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1 evict vt
[ɪ'vɪkt] -
2 evict
[ɪ'vɪkt]verbo transitivo sfrattare* * *[i'vikt](to put out from house or land especially by force of law.) sfrattare- eviction* * *[ɪ'vɪkt]verbo transitivo sfrattare -
3 (to) evict
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4 (to) evict
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5 put out
2) (extinguish) spegnere [fire, candle]3) (take outside) portare, mettere fuori [bin, garbage]; fare uscire [ cat]5) (arrange) mettere (a disposizione) [food, dishes, towels etc.]6) (sprout) mettere [bud, root]7) (cause to be wrong) fare sbagliare, fare sballare [figure, estimate, result]8) (dislocate) lussarsi, slogarsi [ shoulder]9) (subcontract) dare fuori [ work] (to a); put [sb.] out10) (inconvenience) arrecare disturbo, scomodareto put oneself out — disturbarsi, darsi pena ( to do per fare)
to put oneself out for sb. — darsi pena o scomodarsi per aiutare qcn
11) (annoy) seccare, contrariare12) (evict) buttare fuori, sfrattare* * *1) (to extend (a hand etc): He put out his hand to steady her.) tendere, allungare2) ((of plants etc) to produce (shoots, leaves etc).) mettere3) (to extinguish (a fire, light etc): The fire brigade soon put out the fire.) spegnere4) (to issue, give out: They put out a distress call.) emettere, lanciare5) (to cause bother or trouble to: Don't put yourself out for my sake!) disturbarsi, scomodarsi6) (to annoy: I was put out by his decision.) importunare* * *1. vt + adv1) (place outside) mettere fuorito be put out — (asked to leave) essere buttato (-a) fuori
2) (stretch out: arm, foot, leg) allungare, (one's hand) porgere, (tongue) tirare fuori, (push out: leaves etc) spuntareto put one's head out of the window — metter fuori or sporgere la testa dalla finestra
3) (lay out in order) disporre4) (circulate: propaganda) fare, (news) annunciare, (rumour) mettere in giro, (bring out: new book) pubblicare, (regulation) emettere5) (extinguish: fire, cigarette, light) spegnere6) (discontent, vex) contrariare, seccareto be put out by sth/sb — essere contrariato (-a) da qn/qc
7)to put o.s. out (for sb) — scomodarsi or disturbarsi per qn8) (dislocate: shoulder, knee) lussarsi, (back) farsi uno strappo a9) (subcontract) subappaltare2. vi + adv* * *2) (extinguish) spegnere [fire, candle]3) (take outside) portare, mettere fuori [bin, garbage]; fare uscire [ cat]5) (arrange) mettere (a disposizione) [food, dishes, towels etc.]6) (sprout) mettere [bud, root]7) (cause to be wrong) fare sbagliare, fare sballare [figure, estimate, result]8) (dislocate) lussarsi, slogarsi [ shoulder]9) (subcontract) dare fuori [ work] (to a); put [sb.] out10) (inconvenience) arrecare disturbo, scomodareto put oneself out — disturbarsi, darsi pena ( to do per fare)
to put oneself out for sb. — darsi pena o scomodarsi per aiutare qcn
11) (annoy) seccare, contrariare12) (evict) buttare fuori, sfrattare -
6 turn out
to turn out well, badly — andare a finire bene, male
to turn out all right — andare bene o per il meglio
as it turned out — a conti fatti, in fin dei conti
2) (come out) [crowd, people] affluire, accorrere ( to do per fare; for per)his toes o feet turn out — ha i piedi in fuori; turn [sth.] out, turn out [sth.]
4) (turn off) spegnere [ light]6) (produce) produrre, fabbricare [ goods]; formare [scientists, graduates]; turn [sb.] out, turn out [sb.] (evict) buttare fuori, mettere alla porta* * *1) (to send away; to make (someone) leave.) (mandare fuori)2) (to make or produce: The factory turns out ten finished articles an hour.) produrre3) (to empty or clear: I turned out the cupboard.) vuotare4) ((of a crowd) to come out; to get together for a (public) meeting, celebration etc: A large crowd turned out to see the procession.) comparire5) (to turn off: Turn out the light!) spegnere6) (to happen or prove to be: He turned out to be right; It turned out that he was right.) rivelarsi, (venire fuori)* * *1. vi + adv1) (appear, attend: troops, doctor) presentarsi2) (prove to be) rivelarsiit turned out to be true/a mistake — è risultato essere vero/un errore
it turned out that... — si è scoperto che...
2. vt + adv1) (light, appliance, gas) chiudere, spegnere2) (produce: goods) produrre, (novel, good pupils) creare3) (empty: pockets) vuotare, (tip out: cake) capovolgere4) (clean out: room) dare una bella pulita a5) (expel: tenant, employee) mandar via6) (guard, police) far uscire* * *to turn out well, badly — andare a finire bene, male
to turn out all right — andare bene o per il meglio
as it turned out — a conti fatti, in fin dei conti
2) (come out) [crowd, people] affluire, accorrere ( to do per fare; for per)his toes o feet turn out — ha i piedi in fuori; turn [sth.] out, turn out [sth.]
4) (turn off) spegnere [ light] -
7 evictee
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8 eviction
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9 evictor
См. также в других словарях:
evict — /i vikt/ vt [Medieval Latin evictus, past participle of evincere to recover (property) by legal process, from Latin, to vanquish, regain possession of]: to put (a tenant) out of property by force, by virtue of a paramount title, or esp. by legal… … Law dictionary
evict — e‧vict [ɪˈvɪkt] verb [transitive] LAW to legally force someone to leave the house they are living in or land they are living on: • They were evicted from their home for not paying the rent. eviction noun [countable, uncountable] : • Foreclosure… … Financial and business terms
Evict — E*vict , v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Evicted}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Evicting}.] [L. evictus, p. p. of evincere to overcome completely, evict. See {Evince}.] 1. (Law) To dispossess by a judicial process; to dispossess by paramount right or claim of such… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
evict — evict; evict·ee; … English syllables
evict — mid 15c., recover (property) by judicial means, from L. evictus, pp. of evincere recover property, overcome and expel, conquer, from ex out (see EX (Cf. ex )) + vincere conquer (see VICTOR (Cf. victor)). Sense of expel by legal process first… … Etymology dictionary
evict — *eject, oust, expel, dismiss Analogous words: *exclude, eliminate, shut out: reject, repudiate, spurn (see DECLINE): *dismiss, fire, cashier, discharge … New Dictionary of Synonyms
evict — [v] throw out from residence boot out*, bounce*, chase, dislodge, dismiss, dispossess, eject, expel, extrude, force out, heave ho*, kick out*, oust, out, put out, remove, send packing*, show out, show the door*, shut out, toss out on ear*, turn… … New thesaurus
evict — ► VERB ▪ expel (someone) from a property, especially with the support of the law. DERIVATIVES eviction noun. ORIGIN from Latin evincere overcome, defeat … English terms dictionary
evict — [ē vikt′, ivikt′] vt. [ME evicten < L evictus, pp. of evincere, EVINCE] to remove (a tenant) from leased premises by legal procedure, as for failure to pay rent SYN. EJECT eviction n … English World dictionary
evict — verb ADVERB ▪ forcibly ▪ unlawfully (esp. BrE) VERB + EVICT ▪ attempt to, seek to, try to, want to … Collocations dictionary
evict — v. (D; tr.) to evict from * * * [ɪ vɪkt] (D; tr.) to evict from … Combinatory dictionary