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1 complete with
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2 complete
كَامِل \ absolute: without limit; complete: the absolute truth; absolute rule over a country. clear: complete: a clear month. complete: whole; having all its parts: That is a complete collection of the works of Shakespeare, in every way; nothing else but He is a complete stranger to me. Our product was a complete failure. dead: (in special uses, as adj or adv) sudden; suddenly; complete; completely; exactly: He came to a dead stop. He stopped dead in the middle of the road. There was dead silence in the room. entire: whole; complete: I spent the entire morning cleaning the house. exclusive: whole; only: We have the exclusive right to publish that book. This shop deals exclusively with women’s clothes. full: complete: a full moon; a full description; full marks in an exam. good: thorough: He gave me a good beating. perfect: complete: He’s perfect stranger. thorough: (in a bad sense, with nouns like mess, nuisance) complete. carefully done:: a thorough preparation. total: complete: total destruction. whole: complete; unbroken: He spent the whole day (all the day) in bed. He swallowed it whole (in one piece). whole-hearted: full, unlimited, eager and willing: His plan had their whole-hearted support. \ See Also مطلق (مُطْلَق)، تام (تامّ)، شامل (شامِل)، غَيْر محدود، صادق (صادِق)، مخلص (مُخْلِص) -
3 complete
تامّ \ complete: whole; having all its parts: That is a complete collection of the works of Shakespeare, in every way; nothing else but He is a complete stranger to me. Our product was a complete failure. dead: (in special uses, as adj. or adv.) sudden; suddenly; complete; completely; exactly: He came to a dead stop. He stopped dead in the middle of the road. There was dead silence in the room. done: ready; finished: The job is nearly done. full: complete: a full moon; a full description. implicit: complete and without doubts: implicit trust; implicit obedience. perfect: without a fault; as good as it could possibly be: a perfect copy, complete He’s a perfect stranger. stark: (rare) complete: stark madness. thorough: (of things) complete; carefully done: a thorough preparation, (in a bad sense, with nouns like mess, nuisance) complete. total: complete: total destruction. utter: complete: He’s an utter fool. whole-hearted: full, unlimited, eager and willing: His plan had their whole-hearted support. \ See Also كامل (كامِل)، جاهز (جاهِز)، تماما (تمامًا)، شامل (شامِل)، مطلق (مُطْلَق) -
4 complete
[kəmˈpliːt]1. adjective1) whole; with nothing missing:تام، كامِلa complete set of Shakespeare's plays.
2) thorough:شامِلa complete surprise.
3) finished:تامMy picture will soon be complete.
2. verbto finish; to make complete:When will he complete the job?
يُكَمِّل، يُتَمِّمThis stamp completes my collection.
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5 complete
شَامِل \ absolute: without limit; complete: the absolute truth; absolute rule over a country. complete: in every way; nothing else but: He is a complete stranger to me. Our product was a complete failure. comprehensive: including most or many things: a comprehensive report; a comprehensive course in science. extensive: wide; stretching far: an extensive knowledge of radio; an extensive view from the window. inclusive: including everything: an inclusive charge at a hotel. sweeping: having a wide effect: sweeping changes. thorough: (of things) to complete; carefully done: a thorough preparation; (in a bad sense, with nouns like mess, nuisance) complete. universal: concerning everyone and everything; widespread: Food is a universal need. The young leader gained universal support. \ See Also كامل (كامِل)، مطلق (مُطْلَق)، واسع (واسِع)، عام (عامّ) -
6 complete
مُنْتَهٍ \ complete: finished: the work is not yet complete. done: ready; finished: The job is nearly done. over: finished: The fight was over before the police arrived. up: (with verbs) completely; to the end: Finish up your food. He tore the paper up (tore it to pieces). He blew his whistle when the time was up (when the agreed period had passed). -
7 with
ضِدّ \ against: opposed to: a match against another team; a law against murder. opposite: (that which is) as different as possible: North is in the opposite direction to south. Darkness is the opposite of light. We have opposite ideas about religion. proof: (with against or in compounds) giving complete protection: This lock is proof against any thief. My watch is shockproof and waterproof. versus: (often shortened to v. or vs.) against: The first match or the World Football Cup was Scotland versus Zaire. with: against: He quarrelled with her. She struggled with him. -
8 complete
أَنْهَى \ bring (sth.) to an end: to cause sth. to end: The rain brought the game to an end. close: to cause to be out of use: On his death, his business had to be closed (or closed down), come or bring to an end: She closed her speech with a funny joke. complete: to finish; make perfect: I’ve just completed my studies at the university. conclude: to finish; end (a meeting, speech etc.). end: to bring to a finish: We ended the meeting at 8 o’clock. finish: to bring to an end; come to an end: Have you finished your meal? Yes, we’ve finished. terminate: to end: My job will be terminated when I reach the age of sixty. -
9 het leger verschafte hem een complete uitrusting
het leger verschafte hem een complete uitrustingVan Dale Handwoordenboek Nederlands-Engels > het leger verschafte hem een complete uitrusting
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10 be through (with)
أَتَمَّ \ accomplish: to finish (work, etc.) successfully; fulfil (sth. planned): The change to a different form of government was accomplished without fighting or opposition. be through (with): to have finished: Are you through with that book yet? No, I’ll be through soon. finish off, finish up: to finish completely: The boys have finished off (or up) the cake. go through, (go over): (with with) to complete: If you start a course, you must go through with it. -
11 deal with
1) to be concerned with:يَبْحَث في، يَتَناوَل في البَحْثThis book deals with methods of teaching English.
