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1 theory
elmélet, elképzelés, nézet, teória* * *['Ɵiəri]plural - theories; noun1) (an idea or explanation which has not yet been proved to be correct: There are many theories about the origin of life; In theory, I agree with you, but it would not work in practice.) elmélet2) (the main principles and ideas in an art, science etc as opposed to the practice of actually doing it: A musician has to study both the theory and practice of music.) elmélet•- theoretically
- theorize
- theorise
- theorist
См. также в других словарях:
agree — is used intransitively (without an object) with about, on, to, upon, and with, or with a that clause, and transitively (with an object) to mean ‘to arrange or settle (a thing in which various interests are concerned)’; there are examples of this… … Modern English usage
Doing the Honours — Episode no. Series 2 Episode 2 Written by Antony Jay Jonathan Lynn Produced by Peter Whitmore … Wikipedia
agree */*/*/ — UK [əˈɡriː] / US [əˈɡrɪ] verb [not usually progressive] Word forms agree : present tense I/you/we/they agree he/she/it agrees present participle agreeing past tense agreed past participle agreed Get it right: agree: When you want to say that you… … English dictionary
agree — [[t]əgri͟ː[/t]] ♦ agrees, agreeing, agreed 1) V RECIP If people agree with each other about something, they have the same opinion about it or say that they have the same opinion. [pl n V] If we agreed all the time it would be a bit boring, wouldn … English dictionary
agree with — phrasal verb [transitive] Word forms agree with : present tense I/you/we/they agree with he/she/it agrees with present participle agreeing with past tense agreed with past participle agreed with 1) agree with something to think that something is… … English dictionary
doing the ton — Kiwi (New Zealand Slang) Driving really, really fast! but corrected by Phil Lyall as Doing 100mph (and I agree, although only us oldies would remember the thrill of the possibility your car could actually go that fast!) … English dialects glossary
doing the ton — Driving really, really fast! but corrected by Phil Lyall as Doing 100mph (and I agree, although only us oldies would remember the thrill of the possibility your car could actually go that fast!) … Kiwi (New Zealand slang)
hold with doing something — hold with ((doing) something) to agree with or support something. He married a woman who didn t hold with gambling. Usage notes: often used in the form not hold with (doing) something: I don t hold with the idea that I was rebellious as a child … New idioms dictionary
nothing doing — I will not do that or agree to that. She wanted to come to the dance tonight but her father said nothing doing … New idioms dictionary
see your way (clear) to (doing something) — to be able to do something and agree to do it. Do you think you could see your way clear to lending me a bit more money? … New idioms dictionary
take some doing — to need a lot of effort. It took some doing, but I finally got the manager to agree to hire you … New idioms dictionary