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1 expel
[ɪk'spel]* * *[ik'spel]past tense, past participle - expelled; verb1) (to send away in disgrace (a person from a school etc): The child was expelled for stealing.) espellere2) (to get rid of: an electric fan for expelling kitchen smells.) eliminare•* * *[ɪk'spel] -
2 expel ex·pel vt
[ɪks'pɛl] -
3 (to) expel
(to) expel /ɪkˈspɛl/v. t.1 espellere; cacciare: Lew was expelled from college for stealing, Lew è stato espulso dal college per aver rubato; to expel the invaders, cacciare gli invasori2 (med.) espellereexpelleen.espulso. -
4 (to) expel
(to) expel /ɪkˈspɛl/v. t.1 espellere; cacciare: Lew was expelled from college for stealing, Lew è stato espulso dal college per aver rubato; to expel the invaders, cacciare gli invasori2 (med.) espellereexpelleen.espulso. -
5 leak
I [liːk]1) (in container, roof) crepa f.; (in ship) falla f.to spring a leak — [pipe, tank] creparsi
2) (escape) (of liquid, gas) fuga f., perdita f.; (of charge) dispersione f.3) giorn. (disclosure) fuga f. di notizie••II 1. [liːk]to take a leak — pop. pisciare
1) (disclose) fare trapelare [ information]; diffondere, divulgare [ document]2.1) (have crack) [container, pipe] perdere; [ boat] fare acqua2) (seep) [liquid, gas] filtrare, fuoriuscire (from, out of da)to leak into — spandersi in [ sea]; penetrare in [ soil]
•- leak out* * *[li:k] 1. noun1) (a crack or hole through which liquid or gas escapes: Water was escaping through a leak in the pipe.) crepa, fessura2) (the passing of gas, water etc through a crack or hole: a gas-leak.) fuga3) (a giving away of secret information: a leak of Government plans.) fuga (di notizie)2. verb1) (to have a leak: This bucket leaks; The boiler leaked hot water all over the floor.) perdere2) (to (cause something) to pass through a leak: Gas was leaking from the cracked pipe; He was accused of leaking secrets to the enemy.) lasciar uscire, far trapelare•- leakage- leaky* * *leak /li:k/n.2 fuga; perdita ( di liquido, ecc.): a gas leak, una fuga di gas; to stop leaks, eliminare le perdite3 (naut.) falla; via d'acqua4 (elettr.) dispersione5 (fig.) fuga ( di notizie); ( anche) indiscrezione (o notizia) fatta trapelare a bella posta ( a giornalisti, ad amici, ecc.)● (tecn.) leak detector, rivelatore di perdite □ to spring a leak, aprire una falla □ ( slang) to take (o to have) a leak, fare pipì; pisciare.♦ (to) leak /li:k/A v. i.3 ( spesso to leak out) spandersi; filtrare, trapelare ( anche fig.): The news of the scandal has leaked out, la notizia dello scandalo è trapelataB v. t.● to leak in, infiltrarsi; penetrare: The rain leaked in through the roof, la pioggia penetrò attraverso il tetto.* * *I [liːk]1) (in container, roof) crepa f.; (in ship) falla f.to spring a leak — [pipe, tank] creparsi
2) (escape) (of liquid, gas) fuga f., perdita f.; (of charge) dispersione f.3) giorn. (disclosure) fuga f. di notizie••II 1. [liːk]to take a leak — pop. pisciare
1) (disclose) fare trapelare [ information]; diffondere, divulgare [ document]2.1) (have crack) [container, pipe] perdere; [ boat] fare acqua2) (seep) [liquid, gas] filtrare, fuoriuscire (from, out of da)to leak into — spandersi in [ sea]; penetrare in [ soil]
•- leak out -
6 displace
[dɪs'pleɪs]verbo transitivo (replace) soppiantare, rimpiazzare [ competitor]; rimpiazzare, sostituire [ worker]; (expel) cacciare (via), allontanare [ person]* * *[dis'pleis]1) (to disarrange or put out of place.) spostare2) (to take the place of: The dog had displaced her doll in the little girl's affections.) sostituire•- displaced person* * *[dɪs'pleɪs]verbo transitivo (replace) soppiantare, rimpiazzare [ competitor]; rimpiazzare, sostituire [ worker]; (expel) cacciare (via), allontanare [ person] -
7 expellee
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8 send down
send [sb., sth.] down, send down [sb., sth.] mandareEx:send him down to the first floor — mandatelo (giù) al primo piano; send [sb.] down/Ex:1) BE univ. espellere2) BE colloq. mandare in prigione* * *(to expel (a student) from a university.) espellere* * *vt + adv(person, prices) far scendere, (Brit: student) cacciare, mandar via, (fam: imprison) mandare in galera* * *send [sb., sth.] down, send down [sb., sth.] mandareEx:send him down to the first floor — mandatelo (giù) al primo piano; send [sb.] down/Ex:1) BE univ. espellere2) BE colloq. mandare in prigione -
9 turn out
to turn out well, badly — andare a finire bene, male
to turn out all right — andare bene o per il meglio
as it turned out — a conti fatti, in fin dei conti
2) (come out) [crowd, people] affluire, accorrere ( to do per fare; for per)his toes o feet turn out — ha i piedi in fuori; turn [sth.] out, turn out [sth.]
4) (turn off) spegnere [ light]6) (produce) produrre, fabbricare [ goods]; formare [scientists, graduates]; turn [sb.] out, turn out [sb.] (evict) buttare fuori, mettere alla porta* * *1) (to send away; to make (someone) leave.) (mandare fuori)2) (to make or produce: The factory turns out ten finished articles an hour.) produrre3) (to empty or clear: I turned out the cupboard.) vuotare4) ((of a crowd) to come out; to get together for a (public) meeting, celebration etc: A large crowd turned out to see the procession.) comparire5) (to turn off: Turn out the light!) spegnere6) (to happen or prove to be: He turned out to be right; It turned out that he was right.) rivelarsi, (venire fuori)* * *1. vi + adv1) (appear, attend: troops, doctor) presentarsi2) (prove to be) rivelarsiit turned out to be true/a mistake — è risultato essere vero/un errore
it turned out that... — si è scoperto che...
2. vt + adv1) (light, appliance, gas) chiudere, spegnere2) (produce: goods) produrre, (novel, good pupils) creare3) (empty: pockets) vuotare, (tip out: cake) capovolgere4) (clean out: room) dare una bella pulita a5) (expel: tenant, employee) mandar via6) (guard, police) far uscire* * *to turn out well, badly — andare a finire bene, male
to turn out all right — andare bene o per il meglio
as it turned out — a conti fatti, in fin dei conti
2) (come out) [crowd, people] affluire, accorrere ( to do per fare; for per)his toes o feet turn out — ha i piedi in fuori; turn [sth.] out, turn out [sth.]
4) (turn off) spegnere [ light] -
10 expelled
past tense, past participle; see expel
См. также в других словарях:
expel — ex‧pel [ɪkˈspel] verb expelled PTandPPX expelling PRESPARTX [transitive] to officially make someone leave a country or an organization: • In the past, the government found it legally difficult to identify and expel illegal immigrants. expel… … Financial and business terms
Expel — Ex*pel , v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Expelled}, p. pr. & vb. n.. {Expelling}.] [L. expellere, expulsum; ex out + pellere to drive: cf.F. expeller. See {Pulse} a beat.] 1. To drive or force out from that within which anything is contained, inclosed, or… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
expel — I verb banish, cut out, deport, discard, discharge, dislodge, dismiss, disown, dispose of, dispossess, drive out, eicere, eject, eliminate, emit, evict, exclude, excommunicate, exigere, exile, expatriate, expellere, extrude, force away, force out … Law dictionary
expel — [v1] discharge belch, blow out, cast out, disgorge, dislodge, drive out, ejaculate, eruct, erupt, evacuate, exhaust, exudate, exude, get rid of, irrupt, pass, remove, spew, throw out, vomit; concept 179 Ant. absorb, admit, take in expel [v2]… … New thesaurus
expel — late 14c., from L. expellere drive out, from ex out (see EX (Cf. ex )) + pellere to drive (see PULSE (Cf. pulse) (1)). Meaning to eject from a school is first recorded 1640s. Related: Expelled; expelling … Etymology dictionary
expel — *eject, oust, dismiss, evict Analogous words: *banish, exile, ostracize: *dismiss, discharge, cashier, fire: *discard, cast: *exclude, shut out, eliminate Antonyms: admit (sense 1) … New Dictionary of Synonyms
expel — ► VERB (expelled, expelling) 1) force or drive out. 2) force (a pupil) to leave a school. DERIVATIVES expellable adjective expellee noun expeller noun. ORIGIN Latin expell … English terms dictionary
expel — [ek spel′, ikspel′] vt. expelled, expelling [ME expellen < L expellere < ex , out + pellere, to thrust: see PULSE1] 1. to drive out by force; force out; eject 2. to dismiss or send away by authority; deprive of rights, membership, etc. SYN … English World dictionary
expel — UK [ɪkˈspel] / US verb [transitive] Word forms expel : present tense I/you/we/they expel he/she/it expels present participle expelling past tense expelled past participle expelled 1) to officially force someone to leave a place or organization… … English dictionary
expel — ex|pel [ ık spel ] verb transitive 1. ) to officially force someone to leave a place or organization because of their bad behavior: They have no legal power to expel a party member. expel someone from something: The police were sent to expel the… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
expel — v. (D; tr.) to expel from (to expel a child from school) * * * [ɪk spel] (D; tr.) to expel from (to expel a child from school) … Combinatory dictionary