2) to take action about, especially in order to solve a problem, get rid of a person, complete a piece of business etc:يُعالِج، يُناقِشShe deals with all the inquiries.
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12 go through with (sth.)
وَاصَلَ (العَمَل) حتى النهاية \ go through with (sth.): to continue (sth.) until it is complete: We shall go through with our plans, in spite of the increased cost. -
13 в комплекте с
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14 lengkap dengan
complete with -
15 kompletny wraz z
• complete with -
16 в комплекте с
Banks. Exchanges. Accounting. (Russian-English) > в комплекте с
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17 комплектовать
complete, ( книжный блок) collate, group, gather* * *комплектова́ть гл. ( включать одно изделие в состав другого)
furnish [supply] a product as part of anotherкомплектова́ть запчастя́ми — stock (with)ка́ждый дви́гатель комплекту́ется запасны́м я́корем — each motor is stocked with a spare armature, a spare armature is stocked for each motorкомплектова́ть изде́лие — build up a productкомплектова́ть людьми́ — staff (e. g., an organization)устро́йство A комплекту́ется элеме́нтом B — element B is (regularly) furnished [supplied] as part of device A, device A comes complete with element B -
18 в комплекте с ч-л.
complete with smth. -
19 completo
1. adj complete( pieno) fulltheatre sold out2. m set( vestito) suital completo ( pieno) full (up)theatre sold out* * *completo agg.1 complete, full, whole, entire: la serie non era completa, the series wasn't complete; ci diede un resoconto completo del viaggio, he gave us a full account of his journey; un microscopio completo di accessori, a microscope complete with accessories; un pasto completo, a full meal; un atleta completo, an all-round athlete; il latte è un alimento completo, milk is a good all-round food // (mat.) reticolo, spazio completo, complete lattice, space2 ( totale) complete, entire, utter, absolute, total: ho una fiducia completa in lui, I have complete faith in him; ero nel buio completo, I was in total darkness; la casa era in completa rovina, the house was in complete ruin3 ( esaurito) full (up): l'albergo era completo, the hotel was full // (mar.) carico completo, full cargo◆ s.m.1 al completo, full (up): spiacenti, siamo al completo, sorry, we are all full (up); il teatro era al completo, the theatre was full; c'era la classe al completo, the whole class was there2 (abbigl.) ( insieme di indumenti) outfit; ( insieme di accessori) set, gear: completo da uomo, suit; completo da donna, costume (o suit); completo da sci, ski suit (o outfit); completo da tennis, tennis outfit; completo da barba, shaving gear3 ( ippica) three-day event.* * *[kom'plɛto] completo (-a)1. agg(gen) complete, (resoconto, elenco) full, complete, (fiasco, fallimento) complete, utter2. sm(abito) suit, (di lenzuola) setcompleto di lenzuola singole/matrimoniali — set of sheets for a single/double bed
essere al completo — (albergo) to be full, (teatro) to be sold out
* * *[kom'plɛto] 1.2) (pieno) [albergo, volo] full"completo" — "no vacancies"
buio completo — complete o pitch o utter darkness
4) (versatile) [attore, atleta, servizio] all-round5) completo di complete with [batterie, accessori]2.sostantivo maschile1) abbigl. suit; (tenuta) outfit2) (accessori)completo da scrivania — desk set o accessories
3) al completo [ albergo] full; [cinema, teatro] sold outessere al completo — to be booked up o fully booked
* * *completo/kom'plεto/1 (intero) [opere, collezione] complete; [ lista] comprehensive; [nome, indirizzo] full; questo non dà un quadro completo della situazione this doesn't give the whole picture2 (pieno) [albergo, volo] full; "completo" "no vacancies"3 (totale) [ fiducia] complete, absolute; [ disastro] utter; buio completo complete o pitch o utter darkness4 (versatile) [attore, atleta, servizio] all-round5 completo di complete with [batterie, accessori]1 abbigl. suit; (tenuta) outfit3 al completo [ albergo] full; [cinema, teatro] sold out; essere al completo to be booked up o fully booked. -
20 junto a
prep.1 next to, alongside, beside.2 around.3 as compared with.