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1 dock
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1. dok noun1) (a deepened part of a harbour etc where ships go for loading, unloading, repair etc: The ship was in dock for three weeks.) muelle2) (the area surrounding this: He works down at the docks.) muelle3) (the box in a law court where the accused person sits or stands.) banquillo (de los acusados)
2. verb(to (cause to) enter a dock and tie up alongside a quay: The liner docked in Southampton this morning.) atracar- docker- dockyard
II dok verb(to cut short or remove part from: The dog's tail had been docked; His wages were docked to pay for the broken window.)dock1 n muelledock2 vb atracartr[dɒk]1 SMALLBOTANY/SMALL acedera————————tr[dɒk]2 SMALLLAW/SMALL banquillo (de los acusados)1 (ship) atracar (at, a); (spaceship) acoplar1 (ship) atracar, fondear; (spaceship) acoplarse1 puerto\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLdock worker trabajador,-ra portuario,-a————————tr[dɒk]1 (animal's tail) cortar2 (wages) descontar dinero dedock ['dɑk] vt1) cut: cortar2) : descontar dinero de (un sueldo)dock vianchor, land: fondear, atracardock n1) pier: atracadero m2) wharf: muelle m3) : banquillo m de los acusados (en un tribunal)n.• andén s.m.• dique s.m.• dársena s.f.• muelle s.m.• romaza s.f.v.• abarloar v.• abordar v.• recortar v.• reducir v.dɑːk, dɒk
I
1) ( Naut)a) c (wharf, quay) muelle m; ( for cargo ships) dársena fto be in dock — \<\<ship\>\> estar* en puerto; (before n) <worker, strike> portuario
b) docks pl puerto m2) ( Law) (no pl)3) u ( Bot) acedera f
II
1.
1)a) \<\<tail\>\> cortarb) \<\<wages\>\> descontar* dinero de2) \<\<vessel/ship\>\> fondear, atracar*
2.
via) ( Naut) \<\<ship/vessel\>\> atracar*, fondearb) ( Aerosp) acoplarse
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[dɒk]N (Bot) acedera f, ramaza f
II
[dɒk]VT1) [+ animal's tail] cortar, cercenar frm2) (Brit)I've been docked £1 — me han descontado una libra
III [dɒk]1. N1) (Naut) dársena f, muelle m ; (with gates) dique mto be in dock — (Brit) * [ship] estar en puerto; [car] estar en el taller
2.VT [+ ship] atracar; [+ spacecraft] acoplar3. VI1) (Naut) atracar; (loosely) llegarwe docked at five — llegamos a las cinco, entramos en el puerto a las cinco
2) [spacecraft] acoplarse ( with a)4.CPDdock labourer, dock laborer (US) N — = dock worker
dock walloper * N (US) — = dock worker
dock warrant N — resguardo m de muelle, conocimiento m de almacén
dock worker N — trabajador m portuario
IV
[dɒk]N (Brit) (in court) banquillo m de los acusados* * *[dɑːk, dɒk]
I
1) ( Naut)a) c (wharf, quay) muelle m; ( for cargo ships) dársena fto be in dock — \<\<ship\>\> estar* en puerto; (before n) <worker, strike> portuario
b) docks pl puerto m2) ( Law) (no pl)3) u ( Bot) acedera f
II
1.
1)a) \<\<tail\>\> cortarb) \<\<wages\>\> descontar* dinero de2) \<\<vessel/ship\>\> fondear, atracar*
2.
via) ( Naut) \<\<ship/vessel\>\> atracar*, fondearb) ( Aerosp) acoplarse -
2 descontar
descontar ( conjugate descontar) verbo transitivo 1a) ( rebajar):◊ me descontó el 15% he gave me a 15% discount‹ horas› to deduct 2 ( exceptuar):◊ si descontamos a Pedro/los domingos … if we don't count Pedro/Sundays …3 ‹letra/pagaré› to discount
descontar verbo transitivo
1 (rebajar) to deduct, give a discount (no incluir) to leave out, disregard: descontando a tus padres, tocamos a mil por cabeza, not counting your parents, we'll pay a thousand per head
2 Dep (tiempo) to add on ' descontar' also found in these entries: Spanish: deducir English: deduct - stop - take off - discount - dock - take
См. также в других словарях:
dock — dock1 [dɔk US da:k] n [Date: 1300 1400; : Middle Dutch; Origin: docke] 1.) a place in a port where ships are loaded, unloaded, or repaired →↑dry dock ▪ A crowd was waiting at the dock to greet them. in dock ▪ The ship is in dock for repairs. 2.) … Dictionary of contemporary English
Dock Boggs — Birth name Moran Lee Boggs Born February 7, 1898(1898 02 07) Norton, Virginia, United States Died February 7, 1971(1971 02 07) (aged 73) Needmore, Virginia, United States … Wikipedia
dock dues — ➔ dues * * * dock dues UK US noun [plural] TRANSPORT, COMMERCE ► money that a shipping company must pay for the use of a port: »Liverpool retaliated by charging enormous dock dues on Manchester s cotton imports … Financial and business terms
dock — ▪ I. dock dock 1 [dɒk ǁ dɑːk] noun [countable] 1. TRANSPORT a place in a port where ships are loaded and unloaded: • Oil can go by pipeline to a nearby dock where tankers can load it. 2. docks [plural] a port area … Financial and business terms
dock — 1 noun 1 (C) a place in a port where ships are loaded and unloaded: A crowd was waiting at the dock to greet them. | in dock: The ship is now in dock for repairs. see also: dry dock 2 (C) the part of a law court where the person being tried (try1 … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
dock — dock1 /dok/, n. 1. a landing pier. 2. the space or waterway between two piers or wharves, as for receiving a ship while in port. 3. such a waterway, enclosed or open, together with the surrounding piers, wharves, etc. 4. See dry dock. 5. a… … Universalium
dock — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun 1 place for loading/unloading ships ADJECTIVE ▪ commercial ▪ coal, fish, etc. ▪ boat, ferry, shipping (all esp. AmE) … Collocations dictionary
dock — I. /dɒk / (say dok) noun 1. a wharf. 2. the space or waterway between two piers or wharves, as for receiving a ship while in port. 3. such a waterway, enclosed or open, together with the surrounding piers, wharves, etc. 4. → dry dock. 5. a semi… …
pay — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun ADJECTIVE ▪ hourly, monthly, weekly ▪ full, half (both esp. BrE) ▪ He has taken leave on half pay. ▪ … Collocations dictionary
dock — {{11}}dock (n.1) ship s berth, late 15c., from M.Du. or M.L.G. docke, perhaps ultimately (via L.L. *ductia aqueduct ) from L. ducere to lead (see DUKE (Cf. duke) (n.)); or possibly from a Scandinavian word for low ground (Cf. Norw. dokk hollow,… … Etymology dictionary
dock — I 1. noun his boat was moored at the dock Syn: harbor, marina, port, anchorage; wharf, quay, pier, jetty, landing stage 2. verb the ship docked Syn: moor, berth, put in, tie up, anchor … Thesaurus of popular words