concussion
41Concussion — Droit pénal: fait pour un fonctionnaire, officier public, percepteur, greffier, officier ministériel ou tout autre détenteur de l autorité publique, de recevoir, d exiger ou d ordonner de percevoir, de mauvaise foi, des sommes présentées comme …
42concussion — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) n. shock, blow, impact. See impulse, pain. II (Roget s IV) n. 1. [A violent shock] Syn. impact, jolt, jarring, agitation; see bump 1 , collision 1 . 2. [The result of a blow] Syn. shock, head trauma,… …
43concussion — con|cus|sion [ kən kʌʃn ] noun uncount a head injury that makes someone feel sick or become unconscious for a short time …
44concussion — con cus·sion || ʌʃn n. head injury (caused by a fall, blow, etc.); shock …
45concussion — noun 1》 temporary unconsciousness or confusion caused by a blow on the head. 2》 a violent shock as from a heavy blow. Derivatives concuss verb concussive adjective Origin ME: from L. concussio(n ), from concutere dash together, shake …
46concussion — n. 1. Shaking, agitation. 2. Clash, shock, crash, violent collision …
47concussion — noun (U) a small amount of damage to the brain that makes you lose consciousness or feel sick for a short time, usually caused by something hitting your head …
48concussion — n 1. blow, bump, jolt, jolting, jar, jarring, jostle, jostling; impact, crash, crackup, smash, collision, clash, encounter. 2. shock, stun, daze, paralysis …
49concussion — con·cus·sion …
50concussion — [kənˈkʌʃ(ə)n] noun [C/U] a head injury that makes someone feel ill or become unconscious for a short time …