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1 present a show
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2 present
adj. aanwezig; ; tegenwoordig; heden--------n. aanwezigheid; tegenwoordige tijd--------n. cadeau, geschenk--------v. voordragen; uitreiken, toekennen; aanbieden; opdragenpresent1[ preznt] 〈 zelfstandig naamwoord〉1 geschenk ⇒ cadeau, gift♦voorbeelden:for the present • voorlopig————————present2[ prizzent] 〈 zelfstandig naamwoord〉♦voorbeelden:————————present3[ preznt]♦voorbeelden:in the present case • in dit/onderhavig geval3 present participle • onvoltooid/tegenwoordig deelwoordpresent perfect • voltooid tegenwoordige tijdpresent tense • tegenwoordige tijdII 〈 bijvoeglijk naamwoord, predicatief〉♦voorbeelden:present at • aanwezig bij/op————————present41 voorstellen ⇒ introduceren; voordragen3 (ver)tonen ⇒ ten toon spreiden, blijk geven van4 aanbieden ⇒ schenken, uitreiken♦voorbeelden:present a show • een show presenteren3 present no difficulties • geen problemen bieden/opleverenpresent someone with a price • iemand een prijs uitreikenyour remarks present me with a problem • je opmerkingen stellen me voor een probleem5 present arms! • presenteer geweer!present oneself for an examination • voor een examen opgaana new chance presents itself • er doet zich een nieuwe kans voor
См. также в других словарях:
show cause — verb present a case, present argument, present cause, present reason, show grounds for associated concepts: order to show cause Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 show cause … Law dictionary
show */*/*/ — I UK [ʃəʊ] / US [ʃoʊ] verb Word forms show : present tense I/you/we/they show he/she/it shows present participle showing past tense showed past participle shown UK [ʃəʊn] / US [ʃoʊn] 1) [transitive] to prove that something exists or is true The… … English dictionary
show — show1 [ ʃou ] (past tense showed; past participle shown [ ʃoun ] ) verb *** ▸ 1 prove something is true ▸ 2 give information ▸ 3 behave in particular way ▸ 4 let someone see something ▸ 5 give instructions, etc. ▸ 6 lead someone somewhere ▸ 7 be… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
show — vt showed, shown, or, showed, show·ing: to demonstrate or establish by argument, reasoning, or evidence must show a compelling need for the court action show cause: to establish by reasoning and evidence a valid reason for something if a debtor… … Law dictionary
present — [prez′ənt; ] for v. [ prē zent′, prizent′] adj. [OFr < L praesens, prp. of praeesse, to be present < prae , before (see PRE ) + esse, to be (see ESSENCE)] 1. a) being at the specified or understood place; at hand; in attendance b) existing… … English World dictionary
Present Laughter — is a comedic play written by Noel Coward in 1939 and first staged in 1942 as part of a double bill with his lower middle class domestic drama This Happy Breed ; later the double bill was expanded to include Coward s new play Blithe Spirit .… … Wikipedia
show — vb 1 Show, manifest, evidence, evince, demonstrate are comparable when they mean to reveal something outwardly by or as if by a sign or to serve to make something outwardly apparent or visible. Show implies enabling others to see, but in this… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
show — [n1] demonstration, exhibition appearance, array, display, expo*, exposition, fair, fanfare, fireworks, grandstand, manifestation, occurrence, pageant, pageantry, panoply, parade, pomp, presentation, program, representation, shine*, showboat*,… … New thesaurus
show around — ˌshow a ˈround ˌshow ˈround [transitive] [present tense I/you/we/they show around he/she/it shows around present participle … Useful english dictionary
present — Ⅰ. present [1] ► ADJECTIVE 1) being or occurring in a particular place. 2) existing or occurring now. 3) Grammar (of a tense or participle) expressing an action now going on or habitually performed, or a condition now existing. ► NOUN 1) ( … English terms dictionary
present — [adj1] existing; at this time ad hoc, already, at this moment, begun, being, coeval, commenced, contemporaneous, contemporary, current, even now, existent, extant, for the time being, going on, immediate, in duration, in process, instant, just… … New thesaurus