's ills.
148, Now, one can dismiss Mr Toner's argument as special pleading.
149, Therefore, a purchaser would avoid automatically assuming liabilities by requiring a vendor to dismiss all or some employees prior to completion.
150, Otherwise she felt certain he'd dismiss the whole embarrassing situation with a careless sneer.
More similar words: transmission, missile, mission, missing, emission, euphemism, dismal, admission, permission, commission, missionary, commissioner, dissolve, smile on, transmit, issue, tourism, racism, tissue, organism, mutualism, journalism, mechanism, terrorism, premise, what is more, militarism, at this stage, chemistry, nationalism.