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1 restore
rə'sto:1) (to repair (a building, a painting, a piece of furniture etc) so that it looks as it used to or ought to.) restaurar2) (to bring back to a normal or healthy state: The patient was soon restored to health.) restablecer3) (to bring or give back: to restore law and order; The police restored the stolen cars to their owners.) restablecer, devolver4) (to bring or put (a person) back to a position, rank etc he once had: He was asked to resign but was later restored to his former job as manager.) restablecer•- restorer
restore vb restaurartr[rɪ'stɔːSMALLr/SMALL]1 (gen) restaurar2 (return) devolver3 (order) restablecer1) return: volver2) reestablish: restablecer3) repair: restaurarv.• devolver v.• instaurar v.• reanimar v.• reintegrar v.• renovar v.• reparar v.• reponer v.(§pres: -pongo, -pones...) pret: -pus-pp: -puestofut/c: -pondr-•)• restablecer v.• restaurar v.• restituir v.• tornar v.rɪ'stɔːr, rɪ'stɔː(r)1)a) (re-establish, bring back) \<\<order/peace\>\> restablecer*; \<\<confidence/health/energy\>\> devolver*; \<\<links/communications\>\> restablecer*; \<\<monarchy/king\>\> restaurar, reinstaurarher sight was restored — recuperó or recobró la vista
to restore somebody TO something: the coup restored him to power el golpe lo colocó nuevamente en el poder; to restore somebody to health devolverle* la salud a alguien; to restore something to life — hacer* revivir algo
b) ( give back) (frml) \<\<goods/property\>\> restituir* (frml); \<\<money\>\> restituir* (frml), reintegrar (frml)to restore something TO somebody — restituir(le)* algo a alguien (frml)
2) \<\<building/painting\>\> restaurarto restore something to its former glory — restituir* algo a su antigua grandeza
[rɪs'tɔː(r)]VT1) (=give back) [+ money, possession] devolver, restituir frmto restore sth to sb — devolver algo a algn, restituir algo a algn frm
2) (=re-establish, reinstate) [+ relations, links, order] restablecer; [+ monarch, president, democracy] restaurar; [+ confidence, strength] devolver; [+ tax, law] reimplantar, volver a implantarto restore sb to health/life — devolver la salud a algn/reanimar a algn
the investment needed to restore these depressed areas to life — la inversión que se necesita para reactivar estas zonas deprimidas
3) [+ building, painting, antique] restaurarto restore sth to its original state or condition — restituir or devolver algo a su estado original
* * *[rɪ'stɔːr, rɪ'stɔː(r)]1)a) (re-establish, bring back) \<\<order/peace\>\> restablecer*; \<\<confidence/health/energy\>\> devolver*; \<\<links/communications\>\> restablecer*; \<\<monarchy/king\>\> restaurar, reinstaurarher sight was restored — recuperó or recobró la vista
to restore somebody TO something: the coup restored him to power el golpe lo colocó nuevamente en el poder; to restore somebody to health devolverle* la salud a alguien; to restore something to life — hacer* revivir algo
b) ( give back) (frml) \<\<goods/property\>\> restituir* (frml); \<\<money\>\> restituir* (frml), reintegrar (frml)to restore something TO somebody — restituir(le)* algo a alguien (frml)
2) \<\<building/painting\>\> restaurarto restore something to its former glory — restituir* algo a su antigua grandeza
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2 pacify
(to make calm or peaceful: She tried to pacify the quarrelling children.) apaciguar, calmar- pacifism
- pacifist
tr['pæsɪfaɪ]1 (person) calmar, tranquilizar, apaciguar2 (country) pacificar1) soothe: apaciguar, pacificar2) : pacificar (un país, una región, etc.)v.• allanar v.• amansar v.• apaciguar v.• aplacar v.• aquietar v.• callar v.• calmar v.• desarmar v.• pacificar v.• serenar v.'pæsəfaɪ, 'pæsɪfaɪtransitive verb -fies, -fying, -fieda) (calm, satisfy) apaciguar*, calmarb) ( restore to peace) \<\<country/area\>\> pacificar*['pæsɪfaɪ]VT (=calm) [+ person] apaciguar, calmar; [+ country] pacificar* * *['pæsəfaɪ, 'pæsɪfaɪ]transitive verb -fies, -fying, -fieda) (calm, satisfy) apaciguar*, calmarb) ( restore to peace) \<\<country/area\>\> pacificar*
См. также в других словарях:
Peace of Westphalia — Treaties of Osnabrück and Münster Ratification of the Peace of Münster (Gerard ter Borch, Münster, 1648) Type Peace treaty … Wikipedia
restore */*/*/ — UK [rɪˈstɔː(r)] / US [rɪˈstɔr] verb [transitive] Word forms restore : present tense I/you/we/they restore he/she/it restores present participle restoring past tense restored past participle restored 1) to cause a particular situation to exist… … English dictionary
restore — re|store [ rı stɔr ] verb transitive *** 1. ) to cause a particular situation to exist again, especially a positive one: By Sunday, electricity had been restored. restore order/peace/calm: The lesson continued when order had been restored.… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
Peace of Antalcidas — The Peace of Antalcidas (387 BC), also known as the King s Peace, was a peace treaty that ended the Corinthian War in ancient Greece. The treaty s official name comes from the Spartan diplomat who traveled to Susa to negotiate the terms of the… … Wikipedia
restore to a state of peace — index pacify Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
restore — verb 1 bring back a situation/feeling ADVERB ▪ quickly, soon ▪ Order was quickly restored. VERB + RESTORE ▪ need to ▪ We need to restore public confiden … Collocations dictionary
restore — re|store W3 [rıˈsto: US o:r] v [T] ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(former situation)¦ 2¦(positive feeling)¦ 3¦(repair)¦ 4¦(give something back)¦ 5¦(bring back a law)¦ 6 restore somebody to power/the throne ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ [Date: 1200 1300; : Old French; Origin: restorer,… … Dictionary of contemporary English
peace — noun 1 not war ADJECTIVE ▪ durable, lasting, permanent ▪ fragile, uneasy ▪ negotiated ▪ A negotiated peace would be preferable to a p … Collocations dictionary
peace */*/*/ — UK [piːs] / US [pɪs] noun 1) [uncountable] a situation in which there is no war between countries or groups peace in: For many years the agreement maintained peace in Europe. peace between: The Camp David agreement brought peace between Israel… … English dictionary
peace building — Application of military force, or the threat of its use, normally pursuant to international authorization, to compel compliance with resolutions or sanctions designed to maintain or restore peace and order. See also peace building; peacekeeping;… … Military dictionary
Crime against peace — A crime against peace, in international law, refers to planning, preparation, initiation, or waging of wars of aggression, or a war in violation of international treaties, agreements or assurances, or participation in a common plan or conspiracy… … Wikipedia