Definition
Relating to or granting permission for dismissal or departure; serving to release someone from an obligation or position.
Etymology
From Latin dimissorius, from dimittere 'to send away.' This term is almost exclusively used in ecclesiastical and legal contexts to describe official papers.
Kelly Says
The subtle difference between dimissorial and dimissory shows how English ecclesiastical language developed variant forms—both are correct, but dimissory is slightly more common in modern legal English.
Translations
CACatalà
destitució
de-sti-too-thee-o
CSČeština
propuštění
pro-pu-ste-ni
DADansk
afskedigelse
af-ski-di-gel-se
DEDeutsch
Entlassung
ent-la-sung
ELΕλληνικά
απολυ dismissal
a-po-lee
ESEspañol
despedidor
des-pe-DI-dor
FISuomi
työsäästö
tyo-sa-sto
FRFrançais
licencié
lee-see-ay
HUMagyar
felmentés
fel-men-tes
IDBahasa Indonesia
pemecatan
pe-me-ca-tan
ITItaliano
licenziamento
lee-chen-see-men-toh
MRMR
निष्कासन
nish-ka-san
MSBahasa Melayu
penyingkiran
pe-nin-gi-ran
MYမြန်မာ
ပြောင်းလဲ
pyaung-lan-eh
NLNederlands
ontslag
ont-slag
NONorsk
oppsigelse
op-si-gel-se
PLPolski
zwolnienie
zvol-ni-en-ie
PTPortuguês
licenciamento
lee-sen-see-men-toh
RORomână
demisia
de-mi-see-a
RUРусский
увольнение
uvo-l-nee-niye
SWKiswahili
kufukuzwa
ku-fu-ku-zu-wa
TEతెలుగు
తొలగింపు
to-la-gin-pu
THไทย
การไล่ออก
gan lai-ok
UKУкраїнська
звільнення
zvi-l-nen-nya
VITiếng Việt
sa thải
sa-thai
ZUZU
ukusila
oo-koo-si-la