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1 detonate
'detəneit(to (cause to) explode violently: This device detonates the bomb.) detonar- detonator
tr['detəneɪt]1 estallar, detonar, explotar1 hacer estallar, hacer explotar: hacer detonardetonate vi: detonar, estallarv.• detonar v.'detəneɪt
1.
transitive verb hacer* detonar
2.
vi detonar, explotar, estallar['detǝneɪt]1.2.VI detonar, estallar* * *['detəneɪt]
1.
transitive verb hacer* detonar
2.
vi detonar, explotar, estallar -
2 detonate
vtMILIT, MINE, THERMO detonar -
3 detonate
vt.1 explosionar, hacer explotar (bomb, explosive)2 desencadenar, provocar, detonar.3 reventar.vi.detonar, explotar. (pt & pp detonated) -
4 detonar
detonar ( conjugate detonar) verbo intransitivo to detonate, explode
detonar verbo intransitivo & verbo transitivo to detonate ' detonar' also found in these entries: English: detonate - unexploded -
5 NE
NE (◊ nordeste) NE'NE' also found in these entries: English: alienate - alternate - antenatal - assassinate - assassination - billionaire - Canadian - Canaries - canary - carnation - combination - consternation - contaminate - contamination - coordination - coordinator - coronation - culminate - culmination - decaffeinated - decontaminate - denomination - denominator - destination - determination - detonate - detonation - disciplinarian - discriminate - discriminating - discrimination - disseminate - dominate - donate - donation - eliminate - elimination - emanate - esplanade - euthanasia - examination - explanation - exterminate - extermination - exterminator - fascinate - fascinating - fascination - fingernail - forenameNEtr[nɔːɵ'iːst]a) (= northeast) NEb) = NebraskaABBR1) (Geog)= north east NE2) (US)= Nebraska3) (US)= New England* * *a) (= northeast) NEb) = Nebraska -
6 remotely
adverb remotamente, lejanamenteremotely adv remotamentetr[rɪ'məʊtlɪ]1 remotamenteremotely [ri'mo:tli] adv1) slightly: remotamente2) distantly: en un lugar remoto, muy lejosrɪ'məʊtlia) (at all, in the least) (usu with neg) remotamentethe two events are not even remotely connected — no hay ni la más remota conexión entre los dos hechos
[rɪ'mǝʊtlɪ]ADV1) (=distantly) en un lugar apartado2) (=slightly) [connected, possible] remotamente•
he isn't even remotely interested in opera — no está ni siquiera remotamente interesado en la ópera•
I've never seen anything remotely like it — nunca he visto nada (ni) remotamente parecido•
he'll eat anything that looks remotely edible — es capaz de comerse cualquier cosa con un mínimo aspecto de comestible•
the struggle to maintain anything remotely resembling decent standards — la lucha por mantener algo que se pareciera aunque fuera de lejos a unos niveles decentes3) (=in a detached manner) [say, behave] de forma distante4) (=by remote control) [control] a distancia; [detonate] por control remoto* * *[rɪ'məʊtli]a) (at all, in the least) (usu with neg) remotamente -
7 detonating
adj.detonante, detonador.ger.gerundio del verbo DETONATE.
См. также в других словарях:
Detonate — Det o*nate, v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Detonated}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Detonating}.] [L. detonare, v. i., to thunder down; de + tonare to thunder; akin to E. thunder. See {Thunder}, and cf. {Detonize}.] To explode with a sudden report; as, niter detonates … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Detonate — Det o*nate, v. t. To cause to explode; to cause to burn or inflame with a sudden report. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
detonate — index discharge (shoot) Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
detonate — 1729, a back formation from DETONATION (Cf. detonation), or else from L. detonatus, pp. of detonare. Related: Detonated; detonating … Etymology dictionary
detonate — [v] set off bomb bang, blast, blow up, burst, discharge, explode, fulminate, kablooey*, let go, mushroom*, push the button*, shoot off, touch off, va voom*; concept 179 Ant. dismantle … New thesaurus
detonate — ► VERB ▪ explode or cause to explode. DERIVATIVES detonation noun. ORIGIN Latin detonare, from tonare to thunder … English terms dictionary
detonate — [det′ n āt΄] vi. detonated, detonating [< L detonatus, pp. of detonare, to thunder < de , intens. + tonare, to THUNDER] to explode violently and noisily vt. to cause (a bomb, dynamite, etc.) to explode detonation n … English World dictionary
detonate — verb ( nated; nating) Etymology: French détoner to explode, from Latin detonare to expend thunder, from de + tonare to thunder more at thunder Date: 1729 intransitive verb to explode with sudden violence transitive verb … New Collegiate Dictionary
detonate — verb Detonate is used with these nouns as the subject: ↑bomb Detonate is used with these nouns as the object: ↑bomb, ↑explosive, ↑mine … Collocations dictionary
detonate — UK [ˈdetəneɪt] / US [ˈdet(ə)nˌeɪt] verb [intransitive/transitive] Word forms detonate : present tense I/you/we/they detonate he/she/it detonates present participle detonating past tense detonated past participle detonated to explode, or to make… … English dictionary
detonate — [18] Detonate is related to thunder. It comes from the past participle of Latin dētonāre, a compound verb formed from the prefix dē ‘down’ and tonāre ‘thunder, roar’, which goes back to the same Indo European base (*ten , *ton ) as thunder. Latin … The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins