释义 |
‖ laissez-passer|lese pɑse| Also laisser-passer. [Fr., lit. ‘allow to pass’.] A permit, a pass.
1914T. A. Baggs Back from Front xx. 94 You must first pass grim Charon and his watchdogs at the entrance, where your passports, laisser-passers, sauf-conduits, are inspected. 1928Sunday Express 1 July 5 The Ballet was given a laissez-passer and were allowed to come to England through Paris. 1936E. Waugh Waugh in Abyssinia 77 Many writers have left accounts of the intricate system of tolls and hospitality by which the traveller was passed on from one chief to another and of the indifference with which the Emperor's laissez-passer was treated within a few miles of the capital. 1951J. B. Priestley Festival at Farbridge i. i. 34 He handed over an Order to View as if it were a laissez-passer for the captain of the Swiss Guard at Versailles. 1955Times 28 July 8/4 He has been granted by the Greek Foreign Ministry a laisser-passer to the Greek military zone of the Greek-Bulgarian frontier. 1970R. G. Feltham Diplomatic Handbk. 178 Laissez-passer, a permit to travel or to enter a particular area. |