warrant
意味: To justify or make necessary; to give good reason for a particular action or response. As a noun, an official document authorising an action, especially a legal order.
As a verb, warrant is used in formal writing to mean 'justify' or 'call for': 'the situation warrants further investigation.' This sense is common in journalism, law, and academic prose. As a noun, it most frequently appears in legal contexts: a search warrant, an arrest warrant, a royal warrant. In finance, a warrant is a certificate giving the holder the right to purchase shares at a specified price. Common collocations include 'warrant attention,' 'warrant investigation,' 'arrest warrant,' and 'search warrant.'
例文
- The severity of the contamination warrants an immediate and thorough investigation by the regulator. 污染的严重程度需要监管机构进行即刻而彻底的调查。La gravedad de la contaminación justifica una investigación inmediata y exhaustiva por parte del regulador.汚染の深刻さは、規制当局による即時かつ徹底的な調査を必要としている。오염의 심각성은 규제 당국에 의한 즉각적이고 철저한 조사를 필요로 한다.
- Police obtained a warrant to search the premises after receiving intelligence from an informant. 在收到线人的情报后,警方获得了搜查该处所的令状。La policía obtuvo una orden judicial para registrar las instalaciones tras recibir información de un confidente.情報提供者からの通報を受け、警察はその施設の捜索令状を取得した。정보 제공자의 첩보를 받은 후, 경찰은 해당 건물의 수색 영장을 발부받았다.
- The committee concluded that the evidence did not warrant the imposition of additional sanctions. 委员会认为,证据不足以证明实施额外制裁是合理的。El comité concluyó que las pruebas no justificaban la imposición de sanciones adicionales.委員会は、証拠が追加制裁の実施を正当化するには不十分であると結論づけた。위원회는 증거가 추가 제재 부과를 정당화하기에 불충분하다고 결론지었다.
発音
使い方ガイド
場面: legal, journalism, professional
トーン: neutral
起源と歴史
From Old North French warant (a protector, guarantee), of Germanic origin, related to Old High German werento (guarantor). The legal sense developed in medieval English law. Entered English in the 13th century.
文化的背景
Era: Modern
Generation: All ages
Social background: Universal
このトピックの他の表現
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