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101 zinsbedrogen
v. hallucinate -
102 alucinación
• chimera• hallucinate• hallucinatory -
103 mito
• chimera• hallucinate• hallucinatory• legation• legend has it• mystifying• mythic -
104 perchero
• clothes hanger• clothes rack• clothes tree• hallowed be thy name• hallucinate• hanged• hanger-on• racist• rack -
105 quimera
• air castle• chimaera• chimera• day-dream• fable• hallucinate• hallucinatory• pipe dream• wild fancy• will-o'-the-wisp -
106 hallucinál
(DE) halluzinieren; halluziniert; (EN) hallucinate; suffer from delusions -
107 halucinál
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108 halucynacj|a
f (G pl halucynacji) hallucination- halucynacje wzrokowe/słuchowe visual/auditory hallucinations- mieć halucynacje to have a. suffer from hallucinations, to hallucinateThe New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > halucynacj|a
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109 omam
m (G omamu) hallucination- mieć omamy wzrokowe/słuchowe to have visual/auditory hallucinations, to be seeing/hearing things- chyba zaczynam mieć omamy I think I’m starting to hallucinateThe New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > omam
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110 ule|gnąć
ule|c, ule|gnąć pf — ule|gać impf (ulegnę, ulegniesz, uległa, uległ, ulegli — ulegam) vi 1. (poddać się) to surrender, to give in (komuś to sb); (w sporcie) to be defeated (komuś by sb)- ulegli bez oporu they surrendered without resistance- nasza drużyna uległa zespołowi Czech 0:2 our team lost to the Chech players 0-2- nasz zespół uległ zespołowi gospodarzy our team was defeated by the home team a. lost to the home team2. (podporządkować się) to yield, to give in (komuś/czemuś to sb/sth)- ulec czyjejś woli to yield to sb’s will- rząd musi ulec naciskom ze strony rolników the government has to give in to the pressure from the farmers3. (poddać się działaniu) to surrender (czemuś to sth) [uczuciom]; to succumb (czemuś to sth) [urokom, perswazji]; to be overcome (czemuś by sth) [silnym emocjom]- ulec pokusie to yield a. give in to temptation- ulegać wpływom kogoś/czegoś to be influenced by sb/sth- uległa złemu wpływowi nowych znajomych her new friends were a bad influence (on her)- łatwo ulegam wzruszeniu I’m easily moved- łatwo ulega nastrojom he’s/she’s quite moody4. (poddać się przemianie, procesowi) to undergo vt- ulec zagładzie to be destroyed a. annihilated, to come to grief- ulec wypadkowi to have a. meet with an accident- ulegać halucynacjom a. przywidzeniom to have hallucinations, to hallucinate- ulegam wrażeniu, że… I’m under the impression that…- nasze uczucia nie uległy zmianie our feelings haven’t changed- ceny/taryfy mogą ulec zmianie prices/rates are a. may be subject to change- jej nastroje ulegają gwałtownym zwrotom she has a. undergoes extreme mood swings- on ulega czasem napadom złości/stanom przygnębienia he sometimes has bouts of anger/depression, he is sometimes subject to bouts of anger/depression5. (oddać się) [kobieta] to go to bed (komuś with sb)■ nie ulega wątpliwości a. kwestii, że… there is no doubt that…, it is beyond a. without question that…The New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > ule|gnąć
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111 ule|c
ule|c, ule|gnąć pf — ule|gać impf (ulegnę, ulegniesz, uległa, uległ, ulegli — ulegam) vi 1. (poddać się) to surrender, to give in (komuś to sb); (w sporcie) to be defeated (komuś by sb)- ulegli bez oporu they surrendered without resistance- nasza drużyna uległa zespołowi Czech 0:2 our team lost to the Chech players 0-2- nasz zespół uległ zespołowi gospodarzy our team was defeated by the home team a. lost to the home team2. (podporządkować się) to yield, to give in (komuś/czemuś to sb/sth)- ulec czyjejś woli to yield to sb’s will- rząd musi ulec naciskom ze strony rolników the government has to give in to the pressure from the farmers3. (poddać się działaniu) to surrender (czemuś to sth) [uczuciom]; to succumb (czemuś to sth) [urokom, perswazji]; to be overcome (czemuś by sth) [silnym emocjom]- ulec pokusie to yield a. give in to temptation- ulegać wpływom kogoś/czegoś to be influenced by sb/sth- uległa złemu wpływowi nowych znajomych her new friends were a bad influence (on her)- łatwo ulegam wzruszeniu I’m easily moved- łatwo ulega nastrojom he’s/she’s quite moody4. (poddać się przemianie, procesowi) to undergo vt- ulec zagładzie to be