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1 bundle
I ['bʌndl]1) (of objects) pacco m.; (of clothes, cloth) fagotto m.; (of papers) fascio m., plico m.; (of banknotes) mazzetta f.; (of books) pila f.; (of straw) fascio m.2) (baby, person) fagottino m.bundle of joy — angioletto; iron. tesoro
••I don't go a bundle on jazz — BE non vado matto per il jazz
II 1. ['bʌndl]to make a bundle — colloq. guadagnare un pacco di soldi
verbo transitivo colloq.to bundle sb. into — infilare o ficcare qcn. in [plane, aircraft]
2.to bundle sb. outside o through the door — spingere qcn. fuori dalla porta
* * *1. noun(a number of things bound together: a bundle of rags.) fascio2. verb1) ((often with up or together) to make into bundles: Bundle up all your things and bring them with you.) impacchettare2) (to go, put or send (away) in a hurried or disorderly way: They bundled him out of the room.) mandare in tutta fretta* * *bundle /ˈbʌndl/n.1 fascio; fastello: a bundle of letters, un fascio di lettere; a bundle of firewood, una fascina di legna da ardere2 involto; pacco; fagotto3 (anat., bot.) fascio7 (comput., software bundle) vendita abbinata di prodotti; bundle (combinazione di software venduti insieme, spesso ad un prezzo conveniente)● (fig., generalm. al neg.) a bundle of fun (o of laughs), cosa o persona spassosa; spasso; massimo dell'allegria: He's no bundle of fun, è tutt'altro che un tipo spassoso □ (fig.) a bundle of nerves, un fascio di nervi ( nervosismo).(to) bundle /ˈbʌndl/A v. t.2 (seguito da away, off, out, into) mettere (qc.) alla rinfusa; mandare, spedire (q.) in tutta fretta: He bundled everything into the case, ha messo ogni cosa alla rinfusa dentro la cassa; I bundled him off to my office, lo spedii in tutta fretta al mio ufficio3 (seguito da into) spingere (q.) con violenza; ficcare: The kidnapped girl was bundled into the car, la ragazza rapita è stata spinta nella macchina a viva forzaB v. i.● to bundle up, fare un fagotto (o un pacco) di (qc.); impacchettare; infagottarsi, avvolgersi ( in scialli, ecc.)bundlingn. [u](econ., market.) vendita a pacchetto; raggruppamento.* * *I ['bʌndl]1) (of objects) pacco m.; (of clothes, cloth) fagotto m.; (of papers) fascio m., plico m.; (of banknotes) mazzetta f.; (of books) pila f.; (of straw) fascio m.2) (baby, person) fagottino m.bundle of joy — angioletto; iron. tesoro
••I don't go a bundle on jazz — BE non vado matto per il jazz
II 1. ['bʌndl]to make a bundle — colloq. guadagnare un pacco di soldi
verbo transitivo colloq.to bundle sb. into — infilare o ficcare qcn. in [plane, aircraft]
2.to bundle sb. outside o through the door — spingere qcn. fuori dalla porta
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2 bundle bun·dle
['bʌndl]1. n(of clothes, rags) fagotto, involto, (of sticks) fascina, (of papers) mucchio, (of newspapers) fascioto be a bundle of nerves — essere tesissimo (-a), essere un fascio di nervi
2. vt1) (also: bundle up) (clothes) fare un fagotto di, raccogliere in un mucchio, (papers) fare un fascio di2) (put hastily) riporre in fretta, (person) spingere, caricare in gran fretta• -
3 fold
I [fəʊld]1) (crease) (in fabric, paper) piega f.2) geogr. avvallamento m.3) geol. piega f.4) - fold in compostiII 1. [fəʊld]to increase twofold, threefold — raddoppiare, triplicare
1) (crease) piegare [paper, shirt]; chiudere (piegando) [ chair]; piegare, chiudere [ umbrella]; ripiegare, chiudere [ wings]2) (intertwine) congiungere [ hands]2.he folded his arms across his chest — incrociò le braccia sul petto, si mise a braccia conserte
1) [ chair] chiudersi, essere pieghevole2) (fail) [ play] lasciare il cartellone; [ company] chiudere i battenti; [ project] fallire, andare in fumo; [ course] essere annullato•- fold in- fold out- fold upIII [fəʊld]nome agr. ovile m.••* * *I 1. [fould] verb1) (to double over (material, paper etc): She folded the paper in half.)2) (to lay one on top of another: She folded her hands in her lap.)3) (to bring in (wings) close to the body: The bird folded its wings.)2. noun1) (a doubling of one layer of material, paper etc over another: Her dress hung in folds.)2) (a mark made especially on paper etc by doing this; a crease: There was a fold in the page.)•- folded- folder
