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 bail [beil]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 保释, 拎环, 杓, 栅栏

vt. 保释, 舀水

[经] 担保


  1. The boat will sink unless we bail out.
    我们要不把积水清除掉,船就要沉了。
  2. The magistrate refused his bail.
    地方法官不准他保释。
  3. The club faced bankruptcy until a wealthy local businessman bailed them out.
    俱乐部那时眼看就要破产,後来本地有位富商鼎力相助,才摆脱困境。


bail
[ noun ]
  1. (criminal law) money that must be forfeited by the bondsman if an accused person fails to appear in court for trial

  2. <noun.possession>
    the judge set bail at $10,000
    a $10,000 bond was furnished by an alderman
  3. the legal system that allows an accused person to be temporarily released from custody (usually on condition that a sum of money guarantees their appearance at trial)

  4. <noun.cognition>
    he is out on bail
[ verb ]
  1. release after a security has been paid

  2. <verb.social>
  3. deliver something in trust to somebody for a special purpose and for a limited period

  4. <verb.possession>
  5. secure the release of (someone) by providing security

  6. <verb.communication>
  7. empty (a vessel) by bailing

  8. <verb.change>
  9. remove (water) from a vessel with a container

  10. <verb.change>


Bail \Bail\, v. t. [OF. bailler to give, to deliver, fr. L.
bajulare to bear a burden, keep in custody, fr. bajulus he
who bears burdens.]
1. To deliver; to release. [Obs.]

Ne none there was to rescue her, ne none to bail.
--Spenser.

2. (Law)
(a) To set free, or deliver from arrest, or out of
custody, on the undertaking of some other person or
persons that he or they will be responsible for the
appearance, at a certain day and place, of the person
bailed.

Note: The word is applied to the magistrate or the surety.
The magistrate bails (but admits to bail is commoner) a
man when he liberates him from arrest or imprisonment
upon bond given with sureties. The surety bails a
person when he procures his release from arrest by
giving bond for his appearance. --Blackstone.
(b) To deliver, as goods in trust, for some special object
or purpose, upon a contract, expressed or implied,
that the trust shall be faithfully executed on the
part of the bailee, or person intrusted; as, to bail
cloth to a tailor to be made into a garment; to bail
goods to a carrier. --Blackstone. Kent.


Bail \Bail\ (b[=a]l), n. [F. baille a bucket, pail; cf. LL.
bacula, dim. of bacca a sort of vessel. Cf. {Bac}.]
A bucket or scoop used in bailing water out of a boat. [Obs.]

The bail of a canoe . . . made of a human skull.
--Capt. Cook.


Bail \Bail\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Bailed} (b[=a]ld); p. pr. &
vb. n. {Bailing}.]
1. To lade; to dip and throw; -- usually with out; as, to
bail water out of a boat.

Buckets . . . to bail out the water. --Capt. J.
Smith.

2. To dip or lade water from; -- often with out to express
completeness; as, to bail a boat.

By the help of a small bucket and our hats we bailed
her out. --R. H. Dana,
Jr.


Bail \Bail\, n. [OF. bail guardian, administrator, fr. L.
bajulus. See {Bail} to deliver.]
1. Custody; keeping. [Obs.]

Silly Faunus now within their bail. --Spenser.

2. (Law)
(a) The person or persons who procure the release of a
prisoner from the custody of the officer, or from
imprisonment, by becoming surety for his appearance in
court.

The bail must be real, substantial bondsmen.
--Blackstone.

A. and B. were bail to the arrest in a suit at
law. --Kent.
(b) The security given for the appearance of a prisoner in
order to obtain his release from custody of the
officer; as, the man is out on bail; to go bail for
any one.

Excessive bail ought not to be required.
--Blackstone.


Bail \Bail\, n. [OE. beyl; cf. Dan. b["o]ile a bending, ring,
hoop, Sw. b["o]gel, bygel, and Icel. beyla hump, swelling,
akin to E. bow to bend.]
1. The arched handle of a kettle, pail, or similar vessel,
usually movable. --Forby.

