-
1 leave
n. vakantie; permissie, (het) toestaan; afwezig zijn met permissie; afscheid; weggaan--------v. uitkomen, bloeien--------v. verlaten; achterlaten; weggaan; het erbij laten zitten; ophouden; stopzetten; uitwissenleave1[ lie:v] 〈 zelfstandig naamwoord〉1 toestemming ⇒ permissie, verlof2 verlof ⇒ vrij 〈in het bijzonder met betrekking tot overheid/leger〉; 〈 voornamelijk enkelvoud〉 vakantie♦voorbeelden:1 leave of absence • verlof, vakantieleave of absence without pay • onbetaald verloftake leave to • (het) wagen/de vrijheid nemen teby/with your leave • met uw permissie〈 informeel〉 without a ‘by your leave’ or a ‘with your leave’ • zo maar, ongevraagdtake (one's) leave (of someone) • (iemand) gedag/vaarwel zeggen; weggaan (bij/van iemand)→ French French/————————leave2♦voorbeelden:it's time for you to leave/time you left • het wordt tijd dat je weggaatleave one's wife • bij zijn vrouw weggaanleave for work • naar zijn werk vertrekken→ leave off leave off/1 laten liggen/staan ⇒ achterlaten, vergeten♦voorbeelden:leave about/around • laten (rond)slingerenleave for • vaarwel zeggen voor, in de steek laten voorleave (something) undone • (iets) ongedaan latenleave (something) unsaid • over iets zwijgenbe left with • (blijven) zitten met, opgescheept worden met3 leave much/a lot/something/nothing to be desired • veel/een hoop/iets/niets te wensen over latenfour from six leaves two • zes min vier is tweeleave (someone) a fortune • (iemand) een vermogen nalatenbe well left • goed verzorgd achterblijven¶ leave (someone/something) be • (iemand) met rust laten, (iets) laten rustenleave someone/something standing • beter zijn dan iemand/iets, iemand/iets in de schaduw stellenleave it at that • het er (maar) bij latenleave aside • buiten beschouwing latenleave in • op zijn plaats latenI'll leave it entirely up to you • ik laat het helemaal aan jou overleave (people) to themselves • zich niet bemoeien met (mensen)leave someone to it • iemand aan zijn lot overlaten→ leave behind leave behind/, leave on leave on/, leave out leave out/, leave over leave over/, luggage luggage/
См. также в других словарях:
take leave of one's senses — {v. phr.} To go mad; become crazy. * / Have you taken leave of your senses? Jake cried, when he saw Andy swallow a live goldfish./ … Dictionary of American idioms
take leave of one's senses — {v. phr.} To go mad; become crazy. * / Have you taken leave of your senses? Jake cried, when he saw Andy swallow a live goldfish./ … Dictionary of American idioms
take\ leave\ of\ one's\ senses — v. phr. To go mad; become crazy. Have you taken leave of your senses? Jake cried, when he saw Andy swallow a live goldfish … Словарь американских идиом
leave — leave1 W1S1 [li:v] v past tense and past participle left [left] ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(go away)¦ 2¦(stop)¦ 3 leave somebody/something alone 4¦(let something/somebody stay)¦ 5¦(not change/move something)¦ 6¦(result of accident/illness/event)¦ 7 be left… … Dictionary of contemporary English
leave — 1 /li:v/ verb past tense and past participle left LEAVE A PLACE, VEHICLE 1 LEAVE (I, T) to go away from a place or a person: What time did you leave the office? | They were so noisy that the manager asked them to leave. (+ for): They re leaving… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
One Ring — The One Ring is a fictional artifact that appears as the central plot element in J. R. R. Tolkien s Middle earth fantasy novels. It is described in an earlier story, The Hobbit (1937), as a magic ring of invisibility. The sequel The Lord of the… … Wikipedia
leave — leave1 [ liv ] (past tense and past participle left [ left ] ) verb *** ▸ 1 go away from place ▸ 2 go away permanently ▸ 3 stop working for someone etc. ▸ 4 put something somewhere ▸ 5 make something that remains ▸ 6 make someone feel/think ▸ 7… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
Senses Fail — playing at the O2 Academy Islington in February 2011 Background information Origin Ridgewood, New Jersey, USA … Wikipedia
One, Two, Buckle My Shoe (novel) — One, Two, Buckle My Shoe … Wikipedia
take leave of — {v. phr.} I. To abandon, go away from, or become separated from. Usually used in the phrase take leave of one s senses . * /Come down from the roof, Billy! Have you taken leave of your senses?/ 2. See: TAKE ONE S LEAVE … Dictionary of American idioms
take leave of — {v. phr.} I. To abandon, go away from, or become separated from. Usually used in the phrase take leave of one s senses . * /Come down from the roof, Billy! Have you taken leave of your senses?/ 2. See: TAKE ONE S LEAVE … Dictionary of American idioms