- folding II [fould] noun(a place surrounded by a fence or wall, in which sheep are kept: a sheep fold.)* * *I [fəʊld] nAgr ovile mII [fəʊld]1. n(bend, crease) also Geol piega2. vt(gen) piegare, (wings) ripiegare3. vi•- fold up* * *fold (1) /fəʊld/n.1 piega; piegatura; segno di piega: the folds of a skirt, le pieghe di una gonna; a fold in a sheet of paper, una piega in un foglio di carta2 corrugamento; increspatura; piega; plica (anat.): a fold of skin, una piega della pelle; un rotolo di carne6 (geol.) piega; corrugamento.fold (2) /fəʊld/n.1 ovile; addiaccio; stabbio2 (fig.: the fold) ovile: to return to the fold, tornare all'ovile; in the family fold, in seno alla famiglia3 (relig.) gregge (di anime); (i) fedeli (pl.).♦ (to) fold (1) /fəʊld/A v. t.1 piegare; ripiegare: to fold a letter [a sheet], piegare una lettera [un lenzuolo]; to fold a tent, ripiegare una tenda; to fold down the corner of a page, piegare in giù l'angolo di una pagina; He folded the clothes into a bundle, fece un involto dei vestiti2 chiudere; ripiegare, raccogliere (ali, petali); incrociare ( le braccia); intrecciare ( le dita); unire ( le mani): The bird folded its wings, l'uccello chiuse le ali; with folded arms, a braccia conserte; She sat with folded hands, sedeva con le mani unite in grembo3 (con avv. o compl.) avviluppare; avvolgere: to fold st. in paper, avvolgere qc. nella carta; A scarf was folded around his neck, una sciarpa gli avvolgeva il collo; The cliffs were folded in fog, le scogliere erano avvolte dalla nebbia4 (con compl.) serrare, stringere ( fra le braccia, ecc.); to fold a child in one's arms, stringere un bambino fra le braccia; to fold sb. to one's breast, abbracciare q.5 (geol.) corrugare; piegareB v. i.1 ( di tavolo, sedia, ecc.) chiudersi; essere pieghevole: to fold flat, chiudersi e diventare piatto5 (geol.) corrugarsi; piegarsi.(to) fold (2) /fəʊld/v. t.* * *I [fəʊld]1) (crease) (in fabric, paper) piega f.2) geogr. avvallamento m.3) geol. piega f.4) - fold in compostiII 1. [fəʊld]to increase twofold, threefold — raddoppiare, triplicare
1) (crease) piegare [paper, shirt]; chiudere (piegando) [ chair]; piegare, chiudere [ umbrella]; ripiegare, chiudere [ wings]2) (intertwine) congiungere [ hands]2.he folded his arms across his chest — incrociò le braccia sul petto, si mise a braccia conserte
1) [ chair] chiudersi, essere pieghevole2) (fail) [ play] lasciare il cartellone; [ company] chiudere i battenti; [ project] fallire, andare in fumo; [ course] essere annullato•- fold in- fold out- fold upIII [fəʊld]nome agr. ovile m.••
См. также в других словарях:
bundle — bun|dle1 [ˈbʌndl] n [Date: 1300 1400; : Middle Dutch; Origin: bundel] 1.) a group of things such as papers, clothes, or sticks that are fastened or tied together bundle of ▪ bundles of newspapers ▪ a small bundle containing mostly clothing 2.) a… … Dictionary of contemporary English
bundle — [bun′dəl] n. [ME bundel, prob. < MDu bondel, dim. < bond < binden,BIND] 1. a number of things tied, wrapped, or otherwise held together 2. a package or parcel 3. a bunch, collection, or group 4. Slang a large amount of money 5. Bi … English World dictionary
Bundle theory — Bundle theory, originated by the 18th century Scottish philosopher David Hume, is the ontological theory about objecthood in which an object consists only of a collection (bundle) of properties, relations or tropes. According to bundle theory, an … Wikipedia
bundle of His — his n a slender bundle of modified cardiac muscle that passes from the atrioventricular node in the right atrium to the right and left ventricles by way of the septum and that maintains the normal sequence of the heartbeat by conducting the wave… … Medical dictionary
Bundle — Bun dle (b[u^]n d l), n. [OE. bundel, AS. byndel; akin to D. bondel, bundel, G. b[ u]ndel, dim. of bund bundle, fr. the root of E. bind. See {Bind}.] A number of things bound together, as by a cord or envelope, into a mass or package convenient… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Bundle pillar — Bundle Bun dle (b[u^]n d l), n. [OE. bundel, AS. byndel; akin to D. bondel, bundel, G. b[ u]ndel, dim. of bund bundle, fr. the root of E. bind. See {Bind}.] A number of things bound together, as by a cord or envelope, into a mass or package… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
bundle something up — ˌbundle sthˈup | ˌbundle sthtoˈgether derived to make or tie sth into a ↑bundle • He bundled up the dirty clothes and stuffed them into the bag. • The papers were all bundled together, ready to be thrown out. Main entry: ↑bundle … Useful english dictionary
bundle something together — ˌbundle sthˈup | ˌbundle sthtoˈgether derived to make or tie sth into a ↑bundle • He bundled up the dirty clothes and stuffed them into the bag. • The papers were all bundled together, ready to be thrown out. Main entry: ↑bundle … Useful english dictionary
Bundle — Bun dle, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Bundled}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Bundling}.] 1. To tie or bind in a bundle or roll. [1913 Webster] 2. To send off abruptly or without ceremony. [1913 Webster] They unmercifully bundled me and my gallant second into our own … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
bundle — Two or more packages secured together into a single piece or unit. (Also seepackage.) … Glossary of postal terms
bundle — bun|dle1 [ bʌndl ] noun count * 1. ) a group of things that have been tied together, especially so that you can carry them easily: The women carried heavy bundles on their backs. bundle of: a bundle of clean clothes bundles of firewood 2. ) a… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English