2. A half hoop for supporting the cover of a carrier's wagon,
awning of a boat, etc.


Bail \Bail\, n. [OF. bail, baille. See {Bailey}.]
1. (Usually pl.) A line of palisades serving as an exterior
defense. [Written also {bayle}.] [Obs.]

2. The outer wall of a feudal castle. Hence: The space
inclosed by it; the outer court. --Holinshed.

3. A certain limit within a forest. [Eng.]

4. A division for the stalls of an open stable.

5. (Cricket) The top or cross piece (or either of the two
cross pieces) of the wicket.

  1. Robert D. Bodily, 33, was held today without bail at the San Bernardino County Jail for investigation of attempted murder of police Sgt. Ron Schwenka, said police Sgt. Dan Hernandez.
  2. The trip is an exception to travel restrictions attached to his release on bail while he awaits a March trial on charges he helped the late leader of the Philippines, Ferdinand Marcos, and his wife, Imelda, defraud their national treasury.
  3. But she warns of many reproductions and modern bottles that won't appreciate: "If you're just starting in this, buyer beware." FREDDIE MAC'S BACK to help bail out a New York co-op.
  4. The Bush budget revisions would include the $1.9 billion cost to taxpayers next year of his program to bail out the ailing savings and loan industry.
  5. The protesters say they have a constitutional right to bail when charged with a misdemeanor.
  6. He was released on $10,000 bail, pending a July 14 court hearing.
  7. The Trupps, being held without bail in El Dorado County jail, were arraigned today before U.S. Magistrate Monte Reece in South Lake Tahoe.
  8. However, Ramsey set bail of $250,000 pending appeal for Ng, who has been in custody since his conviction in November.
  9. However, the government was forced again to bail out large state-owned factories hard hit by the austerity program that has reduced inflation.
  10. Soviet businesses also have been told to become self-sufficient because they can no longer rely on the state to bail them out.
  11. Mrs. Locasto was charged with felony child endangerment and was released after posting $50,000 bail late Thursday.
  12. The suit, filed in Hong Kong in early November, has been the major stumbling block in efforts to reach an agreement to bail out the shipping group.
  13. Along with finding the money, Congress must also look at some sort of "never again" reforms guaranteeing that the government will not be asked again to bail out the S&L industry.
  14. The suspects, in their late teens or early 20s, were charged with murder and robbery and were held without bail.
  15. Buckey spent more than four years in jail before he recently was able to post bail.
  16. Victor Barr, who has no known address, was arraigned Monday and jailed without bail on charges of bank fraud and causing Carol Kelly of Pontiac to travel with him to Las Vegas in April for marriage under false pretenses.
  17. He concludes, however, that our employers will not, indeed cannot, change; therefore the education system must continue to bail them out. The UK cannot afford to adopt such a defeatist stance.
  18. Miss Bittinger and Tammy Boyce, 23, were freed on $200 bail.
  19. He was free Thursday on bail.
  20. District Attorney Robert Morgenthau said Thursday that his office had requested Nosair be held without bail.
  21. But the president is a man who habitually relies heavily on staff; what's different this time is that his usually keen political instincts didn't bail him out of bad advice.
  22. John Gotti, the reputed boss of the nation's most powerful crime family, was freed on $100,000 bail Tuesday, less than 24 hours after an army of police arrested him.
  23. Superior Judge Kathleen Parker denied bail, telling Riordan she didn't have authority to grant it.
  24. Mr. LeBow, whose LeBow Industries Inc. helped bail out the troubled Western Union Corp., joined forces with a group of Allegheny's equity shareholders.
  25. Cedeno was released Friday on $2,000 bail.
  26. Repetto had asked for $5 million bail each.
  27. Keating is jailed on $5 million bail.
  28. Said spokesman John Hanson of the American Legion: "If that's going to be a plan then it seems like the VA again is trying to make veterans bail out the home loan program, a program whose problems veterans have not created.
  29. Lozano, who remains free on $10,000 bail, said he received an unfair trial.
  30. The judge set bail at $75,000 and told Mrs. Gentile she may not have unsupervised visits with her 7-year-old son, John Jr.
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