COMMIT


Meaning of COMMIT in English

— committable , adj. — committer , n.

/keuh mit"/ , v. , committed, committing .

v.t.

1. to give in trust or charge; consign.

2. to consign for preservation: to commit ideas to writing; to commit a poem to memory.

3. to pledge (oneself) to a position on an issue or question; express (one's intention, feeling, etc.): Asked if he was a candidate, he refused to commit himself.

4. to bind or obligate, as by pledge or assurance; pledge: to commit oneself to a promise; to be committed to a course of action.

5. to entrust, esp. for safekeeping; commend: to commit one's soul to God.

6. to do; perform; perpetrate: to commit murder; to commit an error.

7. to consign to custody: to commit a delinquent to a reformatory.

8. to place in a mental institution or hospital by or as if by legal authority: He was committed on the certificate of two psychiatrists.

9. to deliver for treatment, disposal, etc.; relegate: to commit a manuscript to the flames.

10. to send into a battle: The commander has committed all his troops to the front lines.

11. Parl. Proc. to refer (a bill or the like) to a committee for consideration.

v.i.

12. to pledge or engage oneself: an athlete who commits to the highest standards.

[ 1350-1400; ME committen ( committer ) committere, equiv. to com- COM- + mittere to send, give over ]

Syn. 6. carry out, effect, execute.

Random House Webster's Unabridged English dictionary.      Полный английский словарь Вебстер - Random House .