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1 corpse
[kɔːps]nome cadavere m., salma f.* * *[ko:ps](a dead body, especially of a human being: Don't move the corpse before you send for the police.) cadavere* * *corpse /kɔ:ps/n.cadavere; salma● corpse candle, fuoco fatuo ( nei cimiteri).(to) corpse /kɔ:ps/v. i.* * *[kɔːps]nome cadavere m., salma f. -
2 corpse n
[kɔːps]cadavere m -
3 bleeding
['bliːdɪŋ] 1.1) U sanguinamento m.; (heavy) emorragia f.2) (deliberate) salasso m.2.1) [wound, hand, leg] sanguinante; [ corpse] insanguinato2) BE pop.* * *adjective (losing blood: a bleeding wound.) sanguinante* * *bleeding /ˈbli:dɪŋ/A a.2 ( slang GB antiq.) disgraziato; stupido; maledetto: You bleeding fool!, maledetto stupido!; Where's the bleeding ticket?, dove accidenti è il biglietto?B n. [u]1 (med.) emorragia: internal bleeding, emorragia interna; to stop the bleeding, arrestare l'emorragia2 (med., stor.) salasso3 (mecc.) spurgo4 (fotogr.) frangia5 (tipogr.) rifilaturaC avv.● (tecn.) bleeding edge, ultramoderno (anche in senso negativo, non ancora perfetto) □ (spreg. spec. USA) bleeding heart, persona dal cuore tenero (spec. riguardo ai problemi sociali) □ (spreg. spec. USA) bleeding-heart liberal, sinistroide; socialistoide.* * *['bliːdɪŋ] 1.1) U sanguinamento m.; (heavy) emorragia f.2) (deliberate) salasso m.2.1) [wound, hand, leg] sanguinante; [ corpse] insanguinato2) BE pop. -
4 decay
I [dɪ'keɪ]1) (rot) (of timber, vegetation) decomposizione f.; (of area, house) decadimento m., rovina f.2) med. carie f.3) fig. (of society, industry) declino m.; (of civilization) decadenza f.II 1. [dɪ'keɪ] 2.1) (rot) [timber, vegetation, food] decomporsi, marcire; [ corpse] decomporsi, putrefarsi; [ tooth] cariarsi2) (disintegrate) [ building] andare in rovina* * *[di'kei] 1. verb(to (cause to) become rotten or ruined: Sugar makes your teeth decay.) deteriorare; cariarsi2. noun(the act or process of decaying: tooth decay; in a state of decay.) decadimento; carie* * *decay /dɪˈkeɪ/n. [u]2 marciume; putredine: The timbers were full of decay, il legname era mezzo marcio; (med.) ( tooth o dental) decay, carie (dentaria)4 (fig.) decadenza; declino: moral decay, decadenza morale; social decay, degrado sociale; the decay of civil society [of capitalism], il declino della società civile [del capitalismo]; All civilizations eventually fall into decay, tutte le civiltà alla fine entrano in declino5 (fis. nucl.) disintegrazione ( di sostanze radioattive); decadimento: radioactive decay, decadimento radioattivo; decay constant, costante di decadimento(to) decay /dɪˈkeɪ/A v. i.1 decomporsi, marcire: the decaying process, il processo di decomposizione; Bamboo has the disadvantage of decaying fast in wet conditions, il bambù ha l'inconveniente di marcire in fretta in condizioni di umidità2 andare in rovina, degradarsi: Long neglected historic buildings are decaying visibly, gli edifici storici, trascurati a lungo, si stanno visibilmente degradando3 (med.) cariarsi: My teeth are starting to decay, i miei denti cominciano a cariarsi; a decayed tooth, un dente cariato5 (fis. nucl.) decadere; disintegrarsiB v. t.1 far marcire; far imputridire* * *I [dɪ'keɪ]1) (rot) (of timber, vegetation) decomposizione f.; (of area, house) decadimento m., rovina f.2) med. carie f.3) fig. (of society, industry) declino m.; (of civilization) decadenza f.II 1. [dɪ'keɪ] 2.1) (rot) [timber, vegetation, food] decomporsi, marcire; [ corpse] decomporsi, putrefarsi; [ tooth] cariarsi2) (disintegrate) [ building] andare in rovina -
5 moulder
molder ['məʊldə(r)] verbo intransitivo (anche moulder away) [ ruins] sgretolarsi, ridursi in polvere; [corpse, refuse] decomporsi; fig. [ person] marcire* * *moulder, ( USA) molder /ˈməʊldə(r)/n. (metall.)(to) moulder, ( USA) (to) molder /ˈməʊldə(r)/v. i. ( spesso to moulder away)1 andare in rovina; ridursi in polvere; polverizzarsi; sgretolarsi* * *molder ['məʊldə(r)] verbo intransitivo (anche moulder away) [ ruins] sgretolarsi, ridursi in polvere; [corpse, refuse] decomporsi; fig. [ person] marcire -
6 remains
[rɪ'meɪnz]nome plurale1) (of meal, fortune) resti m.; (of building, city) vestigia f., resti m.2) (corpse)* * *1) (what is left after part has been taken away, eaten, destroyed etc: the remains of a meal.) resti, avanzi2) (a dead body: to dispose of someone's remains.) (resti mortali)* * *[rɪ'meɪnz]nome plurale1) (of meal, fortune) resti m.; (of building, city) vestigia f., resti m.2) (corpse) -
7 stiff
I [stɪf]nome colloq.1) (corpse) cadavere m.2) AE (humourless person) musone m. (-a), persona f. scontrosaII 1. [stɪf]1) (restricted in movement) rigido, duro; (after sport, sleeping badly) irrigidito, indolenzito2) (hard to move) [ drawer] duro da aprire; [ lever] duro da muovere4) gastr.5) (not relaxed) [manner, person, style] rigido, compassato6) (harsh) [warning, sentence] severo, duro7) (difficult) [ exam] difficile; [ climb] erto, scosceso; [ competition] duro, accanito; [ opposition] duro, tenace8) (high) [charge, fine] salato, elevato2.avverbio colloq.to be scared stiff — avere una paura nera, essere spaventato a morte
to scare sb. stiff — fare una paura nera a qcn., spaventare qcn. a morte
••to keep a stiff upper lip — non mettere in mostra le proprie emozioni, non fare una piega
* * *[stif]1) (rigid or firm, and not easily bent, folded etc: He has walked with a stiff leg since he injured his knee; stiff cardboard.) rigido; indolenzito2) (moving, or moved, with difficulty, pain etc: I can't turn the key - the lock is stiff; I woke up with a stiff neck; I felt stiff the day after the climb.) rigido, duro; indolenzito3) ((of a cooking mixture etc) thick, and not flowing: a stiff dough.) denso, spesso, consistente4) (difficult to do: a stiff examination.) difficile5) (strong: a stiff breeze.) forte6) ((of a person or his manner etc) formal and unfriendly: I received a stiff note from the bank manager.) freddo•- stiffly- stiffness
- stiffen
- stiffening
- bore
- scare stiff* * *I [stɪf]nome colloq.1) (corpse) cadavere m.2) AE (humourless person) musone m. (-a), persona f. scontrosaII 1. [stɪf]1) (restricted in movement) rigido, duro; (after sport, sleeping badly) irrigidito, indolenzito2) (hard to move) [ drawer] duro da aprire; [ lever] duro da muovere4) gastr.5) (not relaxed) [manner, person, style] rigido, compassato6) (harsh) [warning, sentence] severo, duro7) (difficult) [ exam] difficile; [ climb] erto, scosceso; [ competition] duro, accanito; [ opposition] duro, tenace8) (high) [charge, fine] salato, elevato2.avverbio colloq.to be scared stiff — avere una paura nera, essere spaventato a morte
to scare sb. stiff — fare una paura nera a qcn., spaventare qcn. a morte
••to keep a stiff upper lip — non mettere in mostra le proprie emozioni, non fare una piega
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8 dismember
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9 (to) curdle
(to) curdle /ˈkɜ:dl/A v. i.2 (fig.) coagularsi, gelarsi (fig.): My blood curdled at the sight of the corpse, mi si è gelato il sangue alla vista del cadavereB v. t.1 cagliare; fare rapprendere -
10 debris
['deɪbriː, 'de-] [AE də'briː]nome U1) (remains) (of plane) rottami m.pl.; (of building) macerie f.pl.2) geol. detriti m.pl.* * *['deibri:, ]( American[) də'bri:]1) (the remains of something broken, destroyed etc: The fireman found a corpse among the debris.) rovine2) (rubbish: There was a lot of debris in the house after the builder had left.) detriti* * *debris /ˈdeɪbri:/ (franc.)n. [u]1 rottami; macerie2 rifiuti; resti: plastic debris, rifiuti di plastica; the debris from the previous night's party, i resti della festa della sera prima3 (geol.) detrito, detriti● (geol.) debris cone, cono di deiezione.* * *['deɪbriː, 'de-] [AE də'briː]nome U1) (remains) (of plane) rottami m.pl.; (of building) macerie f.pl.2) geol. detriti m.pl. -
11 shroud
I [ʃraʊd]1) (cloth) sudario m., lenzuolo m. funebre2) fig. (of fog, secrecy) velo m.3) mar. (rope) sartia f.II [ʃraʊd]verbo transitivo avvolgere [body, person]* * *1. noun1) (a cloth wrapped around a dead body.) sindone, (lenzuolo funebre)2) (something that covers: a shroud of mist.) manto, coltre2. verb(to cover or hide: The incident was shrouded in mystery.) avvolgere* * *[ʃraʊd]1. n(round corpse) sudario, (fig: of secrecy) alone m2. vtshrouded in — (mist, darkness) circondato (-a) da
* * *shroud /ʃraʊd/n.2 (fig.) velo; manto; coltre: a shroud of dust [of secrecy], un velo di polvere [di mistero]; a shroud of snow, un manto di neve; a shroud of fog, una coltre di nebbia3 (naut.) sartia; sartiola4 (tecn.) copertura protettiva.(to) shroud /ʃraʊd/v. t.2 (fig.) avvolgere; coprire; celare; nascondere: Her past was shrouded in mystery, il suo passato era avvolto nel mistero; The mountains were shrouded in mist, i monti erano avvolti nella nebbia.* * *I [ʃraʊd]1) (cloth) sudario m., lenzuolo m. funebre2) fig. (of fog, secrecy) velo m.3) mar. (rope) sartia f.II [ʃraʊd]verbo transitivo avvolgere [body, person] -
12 slang
[slæŋ]nome gergo m., slang m.* * *[slæŋ] 1. noun(words and phrases (often in use for only a short time) used very informally, eg words used mainly by, and typical of, a particular group: army slang; teenage slang; `stiff' is slang for `a corpse'.) slang, gergo2. verb(to speak rudely and angrily to or about (someone); to abuse: I got furious when he started slanging my mother.) ingiuriare, insultare* * *[slæŋ]1. n(gen) slang m inv, gergoschool/army slang — gergo studentesco/militare
2. adj(word) gergale3. vt(fam: insult, criticize) dirne di tutti i colori a* * *slang /slæŋ/A n. [u]slang; gergo; linguaggio convenzionale: soldiers' slang, gergo militare; thieves' slang, gergo dei ladri; lingua furbescaB a. attr.gergale: slang words, parole gergali.(to) slang /slæŋ/A v. i.B v. t.(fam.) ingiuriare; insultare; vituperare● slanging match, scambio d'insulti.* * *[slæŋ]nome gergo m., slang m. -
13 (to) curdle
(to) curdle /ˈkɜ:dl/A v. i.2 (fig.) coagularsi, gelarsi (fig.): My blood curdled at the sight of the corpse, mi si è gelato il sangue alla vista del cadavereB v. t.1 cagliare; fare rapprendere -
14 wake
I [weɪk] II [weɪk]nome (over dead person) veglia f. funebreIII 1. [weɪk]verbo transitivo (anche wake up) (pass. woke, ant. waked; p.pass. woken, ant. waked) svegliare, destare [ person]; fig. risvegliare, destare [desires, memories]2.to wake sb. from a dream — svegliare qcn. da un sogno
verbo intransitivo (anche wake up) (pass. woke, ant. waked; p.pass. woken, ant. waked) (ri) svegliarsishe finally woke (up) to her responsibilities — fig. finalmente si rese conto delle proprie responsabilità
- wake up* * *I [weik] past tense - woke; verb(to bring or come back to consciousness after being asleep: He woke to find that it was raining; Go and wake the others, will you?)- wakeful- wakefully
- wakefulness
- waken
- wake up II [weik] noun(a strip of smooth-looking or foamy water left behind a ship.)* * *I [weɪk] n(of ship) sciaII [weɪk] n(over corpse) veglia funebreIII [weɪk] woke or waked pt woken or waked pp1. vi(also: wake up) svegliarsi, destarsiwake up! (also) fig — svegliati!
