-
101 exceed
[ik'si:d](to go beyond; to be greater than: His expenditure exceeds his income; He exceeded the speed limit on the motorway.) dépasser -
102 exceed
[ik'si:d](to go beyond; to be greater than: His expenditure exceeds his income; He exceeded the speed limit on the motorway.) exceder, superar -
103 exceed
превышать; превосходить -
104 EXCEED
[V]EXCEDO (-ERE -CESSI -CESSUM)EXEO (-IRE -II -ITUM)TRANSILIO (-IRE -UI)ANTEVENIO (-IRE -VENI -VENTUM)VINCO (-ERE VICI VICTUM)PERVINCO (-ERE -VICI -VICTUM)SUPERO (-ARE -AVI -ATUM)EXSUPERO (-ARE -AVI -ATUM)TRANSSCENDO (-ERE -I -CENSUS) -
105 exceed
germ. her-; ragēn -
106 exceed
[ɪkˈsɪ:d]1) artıq olmaq, aşmaq (müəyyən ölçünü); 2) üstün gəlmək, ötüb keçmək -
107 exceed
எல்லை கட; விஞ்சு -
108 exceed
oorskry, oortref -
109 exceed
bit, superá -
110 exceed
(v) касомс [kasоms] -
111 exceed
v rékôjáÿe-jùtayô -
112 exceed, to
-
113 exceed
v. intr.अधिक होना, बढ जाना, सीमा पार करना -
114 exceed
vაღემატება, აჭარბებს -
115 exceed
-
116 exceed
v.эртараш г.; утыж дене кучылташ г.[ertarash; utyzh dene kuchyltash] -
117 exceed
ирттер -
118 exceed
v.1) асыру, арттыру2) сабырсыз болу -
119 exceed
asmak, geçmek -
120 exceed
v.éship chüshmek; ötüp ketmek
См. также в других словарях:
exceed — exceed, surpass, transcend, excel, outdo, outstrip mean to go or to be beyond a stated or implied limit, measure, or degree. Exceed may imply an overpassing of a limit set by one s right, power, authority, or jurisdiction {this task exceeds his… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
exceed — ex‧ceed [ɪkˈsiːd] verb [transitive] 1. to be more than a particular number or amount: • Working hours must not exceed 42 hours a week. • individuals with assets exceeding £500,000 2. to go beyond an official or legal limit: • Pesticide levels… … Financial and business terms
Exceed — Ex*ceed , v. i. 1. To go too far; to pass the proper bounds or measure. In our reverence to whom, we can not possibly exceed. Jer. Taylor. [1913 Webster] Forty stripes he may give him, and not exceed. Deut. xxv. 3. [1913 Webster] 2. To be more or … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
exceed — [ek sēd′, iksēd′] vt. [ME exceden < OFr exceder < L excedere < ex , out, beyond + cedere, to go: see CEDE] 1. to go or be beyond (a limit, limiting regulation, measure, etc.) [to exceed a speed limit] 2. to be more than or greater than;… … English World dictionary
Exceed — Ex*ceed , v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Exceeded}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Exceeding}.] [L. excedere, excessum, to go away or beyond; ex out + cedere to go, to pass: cf. F. exc[ e]der. See {Cede}.] To go beyond; to proceed beyond the given or supposed limit or… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
exceed — late 14c., from O.Fr. exceder (14c.) exceed, surpass, go too far, from L. excedere depart, go beyond, be in excess, surpass, from ex out (see EX (Cf. ex )) + cedere go, yield (see CEDE (Cf. cede)). Related: Exceeded; exceeding … Etymology dictionary
exceed — index carouse, outbalance, outweigh, overestimate, overlap, overreach, overstep, predominate (outnumber) … Law dictionary
exceed — [v] be superior to; surpass beat, best, better, break record*, cap, distance, eclipse, excel, get upper hand*, go beyond, go by, have advantage, have a jump on*, have it all over*, out distance, outdo, outpace, outreach, outrun, outshine,… … New thesaurus
exceed — ► VERB 1) be greater in number or size than. 2) go beyond what is stipulated by (a set limit). 3) surpass. ORIGIN Latin excedere, from cedere go … English terms dictionary
exceed — verb ADVERB ▪ considerably, far, greatly, significantly, substantially, vastly ▪ clearly, comfortably (esp. BrE), easily … Collocations dictionary
exceed — verb Etymology: Middle English exceden, from Middle French exceder, from Latin excedere, from ex + cedere to go Date: 14th century transitive verb 1. to extend outside of < the river will exceed its banks > 2. to be greater than or superior to 3 … New Collegiate Dictionary