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81 points
1) (a movable section of rails which allow a train to cross over other lines or pass from one line to another: The points had to be changed before the train could continue.) scambio2) (the solid tips in the toes of ballet shoes: She can dance on her points.) punte -
82 press forward/on
(to continue (in spite of difficulties): She pressed on with her work.) andare avanti, continuare -
83 pursue
[pə'sjuː] [AE -'suː]1) inseguire [ person]2) perseguire [aim, ambition]; perseguire, portare avanti [ policy]; dedicarsi a [occupation, interest]; proseguire, portare avanti [ studies]to pursue a career — fare carriera (in in)
* * *[pə'sju:]1) (to follow especially in order to catch or capture; to chase: They pursued the thief through the town.) inseguire2) (to occupy oneself with (studies, enquiries etc); to continue: He is pursuing his studies at the University.) proseguire•- pursuer- pursuit* * *[pə'sjuː] [AE -'suː]1) inseguire [ person]2) perseguire [aim, ambition]; perseguire, portare avanti [ policy]; dedicarsi a [occupation, interest]; proseguire, portare avanti [ studies]to pursue a career — fare carriera (in in)
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84 remain
[rɪ'meɪn]1) (be left) restare2) (stay) [person, memory] restare, rimanere; [problem, doubt] rimanere, sussistere"I remain, yours faithfully" — "distinti saluti"
* * *[rə'mein]1) (to be left: Only two tins of soup remain; Very little remained of the cinema after the fire; A great many things still remain to be done.) restare, rimanere2) (to stay; not to leave: I shall remain here.) restare3) (to continue to be: The problem remains unsolved.) restare•- remains* * *[rɪ'meɪn]1) (be left) restare2) (stay) [person, memory] restare, rimanere; [problem, doubt] rimanere, sussistere"I remain, yours faithfully" — "distinti saluti"
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85 renew
[rɪ'njuː] [AE -'nuː]verbo transitivo rinnovare [efforts, passport, acquaintance]; riprendere [ negotiations]; rinnovare il prestito di [ library book]* * *[rə'nju:]1) (to begin, do, produce etc again: He renewed his efforts; We must renew our attack on drug abuse.) rinnovare2) (to cause (eg a licence) to continue for another or longer period of time: My television licence has to be renewed in October.) rinnovare3) (to make new or fresh or as if new again: The panels on the doors have all been renewed.) rinnovare; sostituire•- renewal* * *[rɪ'njuː] [AE -'nuː]verbo transitivo rinnovare [efforts, passport, acquaintance]; riprendere [ negotiations]; rinnovare il prestito di [ library book] -
86 retain
[rɪ'teɪn]3) (remember) tenere a mente [ fact]4) dir. impegnare (pagando un anticipo sull'onorario) [ lawyer]* * *[rə'tein]1) (to continue to have, use, remember etc; to keep in one's possession, memory etc: He finds it difficult to retain information; These dishes don't retain heat very well.) trattenere2) (to hold (something) back or keep (something) in its place: This wall was built to retain the water from the river in order to prevent flooding.) trattenere* * *[rɪ'teɪn]3) (remember) tenere a mente [ fact]4) dir. impegnare (pagando un anticipo sull'onorario) [ lawyer] -
87 soul
[səʊl]1) (immortal) anima f.to sell one's soul — vendere l'anima (al diavolo); fig. dare l'anima ( to do per fare)
2) (innermost nature) anima f., animo m.3) (essence)4) U (emotional appeal)to lack soul — [ performance] non avere anima; [ building] essere anonimo
6) (person)"many people there?" - "not a soul" — "c'era gente?" - "neanche un'anima"
she's too old, poor soul! — è troppo vecchia, poveretta!
7) mus. (anche soul music) soul m., musica f. soul••it's good for the soul — scherz. fa bene al cuore
to throw oneself into sth. heart and soul — lanciarsi anima e corpo in qcs
* * *[səul]1) (the spirit; the non-physical part of a person, which is often thought to continue in existence after he or she dies: People often discuss whether animals and plants have souls.) anima, spirito2) (a person: She's a wonderful old soul.) anima, persona3) ((of an enterprise etc) the organizer or leader: He is the soul of the whole movement.) anima4) (soul music.) soul•- soulful- soulfully
- soulless
- soul-destroying
- soul music* * *[səʊl]1) (immortal) anima f.to sell one's soul — vendere l'anima (al diavolo); fig. dare l'anima ( to do per fare)
2) (innermost nature) anima f., animo m.3) (essence)4) U (emotional appeal)to lack soul — [ performance] non avere anima; [ building] essere anonimo
6) (person)"many people there?" - "not a soul" — "c'era gente?" - "neanche un'anima"
she's too old, poor soul! — è troppo vecchia, poveretta!
