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1 terminate
['tɜːmɪneɪt] 1.1) terminare, porre fine a [discussion, meeting, phase]; troncare [ relationship]; rescindere [ contract]; interrompere [ pregnancy]; sciogliere, annullare [ agreement]; sospendere [ treatment]3) AE colloq. (kill) fare fuori2.1) (end) [speaker, meeting, programme, work contract, road] finire, terminare2) (end route) terminare la corsa"this train terminates in Oxford" — "ultima stazione, Oxford"
* * *['tə:mineit](to bring or come to an end or limit: She terminated the conversation.) terminare* * *terminate /ˈtɜ:mɪnət/a.1 limitato; che ha un termine(to) terminate /ˈtɜ:mɪneɪt/A v. t.B v. i.2 (leg.) estinguersi; scadere● (med.) to terminate a pregnancy, interrompere una gravidanza.* * *['tɜːmɪneɪt] 1.1) terminare, porre fine a [discussion, meeting, phase]; troncare [ relationship]; rescindere [ contract]; interrompere [ pregnancy]; sciogliere, annullare [ agreement]; sospendere [ treatment]3) AE colloq. (kill) fare fuori2.1) (end) [speaker, meeting, programme, work contract, road] finire, terminare2) (end route) terminare la corsa"this train terminates in Oxford" — "ultima stazione, Oxford"
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2 terminate ter·mi·nate
['tɜːmɪˌneɪt]1. vtterminare, mettere fine a, (contract) rescindere2. vi(contract) terminare, concludersi, (train, bus) finireto terminate in — finire in or con
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3 break off
1) (snap off) [end, mast] rompersi; [handle, piece] staccarsi2) (stop speaking) interrompersi3) (pause) fare una pausa, fermarsi; break off [sth.], break [sth.] off5) (terminate) rompere [ engagement]; interrompere [conversation, negotiations]* * *(to stop: She broke off in the middle of a sentence.) interrompersi* * *1. vt + adv(piece) staccare, spezzare, (talks, engagement) rompere2. vi + adv1) (twig) staccarsi2) (speaker) interrompersito break off (from doing sth) — smettere (di fare qc)* * *1) (snap off) [end, mast] rompersi; [handle, piece] staccarsi2) (stop speaking) interrompersi3) (pause) fare una pausa, fermarsi; break off [sth.], break [sth.] off5) (terminate) rompere [ engagement]; interrompere [conversation, negotiations] -
4 wind up
2) colloq. (end up)he wound up as a cook — si ritrovò a fare il cuoco; wind up [sth.], wind [sth.] up
3) (terminate) liquidare [ business]; chiudere [ account]; terminare [campaign, project]; chiudere [ meeting]; dir. liquidare [ estate]4) (cause to move) caricare [ clock]; alzare [ car window]; wind [sb.] up, wind up [sb.]5) (tease) prendere in giro6) (make tense) innervosire* * *1) (to turn, twist or coil; to make into a ball or coil: My ball of wool has unravelled - could you wind it up again?) arrotolare, avvolgere2) (to wind a clock, watch etc: She wound up the clock.) caricare3) (to end: I think it's time to wind the meeting up.) concludere* * *1. vt + adv1) (car window) alzare, (clock, toy) caricareto wind sb up fig — (fam: annoy) far venire i nervi a or innervosire qn, (kid, trick) prendere in giro qn
2) (close: meeting, debate) concludere, chiudere, (company) chiudere2. vi + adv(meeting, debate) concludersi, (fam: end up) finire* * *2) colloq. (end up)he wound up as a cook — si ritrovò a fare il cuoco; wind up [sth.], wind [sth.] up
3) (terminate) liquidare [ business]; chiudere [ account]; terminare [campaign, project]; chiudere [ meeting]; dir. liquidare [ estate]4) (cause to move) caricare [ clock]; alzare [ car window]; wind [sb.] up, wind up [sb.]5) (tease) prendere in giro6) (make tense) innervosire
См. также в других словарях:
terminate — ter·mi·nate / tər mə ˌnāt/ vb nat·ed, nat·ing vi: to come to an end in time or effect vt 1: to bring to a definite end esp. before a natural conclusion terminate a contract compare cancel … Law dictionary
Terminate with extreme prejudice — is a euphemism (playing on the western expression termination with prejudice of an employment contract) used by Bernard Conners in his 1972 novel Don t Embarrass the Bureau [cite book|title=Don t Embarrass the Bureau|first=Bernard |last=Conners… … Wikipedia
terminate — ter‧mi‧nate [ˈtɜːmneɪt ǁ ˈtɜːr ] verb 1. [intransitive, transitive] if something terminates, or if you terminate it, it ends: • Their three year partnership was terminated. • The contract terminated in April. 2. [transitive] HUMAN RESOURCES to… … Financial and business terms
Terminate and Stay Resident — (TSR) is a computer system call in DOS computer operating systems that returns control to the system as if the program has quit, but keeps the program in memory. Many software vendors use the call to create the appearance of multitasking, by… … Wikipedia
Terminate — (terminat.exe) was a shareware modem terminal and host program for MS DOS and compatible operating systems developed from the early to the late 1990s by the Dane Bo Bendtsen. The last release (5.00) was made in 1997; no details are still… … Wikipedia
Terminate — Ter mi*nate, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Terminated}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Terminating}.] [L. terminatus, p. p. of terminare. See {Term}.] 1. To set a term or limit to; to form the extreme point or side of; to bound; to limit; as, to terminate a surface by… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Terminate — Ter mi*nate, v. i. 1. To be limited in space by a point, line, or surface; to stop short; to end; to cease; as, the torrid zone terminates at the tropics. [1913 Webster] 2. To come to a limit in time; to end; to close. [1913 Webster] The wisdom… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
terminate — ► VERB 1) bring to an end. 2) (terminate in) have an end at or resolution in. 3) (of a train or bus service) end its journey. 4) end (a pregnancy) before term by artificial means. 5) chiefly N. Amer. end the employment of. 6) euphemistic, chiefly … English terms dictionary
terminate and stay resident — see ↑TSR • • • Main Entry: ↑terminate … Useful english dictionary
terminate a trial — index rest (end a legal case) Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
terminate business affairs — index liquidate (convert into cash) Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary