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21 smart
I 1. [smɑːt]1) (elegant) elegante, alla moda3) [restaurant, hotel] chic, alla moda4) (stinging) [ rebuke] pungente, secco, taglientea smart blow — un gran o bel colpo
5) (brisk)6) inform. [ system] intelligente2. II [smɑːt]1) [graze, cheeks] bruciare, fare male2) fig. (emotionally) soffrire, essere punto sul vivo* * *1. adjective1) (neat and well-dressed; fashionable: You're looking very smart today; a smart suit.) elegante2) (clever and quick in thought and action: We need a smart boy to help in the shop; I don't trust some of those smart salesmen.) bravo, sveglio3) (brisk; sharp: She gave him a smart slap on the cheek.) forte2. verb1) ((of part of the body) to be affected by a sharp stinging feeling: The thick smoke made his eyes smart.) bruciare, dolere2) (to feel annoyed, resentful etc after being insulted etc: He is still smarting from your remarks.) soffrire3. noun(the stinging feeling left by a blow or the resentful feeling left by an insult: He could still feel the smart of her slap/insult.) dolore; bruciore- smarten- smartly
- smartness
- smart bomb
- smart card* * *smart (1) /smɑ:t/n. [u]dolore acuto; acuta sofferenza; bruciore (fig.): The smart of the defeat still rankles, il dolore della sconfitta brucia ancora.♦ smart (2) /smɑ:t/a.1 elegante; ben vestito; alla moda; bello: a smart hotel, un albergo elegante; smart clothes, abiti eleganti; a smart car, una bella automobile; smart appearance, bella presenza3 (tecn., comput.) intelligente: (mil.) smart bomb, bomba intelligente; smart card, (comput.) smart card; ( banca) carta di credito intelligente4 abile; accorto; astuto; destro; scaltro; dritto (fam.): a smart move, una mossa abile (o scaltra); a smart talker, un abile parlatore; un oratore brillante; uno che la sa lunga; a smart answer, una risposta abile, accorta; a smart deal, un buon affare; un affarone; un affare vantaggioso ( ma non del tutto onesto); a smart profiteer, un astuto affarista; a smart fellow, un furbacchione; un drittone (fam.)5 impertinente; linguacciuto: Don't you get smart with me, young man!, non essere impertinente, giovanotto!6 veloce; rapido; scattante: a smart salute, un saluto ( militare) scattante; at a smart pace, con passo rapido; di buon passo7 forte; acuto; aspro; doloroso; cocente; pungente; severo: a smart blow, un forte colpo; a smart pain, un acuto dolore● (fam.) smart alec (o aleck), sapientone; saccente; saputello; cacasenno; sputasentenze □ (fam.) smart-alecky, saccente □ ( slang USA) smart apple, tipo in gamba □ (fam.) smart-arse ( USA smart-ass), = smart alec ► sopra □ smart money, investimenti, scommesse, ecc., fatti da chi se ne intende; ( per estens.) gli esperti, quelli che se ne intendono, i bene informati □ (fam. USA) smart mouth, insolenza; impertinenza; ( anche) insolente, impertinente □ (comput.) smart quotes, virgolette inglesi □ the smart set, il bel mondo □ to look smart, avere un aspetto elegante; ( anche) sbrigarsi, spicciarsi; DIALOGO → - Going for an interview- You look smart!, che eleganza! □ to make oneself smart, farsi bello; mettersi in ghingheri.(to) smart /smɑ:t/v. i.1 bruciare; far male; dolere: The smack made his face smart, lo schiaffo gli fece bruciare la faccia; My hand is smarting, mi fa male una mano; ho un dolore a una mano2 soffrire; patire; provar dolore: She's still smarting from ( o over) that disappointment, soffre ancora per quella delusione● to smart for, pagare il fio di; scontare: You shall smart for this, la sconterai; te ne farò pentire; me la pagherai cara.* * *I 1. [smɑːt]1) (elegant) elegante, alla moda3) [restaurant, hotel] chic, alla moda4) (stinging) [ rebuke] pungente, secco, taglientea smart blow — un gran o bel colpo
5) (brisk)6) inform. [ system] intelligente2. II [smɑːt]1) [graze, cheeks] bruciare, fare male2) fig. (emotionally) soffrire, essere punto sul vivo -
22 ♦ (to) avoid
♦ (to) avoid /əˈvɔɪd/v. t.1 evitare: to avoid an accident, evitare un incidente; to avoid disappointment, evitare una delusione (o di essere delusi); to avoid making a mistake, evitare ( di fare) un errore; He narrowly avoided defeat, ha evitato la sconfitta di stretta misura2 evitare; schivare: to avoid a parked car, evitare (o schivare) un'auto in sosta; We avoided each other, ci siamo evitati; I want to avoid the city centre, voglio evitare (di passare per) il centro3 sfuggire a; evitare; eludere; aggirare: to avoid arrest, sfuggire all'arresto; He avoided my eye, ha cercato di non incrociare il mio sguardo; He avoided answering my question, ha evitato di rispondere alla (o ha eluso la) mia domanda● (fam.) to avoid st. like the plague, evitare qc. come la peste □ (fisc.) to avoid taxation, eludere le imposte.NOTA D'USO: - to avoid to do o to avoid doing?- -
23 unwelcome
[ʌn'welkəm]1) [visitor, presence] indesiderato, non gradito; [ interruption] sgradito2) [news, proposition, truth] spiacevole* * *(received unwillingly or with disappointment: unwelcome news/guests; I felt that we were unwelcome.) importuno* * *unwelcome /ʌnˈwɛlkəm/a.1 sgradito; malaccetto: an unwelcome guest, un ospite sgradito; He knew he was unwelcome in their house, sapeva di essere malaccetto in casa loro; to make sb. feel unwelcome, far sentire q. di troppo2 ( di cose) sgradito; non richiesto: unwelcome attention [publicity], attenzione [pubblicità] non richiesta; unwelcome news, una notizia spiacevole.* * *[ʌn'welkəm]1) [visitor, presence] indesiderato, non gradito; [ interruption] sgradito2) [news, proposition, truth] spiacevole -
24 be in for
vi + adv + prep -
25 bitter *** bit·ter
['bɪtə(r)]1. adj1) (taste: gen) amaro (-a), (of fruit) aspro (-a)2) (icy: weather) gelido (-a), (wind) pungente3) (enemy, hatred) acerrimo (-a), (quarrel) aspro (-a), (disappointment) amaro (-a), (person) risentito (-a)to the bitter end — fino all'ultimo, a oltranza
2. n(Brit: beer) birra amara -
26 let-down n
['lɛtˌdaʊn](disappointment) delusione f -
27 make up for
(to supply a reward, substitute etc for disappointment, damage, loss (of money or time) etc: Next week we'll try to make up for lost time.) recuperare* * *vi + adv + prep(lost time) recuperare, (trouble caused) farsi perdonare, (mistake) rimediare a, (loss, injury) compensare -
28 be prepared
((of a person) to be ready (for something, to do something etc): We must be prepared for a disappointment; I'm not prepared (=willing) to lend him more money; The motto of the Scouts is `Be Prepared!'.) essere pronto -
29 conceal
[kən'siːl]to conceal sth. from sb. — nascondere qcs. a qcn
* * *[kən'si:l](to hide or keep secret: He concealed his disappointment from his friends.) nascondere* * *[kən'siːl]to conceal sth. from sb. — nascondere qcs. a qcn
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30 cruel
['krʊəl]aggettivo [person, fate, joke] crudele (to con, nei confronti di); [winter, climate] rigido, gelido••you have to be cruel to be kind — prov. = se si vuole bene è necessario saper castigare
* * *['kru:əl]1) (pleased at causing pain; merciless: He was cruel to his dog.) crudele2) (causing distress: a cruel disappointment.) crudele•- cruelly- cruelty* * *['krʊəl]aggettivo [person, fate, joke] crudele (to con, nei confronti di); [winter, climate] rigido, gelido••you have to be cruel to be kind — prov. = se si vuole bene è necessario saper castigare
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31 disappoint
[ˌdɪsə'pɔɪnt]1) (let down) deludere [ person]* * *[disə'point](to fail to fulfil the hopes or expectations of: London disappointed her after all she had heard about it.) deludere- disappointing
- disappointment* * *[ˌdɪsə'pɔɪnt]1) (let down) deludere [ person]
- 1
- 2
См. также в других словарях:
Disappointment — Dis ap*point ment, n. [Cf. F. d[ e]sappointement.] 1. The act of disappointing, or the state of being disappointed; defeat or failure of expectation or hope; miscarriage of design or plan; frustration. [1913 Webster] If we hope for things of… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
disappointment — disappointment [n1] saddening situation; letdown bitter pill*, blind alley*, blow, blunder, bringdown, bummer, bust*, calamity, defeat, disaster, discouragement, downer*, downfall, drag, dud, error, failure, false alarm*, faux pas*, fiasco,… … New thesaurus
disappointment — index defeat, dissatisfaction, failure (lack of success), miscarriage, misfortune Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
disappointment — 1610s, fact of disappointing; see DISAPPOINT (Cf. disappoint) + MENT (Cf. ment). Meaning state or feeling of being disappointed is from 1756. Meaning a thing that disappoints is from 1756 … Etymology dictionary
disappointment — [dis΄ə point′mənt] n. 1. a disappointing or being disappointed 2. a person or thing that disappoints … English World dictionary
disappointment — noun 1 sadness because sth has not happened, etc. ADJECTIVE ▪ bitter, considerable, deep, extreme, great, immense, intense, profound, sharp ▪ … Collocations dictionary
Disappointment — For other uses, see Disappointment (disambiguation). Disappointment expressed by a team of American football players commiserating after a defeat. Disappointment is the feeling of dissatisfaction that follows the failure of expectations or hopes… … Wikipedia
disappointment — n. 1) to express; feel disappointment 2) (a) bitter, deep, great, keen, profound disappointment 3) disappointment about, at, over (she felt deep disappointment at not getting the job) 4) disappointment that + clause (he expressed keen… … Combinatory dictionary
disappointment — dis|ap|point|ment [ˌdısəˈpɔıntmənt] n 1.) [U] a feeling of unhappiness because something is not as good as you expected, or has not happened in the way you hoped ▪ He could see the disappointment in her eyes. to sb s (great) disappointment ▪ To… … Dictionary of contemporary English
disappointment */*/ — UK [ˌdɪsəˈpɔɪntmənt] / US noun Word forms disappointment : singular disappointment plural disappointments 1) [uncountable] the feeling of being unhappy because something that you hoped for or expected did not happen or because someone or… … English dictionary
disappointment — dis|ap|point|ment [ ,dısə pɔıntmənt ] noun ** 1. ) uncount the feeling of being unhappy because something you hoped for or expected did not happen or because someone or something was not as good as you expected: disappointment at: Diplomats… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English