* * *next to* * *by, next to* * *= adjacent to, along with, alongside, concurrent with, coupled with, in combination with, in conjunction with, in juxtaposition with, in tandem with, together with, within one word of, next to, beside, hand in hand (with), side by side with, combined with, complete withEx. Most users would appreciate disciplines placed adjacent to related disciplines.Ex. A crisp, even impression became the norm, along with the use of respectable paper and ink.Ex. For example, inversion to Hospitals, Military will cause this heading to file alongside other headings commencing with the word Hospitals.Ex. Concurrent with these activities, the Library of Congress has also been engaged in building the RAL file from location reports received in machine-readable form from outside libraries.Ex. And coupled with it, the simple answer, yes, I think made for a rather historic exchange, and it surely was worth the price of admission.Ex. The sort form in combination with the type determines the sequence or filing order of entries in access-point and authority files.Ex. Rules for any given class must be used in conjunction with the schedules for that class.Ex. The attraction of such displays is that the multidimensional relationships between subjects may be shown since any one subject can be displayed in juxtaposition with several others.Ex. Continuing education activities have to be offered in tandem with the service itself.Ex. Most such bulletins list titles or abstracts, together with citations of relevant new documents in the subject area.Ex. The system searches each term separately and then combines the resulting lists into records containing the term 'library' within one word of 'periodical'.Ex. Alf is convinced that she chews broken bottles and wears barbed wire next to her skin.Ex. A small check mark beside a heading can indicate that the heading was found in the source.Ex. Hand in hand with this comes the need for nurses to be able to question, evaluate and reflect on existing practice.Ex. Side by side with the freedom to define their project, however, students are given a fairly rigid methodological structure which should be enforced even if they are reluctant to use it.Ex. On examination, we find that each thesaurus contains an alphabetic list combined with a classified display, and each has a very detailed network of semantic cross-references.Ex. Such moulds were called double-faced to distinguish them from the ordinary single-faced moulds which continued to be used for making laid paper, complete with bar shadows, for the rest of the eighteenth century.* * *= adjacent to, along with, alongside, concurrent with, coupled with, in combination with, in conjunction with, in juxtaposition with, in tandem with, together with, within one word of, next to, beside, hand in hand (with), side by side with, combined with, complete withEx: Most users would appreciate disciplines placed adjacent to related disciplines.
Ex: A crisp, even impression became the norm, along with the use of respectable paper and ink.Ex: For example, inversion to Hospitals, Military will cause this heading to file alongside other headings commencing with the word Hospitals.Ex: Concurrent with these activities, the Library of Congress has also been engaged in building the RAL file from location reports received in machine-readable form from outside libraries.Ex: And coupled with it, the simple answer, yes, I think made for a rather historic exchange, and it surely was worth the price of admission.Ex: The sort form in combination with the type determines the sequence or filing order of entries in access-point and authority files.Ex: Rules for any given class must be used in conjunction with the schedules for that class.Ex: The attraction of such displays is that the multidimensional relationships between subjects may be shown since any one subject can be displayed in juxtaposition with several others.Ex: Continuing education activities have to be offered in tandem with the service itself.Ex: Most such bulletins list titles or abstracts, together with citations of relevant new documents in the subject area.Ex: The system searches each term separately and then combines the resulting lists into records containing the term 'library' within one word of 'periodical'.Ex: Alf is convinced that she chews broken bottles and wears barbed wire next to her skin.Ex: A small check mark beside a heading can indicate that the heading was found in the source.Ex: Hand in hand with this comes the need for nurses to be able to question, evaluate and reflect on existing practice.Ex: Side by side with the freedom to define their project, however, students are given a fairly rigid methodological structure which should be enforced even if they are reluctant to use it.Ex: On examination, we find that each thesaurus contains an alphabetic list combined with a classified display, and each has a very detailed network of semantic cross-references.Ex: Such moulds were called double-faced to distinguish them from the ordinary single-faced moulds which continued to be used for making laid paper, complete with bar shadows, for the rest of the eighteenth century.* * *junto a adv next to
См. также в других словарях:
complete with — phrase with the things mentioned a comprehensive collection complete with detailed biographies of the artists come complete with: All our machines come complete with a three year service warranty. Thesaurus: also and additionalsynonym Main entry … Useful english dictionary
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