bribe

English translation unavailable for bribe.

bribe

US /braɪb/ 
UK /braɪb/ 

to give money or presents to someone so that they will help you by doing something dishonest or illegal.

رشوه دادن
Persian equivalent: 

He tried to bribe the judge.

او سعی کرد به‌ قاضى‌ رشوه‌ بدهد.‏

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English

bribe

I. bribe1 /braɪb/ verb [transitive]
1. to illegally give someone, especially a public official, money or a gift in order to persuade them to do something for you:
The only way we could get into the country was by bribing the border officials.
bribe somebody to do something
He bribed one of the guards to smuggle out a note.
2. to offer someone, especially a child, something special in order to persuade them to do something
bribe somebody with something
Sam wouldn’t do her homework until I bribed her with ice cream.
II. bribe2 noun [countable]
[Date: 1300-1400; Language: Old French; Origin: 'bread given to a beggar']
1. money or a gift that you illegally give someone to persuade them to do something for you:
The officials said that they had been offered bribes before an important game.
accept/take a bribe
A Supreme Court judge was charged with taking bribes.
2. something special offered to someone, especially a child, in order to persuade them to do something
• • •

COLLOCATIONS

 

verbs

offer somebody a bribe Some sportsmen have been offered bribes to perform badly.
accept/take a bribe Any officials who accept bribes will face criminal charges.
give somebody a bribe They issued passports to people who gave them bribes.
pay a bribe It was claimed that the company paid bribes to win the contract.

bribe + NOUN

bribe money The mayor is accused of accepting bribe money.

Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

bribe

 

bribe [bribe bribes bribed bribing] noun, verb   [braɪb]    [braɪb] 

noun

a sum of money or sth valuable that you give or offer to sb to persuade them to help you, especially by doing sth dishonest

• It was alleged that he had taken bribes while in office.

• She had been offered a $50 000 bribe to drop the charges.

 

Word Origin:

late Middle English: from Old French briber, brimber ‘beg’, of unknown origin. The original sense was ‘rob, extort’, hence (as a noun) ‘theft, stolen goods’, also ‘money extorted or demanded for favours’, later ‘offer money as an incentive’ (early 16th cent.).

 

Thesaurus:

bribe noun C

• She was offered a large bribe to drop the charges.

inducement • • bait • |especially AmE kickback • |informal, usually disapproving pay-off

£1 000/$500, etc. bribe/pay-off

offer (sb) a/an bribe/inducement/pay-off

take bribes/the bait/kickbacks

 

Collocations:

Crime

Committing a crime

commit a crime/a murder/a violent assault/a brutal killing/an armed robbery/fraud

be involved in terrorism/a suspected arson attack/people smuggling/human trafficking

engage/participate in criminal activity/illegal practices/acts of mindless vandalism

steal sb's wallet/purse/(BrE) mobile phone/(NAmE) cell phone

rob a bank/a person/a tourist

break into/ (BrE) burgle/ (NAmE) burglarize a house/a home/an apartment

hijack a plane/ship/bus

smuggle drugs/weapons/arms/immigrants

launder drug money (through sth)

forge documents/certificates/passports

take/accept/pay sb/offer (sb) a bribe

run a phishing/an email/an Internet scam

Fighting crime

combat/fight crime/terrorism/corruption/drug trafficking

prevent/stop credit-card fraud/child abuse/software piracy

deter/stop criminals/burglars/thieves/shoplifters/vandals

reduce/tackle/crack down on knife/gun/violent/street crime; (especially BrE) antisocial behaviour

foil a bank raid/a terrorist plot

help/support/protect the victims of crime

Investigating crime

report a crime/a theft/a rape/an attack/(especially BrE) an incident to the police

witness the crime/attack/murder/incident

investigate a murder/(especially NAmE) a homicide/a burglary/a robbery/the alleged incident

conduct/launch/pursue an investigation (into…); (especially BrE) a police/murder inquiry

investigate/reopen a criminal/murder case

examine/investigate/find fingerprints at the crime scene/the scene of crime

collect/gather forensic evidence

uncover new evidence/a fraud/a scam/a plot/a conspiracy/political corruption/a cache of weapons

describe/identify a suspect/the culprit/the perpetrator/the assailant/the attacker

question/interrogate a suspect/witness

solve/crack the case

more collocations at justice 

 

Example Bank:

• He paid out millions of dollars in bribes.

• a bribe of €200

• He was alleged to have accepted bribes while in office.

• The company denied that the money was intended as a bribe.

• The tax cut was described as a pre-election bribe.

 

verb

to give sb money or sth valuable in order to persuade them to help you, especially by doing sth dishonest

~ sb (with sth) They bribed the guards with cigarettes.

~ sb into doing sth She was bribed into handing over secret information.

~ sb to do sth She bribed him to sign the certificate.

~ your way… He managed to bribe his way onto the ship.

 

 

Word Origin:

late Middle English: from Old French briber, brimber ‘beg’, of unknown origin. The original sense was ‘rob, extort’, hence (as a noun) ‘theft, stolen goods’, also ‘money extorted or demanded for favours’, later ‘offer money as an incentive’ (early 16th cent.).

 

Example Bank:

• He must have bribed his way out of the prison.

• He managed to bribe his way onto the ship.

Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary

bribe

bribe /braɪb/
verb [T]
to try to make someone do something for you by giving them money, presents or something else that they want:
He bribed immigration officials and entered the country illegally.
[+ to infinitive] They bribed the waiter to find them a better table.

bribe /braɪb/
noun [C]
money or a present that you give to someone so that they will do something for you, usually something dishonest:
He was accused of accepting/taking bribes from wealthy businessmen.

bribery /ˈbraɪ.bər.i/ US /-bɚ-/
noun [U]
The organization was rife with bribery and corruption.

Corruption

  1. Who are the people that are most prone to corruption?
  2. Has corruption ever affected your life personally? What happened?
  3. Why are people corrupt?
  4. What's the worst corruption possible? Why?
  5. How can you reduce corruption as a citizen who is not in power?
  6. Have you ever bribed the police (traffic police also counts!)? How much? Why?
  7. Have you ever bribed an office employee to do your job?
  8. Would you ever accept a free ticket to a concert or a package holiday by the virtue of your position?
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