destroyed a. annihilated, to come to grief- ulec wypadkowi to have a. meet with an accident- ulegać halucynacjom a. przywidzeniom to have hallucinations, to hallucinate- ulegam wrażeniu, że… I’m under the impression that…- nasze uczucia nie uległy zmianie our feelings haven’t changed- ceny/taryfy mogą ulec zmianie prices/rates are a. may be subject to change- jej nastroje ulegają gwałtownym zwrotom she has a. undergoes extreme mood swings- on ulega czasem napadom złości/stanom przygnębienia he sometimes has bouts of anger/depression, he is sometimes subject to bouts of anger/depression5. (oddać się) [kobieta] to go to bed (komuś with sb)■ nie ulega wątpliwości a. kwestii, że… there is no doubt that…, it is beyond a. without question that…The New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > ule|c
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112 hallucination
Halluzination f, Sinnestäuschung f· to have hallucinationsto hallucinate· to suffer from hallucinationsan Halluzinationen leiden -
113 allucinare
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114 padecer alucinaciones
v.to suffer from hallucinations, to hallucinate, to see things. -
115 ver alucinaciones
v.to hallucinate. -
116 halucini
Lit. haliucinuoti, Fre. halluciner, Eng. hallucinateEtymological dictionary of the esperanto language > halucini
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117 halucinar
Рус. ошибаться, заблуждаться, обманыватьсяEng. to hallucinate -
118 trip
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119 هلوس
هَلْوَسَto hallucinate, have hallucinations -
120 halucinirati
vi imp hallucinate, have hallucinations
См. также в других словарях:
Hallucinate — Hal*lu ci*nate (h[a^]l*l[=u] s[i^]*n[=a]t), v. i. [L. hallucinatus, alucinatus, p. p. of hallucinari, alucinari, to wander in mind, talk idly, dream.] 1. To wander; to go astray; to err; to blunder; used of mental processes. [R.] Byron. [1913… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
hallucinate — hal*lu ci*nate (h[a^]l*l[=u] s[i^]*n[=a]t), v. t. To experience (something nonexistent) as an hallucination[2]. [PJC] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
hallucinate — (v.) c.1600, deceive, from L. alucinatus, later hallucinatus, pp. of alucinari wander (in the mind), dream; talk unreasonably, ramble in thought, probably from Gk. alyein, Attic halyein be distraught, probably related to alaomai wander about… … Etymology dictionary
hallucinate — [v] imagine vividly blow one’s mind*, daydream, envision, fantasize, freak out*, have visions, head trip*, hear voices*, trip*, visualize; concept 34 Ant. experience … New thesaurus
hallucinate — ► VERB ▪ experience a seemingly real perception of something not actually present. DERIVATIVES hallucination noun hallucinator noun hallucinatory adjective. ORIGIN Latin hallucinari go astray in thought , from Greek alussein be uneasy or… … English terms dictionary
hallucinate — [hə lo͞o′si nāt΄] vt. hallucinated, hallucinating [< L hallucinatus, pp. of hallucinari, to wander mentally, rave < Gr alyein, to be confused (+ ending after L vaticinari, to prophesy) < IE base * al , to wander, be confused > L… … English World dictionary
hallucinate — [[t]həlu͟ːsɪneɪt[/t]] hallucinates, hallucinating, hallucinated VERB If you hallucinate, you see things that are not really there, either because you are ill or because you have taken a drug. Hunger made him hallucinate... [V n] If you stared… … English dictionary
hallucinate — UK [həˈluːsɪneɪt] / US [həˈlus(ə)nˌeɪt] verb [intransitive] Word forms hallucinate : present tense I/you/we/they hallucinate he/she/it hallucinates present participle hallucinating past tense hallucinated past participle hallucinated to see or… … English dictionary
hallucinate — hal·lu·ci·nate hə lüs ən .āt vb, nat·ed; nat·ing vt 1) to affect with visions or imaginary perceptions <the patient is not hallucinated> 2) to perceive or experience as a hallucination <may hallucinate monsters or attackers (M. J.… … Medical dictionary
hallucinate — verb the fever made her hallucinate Syn: have hallucinations, see things, be delirious, fantasize; informal trip, see pink elephants … Thesaurus of popular words
hallucinate — verb ( nated; nating) Etymology: Latin hallucinatus, past participle of hallucinari, allucinari to prate, dream, modification of Greek alyein to be distressed, to wander Date: circa 1834 transitive verb 1. to affect with visions or imaginary… … New Collegiate Dictionary