7) mus. (anche soul music) soul m., musica f. soul••it's good for the soul — scherz. fa bene al cuore
to throw oneself into sth. heart and soul — lanciarsi anima e corpo in qcs
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88 tired
['taɪəd] 1. 2.2) (bored)to be tired of sth., of doing — essere stanco di qcs., di fare
to grow o get tired — stancarsi (of di; of doing di fare)
3) (hackneyed) [idea, image] trito4) (worn-out) [ machine] usurato; [clothes, curtains] frusto* * *1) (wearied; exhausted: She was too tired to continue; a tired child.) stanco2) ((with of) no longer interested in; bored with: I'm tired of (answering) stupid questions!) stanco* * *['taɪəd] 1. 2.2) (bored)to be tired of sth., of doing — essere stanco di qcs., di fare
to grow o get tired — stancarsi (of di; of doing di fare)
3) (hackneyed) [idea, image] trito4) (worn-out) [ machine] usurato; [clothes, curtains] frusto
См. также в других словарях:
continue — ● continue nom féminin Consonne dont l émission s accompagne d un écoulement ininterrompu du flux d air phonatoire. (Les constrictives, les approximantes, les latérales, les glides et les nasales sont des continues.) ● continu, continue adjectif… … Encyclopédie Universelle
continue — con·tin·ue vt tin·ued, tinu·ing: to postpone (a legal proceeding) to a future day Merriam Webster’s Dictionary of Law. Merriam Webster. 1996. continue I … Law dictionary
Continue — Con*tin ue, v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Continued}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Continuing}.] [F. continuer, L. continuare, tinuatum, to connect, continue, fr. continuus. See {Continuous}, and cf. {Continuate}.] 1. To remain in a given place or condition; to… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Continue — may refer to: Continue (video gaming), an option to continue a video game after all the player s lives have been lost Continue (album), a 2008 Cantopop album by Pakho Chau Continue (keyword), a programming language keyword See also Continuity… … Wikipedia
continue — [kən tin′yo͞o] vi. continued, continuing [ME continuen < OFr continuer < L continuare, to join, make continuous < continuus, continuous < continere: see CONTAIN] 1. to remain in existence or effect; last; endure [the war continued for … English World dictionary
Continue — Con*tin ue, v. t. 1. To unite; to connect. [Obs.] [1913 Webster] the use of the navel is to continue the infant unto the mother. Sir T. browne. [1913 Webster] 2. To protract or extend in duration; to preserve or persist in; to cease not. [1913… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
continue — CONTINUE. s. f. Durée sans interruption. Il ne s emploie qu adverbialement. A la continue, pour dire, A la longue, à force de continuer. Il travaille d abord avec ardeur, mais à la continue il se ralentit. A la continue il se lasse … Dictionnaire de l'Académie Française 1798
continue — Continue. s. f. Durée sans interruption. Travaillez y sans cesse, la continus l emporte. A la continue, adverbial. A la longue. Il travaille d abord avec ardeur, mais à la continuë il se ralentit. à la continuë il se lasse … Dictionnaire de l'Académie française
continué — continué, ée (kon ti nu é, ée) part. passé. L expédition continuée malgré les obstacles. Un magistrat continué dans ses fonctions. Un ouvrage resté longtemps inachevé et enfin continué … Dictionnaire de la Langue Française d'Émile Littré
continue — continue, last, endure, abide, persist are comparable when meaning to remain indefinitely in existence or in a given condition or course. Continue distinctively refers to the process and stresses its lack of an end rather than the duration of or… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
continue — should not be followed by on (adverb), although this is sometimes found in informal writing: • I continued on down the street A. Bergman, 1975. Use either continue (without on) or a verb of motion (such as go, move, etc.) with on. This use of the … Modern English usage