Dismissal can be categorized as a noun.
Noun |
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dismissal - the termination of someone's employment (leaving them free to depart) | ||
dismissal - permission to go; the sending away of someone | ||
dismissal - official notice that you have been fired from your job | ||
dismissal - a judgment disposing of the matter without a trial |
# | Sentence | ||
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1. | noun | Bankruptcy is to the employer what dismissal is to the employee. | |
2. | noun | The manager threatened him with dismissal. | |
3. | noun | The dismissal of foreign minister Tanaka is symbolic of the continuing political turmoil. | |
4. | noun | Tom asked for dismissal. | |
5. | noun | Mary will almost certainly sue Tom over what she perceives as an unjust dismissal. | |
6. | noun | His mistakes led to his eventual dismissal. | |
7. | noun | "This dismissal," he said, "is the tocsin of the St Bartholomew of the patriots." | |
8. | noun | This horrible mistake led to Tom's conclusive dismissal. |
Sentence | |
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noun | |
Bankruptcy is to the employer what dismissal is to the employee. | |
The manager threatened him with dismissal. | |
The dismissal of foreign minister Tanaka is symbolic of the continuing political turmoil. | |
Tom asked for dismissal. | |
Mary will almost certainly sue Tom over what she perceives as an unjust dismissal. | |
His mistakes led to his eventual dismissal. | |
"This dismissal," he said, "is the tocsin of the St Bartholomew of the patriots." | |
This horrible mistake led to Tom's conclusive dismissal. |