attaché-case
21Case — may refer to:Academia* Case analysis, division of a problem into separate cases * Case study, examination of a single instance or event * Center for Social and Economic ResearchBusiness* Business case, captures the reasoning for initiating a… …
22-case — attaché case beauty case …
23attaché — /a ta shay , at euh / or, esp. Brit., /euh tash ay/ n. 1. a diplomatic official attached to an embassy or legation, esp. in a technical capacity: a commercial attaché; a cultural attaché. 2. a military officer who is assigned to a diplomatic post …
24case — Synonyms and related words: Bible truth, Smyth sewing, abessive, ablative, absolute fact, accepted fact, accusative, action, actual fact, adessive, admitted fact, afghan, alien, allative, ammunition box, anyhow, anyway, apoplectic, approximative …
25attache — noun 1. a specialist assigned to the staff of a diplomatic mission • Hypernyms: ↑specialist, ↑specializer, ↑specialiser • Hyponyms: ↑cultural attache, ↑military attache • Member Holonyms: ↑ …
26attaché — noun Etymology: French, past participle of attacher Date: 1826 1. a technical expert on a country s diplomatic staff at a foreign capital < a military attaché > 2. attache case …
27attaché — noun /ˌæˌtæˈʃeɪ/ A diplomatic officer, usually one who plays a specific role. , Little did anyone suspect that the military attaché was one of the worlds craftiest spies. See Also: attaché case …
28Attaché de Recherche Clinique — Un Attaché de recherche clinique (couramment appelé ARC) est un métier défini par les Bonnes pratiques cliniques (BPC ou GCP en anglais) et l International Conference on Harmonisation of Technical Requirements for Registration of Pharmaceuticals… …
29case — I n. legal action argument 1) to hear, try a case (the court will not hear this case) 2) to argue, plead a case (the lawyer argued the case skillfully) 3) to make (out), present, state; take a case (she made out a good case for her client; the… …
30case — noun 1 example ADJECTIVE ▪ classic, textbook, typical ▪ clear, obvious, simple ▪ It was a simple case of mistaken identity …