English to Malay Dictionary abscond

abscond

melarikan diri
definition
verb
she absconded with the remaining thousand dollars
leave hurriedly and secretly, typically to avoid detection of or arrest for an unlawful action such as theft.
example
One understands the concern that the public authorities have about the public reaction if a prisoner in those circumstances were to become violent or if a violent prisoner were to 'abscond' .
All the children were aged between 11 and 16 years and highly unlikely to 'abscond' or resist arrest.
Also, Africanized bees 'abscond' , leaving no queen, workers, or resources.
I will not 'abscond' in order to avoid extradition to Mexico.
I cannot abandon my family nor 'abscond' from my newspaper just like that,’ he said.
She is enjoying significant unescorted ground leave and has not endeavoured to 'abscond' .
These may be needed in order to, for example, examine the person applying for admission, or to make sure that they do not 'abscond' when a decision to deport has been taken.
While AHBs do make honey and pollinate plants, two traits make them undesirable for beekeepers: Colonies regularly 'abscond' from hives, and they are often too defensive to be easily tended.
The network of centres house those applicants who are reaching the end of their legal battles to stay in the UK, yet are identified as the most likely to 'abscond' in order to avoid being deported.
In Britain around 2/3 of failed asylum seekers 'abscond' and disappear into the ‘black’ economy.
What will happen if these fellows escape or 'abscond' tomorrow?
He said that a person with outstanding warrants is more likely to 'abscond' from bail, wasting more police and court time.
Though men brewed the arrack, police arrest women as the men 'abscond' the moment police arrive on the scene.
Such a trial can only be contemplated if a defendant 'absconds' ; and, as that is so rare an occurrence, there is no public interest in permitting such a trial.
Indeed, it seems that an attempt to arrest the real 'absconder' on the basis of this warrant would have been unlawful, since he was not the person named in it.
Our goal is to stabilize the ratio of people who are now becoming 'absconders' or fugitives and the number of people we're removing from the country.
It attracted many members but few funds, and the secretary 'absconded' with what there were.
He was given two months' jail for the first breach of the ASBO, two months for the second breach, and two weeks for 'absconding' from bail, all to run consecutively.
Judge Simon Fawcus sentenced him to 18 years for one charge of conspiracy to rob and nine months, to run concurrently, for 'absconding' from bail.
A police officer said: ‘He was a known 'absconder' , so people are worried that if they come forward they might be in trouble for helping or harbouring him, but we just want to solve this tragic mystery.’
With gossip raging more quickly than a bush fire, Leonie fled for South Africa while her lover 'absconded' to Peru.
In May he was arrested in Luton for attempting to steal a car, but 'absconded' from the magistrates' court while under secure supervision from the local authority.
Some of the accused, who had 'absconded' after the murder, have not been arrested even after a month.
The ‘wrong way’ meant avoiding paying taxes and cooking the company books before 'absconding' to Brazil and Africa.
The economic offences wing of the Mumbai police is continuing its search for the six 'absconding' directors of Home Trade.
The husband then 'absconded' with the proceeds of sale, and on her return from hospital the wife was excluded from the house by the purchaser, so that she was not physically present on the property when he was registered as proprietor.
A re-trial had been ordered and a trial date fixed before the defendant 'absconded' .
We see no necessity for a defendant who is bailed to be expressly warned that, if he 'absconds' , he may be tried in his absence, for that has been the English common law for over a century.
The Master of the Rolls exemplified cases when an employee leaves and gets another job, or 'absconds' with the money from the till or goes off indefinitely without a word to his employer.
The man who had ruled his country with a brutal and inflexible religious law was now ‘an 'absconder' , a fugitive from justice’ he said.
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