plea
noun /pliː/
/pliː/
请求;恳求 - plea for something She made an impassioned plea for help.
她恳切地求助。 - plea (to somebody) (to do something) a plea to industries to stop pollution
请求生产企业停止污染 - He refused to listen to her tearful pleas.
他对她声泪俱下的恳求置之不理。
- a final plea for his life
为他的生命的最后请求 - Despite pleas from his mother, the gunman refused to give himself up.
尽管他母亲再三恳求,这名持枪歹徒还是拒绝投案自首。 - Hospital visiting hours were extended in response to pleas from patients.
应病人的请求,医院延长了探视时间。 - She made an emotional plea for her daughter's killer to be caught.
她情绪激动地恳求要抓获杀害她女儿的凶手。
Collocations Dictionaryadjective- desperate
- strong
- urgent
- …
- make
- issue
- ignore
- …
- despite a/the plea
- plea by
- plea from
- …
- plea for something She made an impassioned plea for help.
) a statement made by somebody or for somebody who is accused of a crime法律 (被告或被告律师的)诉讼抗辩,答辩 - a plea of guilty/not guilty
承认/不承认有罪 - to enter a guilty plea
正式表示认罪
Wordfinder- accuse
- appeal
- counsel
- defendant
- evidence
- justice
- offence
- plea
- prosecution
- trial
Topics Law and justicec1- Her lawyer entered a plea of guilty on her behalf.
律师代表她承认控罪。 - The prosecution accepted a plea of manslaughter.
控方认可了过失杀人的辩护。 - The terms of the plea agreements weren't disclosed.
控辩协议的条款没有披露。
Collocations Dictionaryadjective- guilty
- not guilty
- insanity
- …
- enter
- hear
- change
- …
- bargain
- bargaining
- agreement
- …
- plea for
- plea of
- cop a plea
- a plea of guilty/not guilty
- plea of something (law
) a reason given to a court for doing or not doing something法律 (向法庭提供的)理由,借口,辩解 - He was charged with murder, but got off on a plea of insanity.
他被指控犯了谋杀罪,但以精神错乱为由逃过惩罚。 - These facts cannot support a plea of diminished responsibility.
这些事实不支持减轻刑事责任抗辩。
Collocations Dictionaryadjective- guilty
- not guilty
- insanity
- …
- enter
- hear
- change
- …
- bargain
- bargaining
- agreement
- …
- plea for
- plea of
- cop a plea
- He was charged with murder, but got off on a plea of insanity.
词源Middle English (in the sense ‘lawsuit’): from Old French plait, plaid ‘agreement, discussion’, from Latin placitum ‘a decree’, neuter past participle of placere ‘to please’.