2. vt(also: wake up) svegliare, (memories, desires) risvegliare* * *wake (1) /weɪk/n.1 (spec. irl.) veglia funebre2 (pl.) (stor., nell'Inghil. sett.) festa annuale (spec. celebrata dagli operai): wakes week, vacanza di una o due settimane.wake (2) /weɪk/n.(naut., astron.) scia ( anche fig.): in the wake of, nella scia di; (fig.) sulle orme di, al seguito di, in seguito a● (aeron.) wake vortex, vortice di scia □ (fig.) to follow in the wake of, essere la conseguenza di (qc.).♦ (to) wake /weɪk/A v. i.1 destarsi; svegliarsi; risvegliarsi; ( anche fig.) aprire gli occhi; (fig.) scuotersi: I woke (up) late and left without having any breakfast, mi sono svegliato tardi e sono uscito senza fare colazione; Wake up there!, su, scuotetevi!2 (fig.) risvegliarsi; animarsiB v. t.1 destare; svegliare; (fig.) scuotere: What time do you want to be woken?, a che ora vuoi essere svegliato?; Is there anything on earth that can wake him up?, ma c'è qualcosa al mondo che possa scuoterlo?3 (fig.) rievocare; suscitare: to wake memories, rievocare memorie; to wake passions, suscitare passioni● to wake an echo, suscitare un'eco □ to wake a place, turbare la quiete di un luogo □ (fam.) Wake up!, sveglia!; attenzione!* * *I [weɪk] II [weɪk]nome (over dead person) veglia f. funebreIII 1. [weɪk]verbo transitivo (anche wake up) (pass. woke, ant. waked; p.pass. woken, ant. waked) svegliare, destare [ person]; fig. risvegliare, destare [desires, memories]2.to wake sb. from a dream — svegliare qcn. da un sogno
verbo intransitivo (anche wake up) (pass. woke, ant. waked; p.pass. woken, ant. waked) (ri) svegliarsishe finally woke (up) to her responsibilities — fig. finalmente si rese conto delle proprie responsabilità
- wake up -
15 bier n
[bɪə(r)](for coffin) catafalco, (for corpse) feretro, bara -
16 mummy mum·my
I ['mʌmɪ] n Brit(fam: mother) mammaII ['mʌmɪ] n(embalmed corpse) mummia -
17 lie in state
((of a corpse) to be laid in a place of honour for the public to see, before burial.) (essere esposto nella camera ardente)
См. также в других словарях:
Corpse — (k[^o]rps), n. [OF. cors (sometimes written corps), F. corps, L. corpus; akin to AS. hrif womb. See {Midriff}, and cf. {Corse}, {Corselet}, {Corps}, {Cuerpo}.] 1. A human body in general, whether living or dead; sometimes contemptuously. [Obs.]… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
corpse — I noun body, cadaver, carcass, carrion, casualty, corpus, dead body, dead person, deceased, departed, individual, lifeless body, mortal remains, murder victim, organic remains, remains, victim associated concepts: corpus delicti II index body … Law dictionary
corpse — [ko:ps US ko:rps] n [Date: 1300 1400; : French; Origin: corps; CORPS] the dead body of a person = ↑body ▪ The corpse was found by children playing in the woods … Dictionary of contemporary English
corpse — [ kɔrps ] noun count * the body of a dead person: They found his corpse a week later, washed up on the shore … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
corpse — 1540s, variant spelling of CORPS (Cf. corps) (q.v.). The p originally was silent, as in French, and with some speakers still is. The terminal e was rare before 19c. Corpse candle is attested from 1690s … Etymology dictionary
corpse — carcass, cadaver, *body Analogous words: remains (see REMAINDER) … New Dictionary of Synonyms
corpse — [n] dead body body, bones*, cadaver, carcass, carrion, deceased, departed, mort*, remains, stiff*; concepts 390,417 … New thesaurus
corpse — ► NOUN ▪ a dead body, especially of a human. ► VERB theatrical slang ▪ spoil a piece of acting by forgetting one s lines or laughing uncontrollably. ORIGIN Latin corpus … English terms dictionary
corpse — [kôrps] n. [var. of CORPS] 1. a dead body, esp. of a person 2. something once vigorous but now lifeless and of no use 3. Obs. a living body SYN. BODY … English World dictionary
corpse — n. 1) to bury; lay out a corpse 2) to dig up, exhume a corpse 3) a corpse decays, decomposes, rots * * * [kɔːps] decomposes exhume a corpse lay out a corpse rots a corpse decays to bury to dig up … Combinatory dictionary
corpse — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ human ▪ naked ▪ bloody, charred, headless, mangled, mutilated ▪ decaying … Collocations dictionary