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  1. to decide that something or someone is not important and not worth considering: I think he'd dismissed me as an idiot within five minutes of meeting me. Let's not just dismiss the idea before we've even thought about it. Just dismiss those thoughts from your mind - they're crazy and not worth thinking about. Más ejemplosMenos ejemplos.

    • English meaning

      to decide that something or someone is not important and not...

    • Dismiss

      to refuse to accept or think about an opinion or idea....

  2. Inglés. Español. dismiss [sb] ⇒ vtr. (sack, fire: an employee) despedir a vtr + prep. echar a vtr + prep. When John's employers caught him stealing from them, they dismissed him immediately. Cuando lo encontraron robando, sus jefes despidieron a Juan.

  3. dismiss [sth] as [sth] vtr + prep. (disregard, not take seriously) desestimar algo por loc verb. locución verbal: Unidad léxica estable formada de dos o más palabras que funciona como verbo ("sacar fuerzas de flaqueza", "acusar recibo"). At first the editor dismissed the story as a rumor.

  4. dismiss - dismissed with or without prejudice - legal. dismiss (a class) dismiss a case by alleging that the interest at sake and its redress cannot be attributed to single individuals - legal. dismiss a claim - legal. dismiss a juror - legal. Dismiss a lawsuit - legal. dismiss a student from a program. Dismiss an accusation of injury - legal.

  5. dismissed {adj.} ES. volume_up. descartada. descartado. despedido. despedida. cesante. volume_up. dismiss {v.t.} ES. volume_up. despedir. desechar. desestimar. rechazar. vencer. volume_up. dismiss {vb} ES. volume_up. descartar. destituir. cesar.