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1 discover
discover [dɪsˈkʌvər]• to discover that... ( = find out) apprendre que... ; ( = notice) s'apercevoir que... ; ( = understand) comprendre que...* * *[dɪs'kʌvə(r)]transitive verb ( all contexts) découvrir -
2 discover
transitive verbentdecken; (by search) herausfinden* * *1) (to find by chance, especially for the first time: Columbus discovered America; Marie Curie discovered radium.) entdecken2) (to find out: Try to discover what's going on!) ausfindig machen, herausfinden•- academic.ru/20907/discovery">discovery* * *dis·cov·er[dɪˈskʌvəʳ, AM -ɚ]vt1. (find out)▪ to \discover sth etw herausfinden [o entdecken] [o feststellen]▪ to \discover that... herausfinden [o entdecken], dass...2. (find first)▪ to \discover sb jdn entdecken [o berühmt machen3. (find)▪ to \discover sth etw finden [o ausfindig machen]* * *[dɪs'kʌvə(r)]vtentdecken; culprit finden; secret, truth herausfinden; cause feststellen; (after search) house, book ausfindig machen, entdecken; (= notice) mistake, loss feststellen, bemerkendid you ever discover who...? — haben Sie jemals herausgefunden, wer...?
* * *discover [dıˈskʌvə(r)] v/t1. Land, auch einen Künstler etc entdecken2. wahrnehmen, erspähen, entdecken3. fig entdecken, (heraus)finden, (plötzlich) erkennen, feststellen:discover sb to be sth feststellen, dass jemand etwas ist4. fig enthüllen, aufdecken* * *transitive verbentdecken; (by search) herausfinden* * *v.entdecken v. -
3 discover
[dɪs'kʌvə]v2) обнаруживать, раскрывать- discover the truth- discover the theft
- discover that..3) узнавать, выяснять•ASSOCIATIONS AND IMAGERY:Действие глагола to discover сравнимо с тщательным раскапыванием земли в поисках чего-либо, в данном случае, каких-либо фактов, новых или неожиданных сведений, что явно выражено в словосочетаниях фигурально передающих значение глагола to discover - "найти, открывать, обнаруживать": let me know if you dig up anything about it дай мне знать, если ты что-нибудь об этом раскопаешь; I unearthed some useful fact and figures я раскопал несколько полезных фактов и цифр; the facts only came to light after a long investigation факты увидели свет только после длительных изысканий; we left no stone unturned in our search for the truth мы камня на камне не оставили в поисках истины; the book is a mine/goldmine of information книга прямо кладезь информации; you need to put in a lot of spadework тебе еще предстоит много черновой работы/немало покопаться; it took me a long time to find it, but I finally struck gold/oil мне потребовалось много времени, чтобы найти это, но в конце концов я на него наткнулся; they racked up a lot of scandal они раскопали грандиозный скандалUSAGE:(1.) Глагол to discover 1. в основном употребляется в официальной письменной речи. (2.) Русские обнаружить, найти соответствуют английским глаголам to discover и to find. B утвердительных и вопросительных предложениях они взаимозаменимы: she found/discovered the drawing on her desk она обнаружила рисунок на своем столе. В отрицательных предложениях глагол to discover в этом значении не употребляется. -
4 discover
1) (to find by chance, especially for the first time: Columbus discovered America; Marie Curie discovered radium.) descubrir2) (to find out: Try to discover what's going on!) descubrir•discover vb descubrirwho discovered Australia? ¿quién descubrió Australia?tr[dɪ'skʌvəSMALLr/SMALL]1 (find - gen) descubrir; (mistake, loss, fact) descubrir, darse cuenta de; (missing object, person) encontrar, hallar2 (find out) descubrir, enterarse de■ did you discover what happened at the end? ¿descubriste qué pasó al final?discover [dɪs'kʌvər] vt: descubrirv.• descubrir v.• desnudar v.• hallar v.• sorprender v.dɪs'kʌvər, dɪs'kʌvə(r)a) ( find) \<\<planet/cure\>\> descubrir*; \<\<error\>\> descubrir*, darse* cuenta deb) ( find out) \<\<reason/solution/culprit\>\> descubrir*, hallarc) \<\<talent/star\>\> descubrir*[dɪs'kʌvǝ(r)]VT2) (=notice) [+ loss, mistake] darse cuenta de* * *[dɪs'kʌvər, dɪs'kʌvə(r)]a) ( find) \<\<planet/cure\>\> descubrir*; \<\<error\>\> descubrir*, darse* cuenta deb) ( find out) \<\<reason/solution/culprit\>\> descubrir*, hallarc) \<\<talent/star\>\> descubrir* -
5 search out
разыскивать глагол: -
6 search of a person
юр. обыск человекаA search of a person is conducted to discover weapon or evidence or to determine identity. — Обыск человека проводится, чтобы обнаружить оружие или улику или установить личность.
Англо-русский универсальный дополнительный практический переводческий словарь И. Мостицкого > search of a person
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7 discover **** dis·cov·er vt
[dɪs'kʌvə(r)] -
8 search-and-discover approach
Компьютерная техника: метод поиска и обнаруженияУниверсальный англо-русский словарь > search-and-discover approach
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9 search-and-discover approach
English-Russian dictionary of computer science > search-and-discover approach
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10 affidavit of diligent search and inquiry
юр. письменное показание о тщательно проведенном поиске и запросеI have made diligent search and inquiry to discover the name and current residence of Respondent.
Англо-русский универсальный дополнительный практический переводческий словарь И. Мостицкого > affidavit of diligent search and inquiry
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11 find
1. transitive verb,1) (get possession of by chance) finden; (come across unexpectedly) entdeckenfind that... — herausfinden od. entdecken, dass...
he was found dead/injured — er wurde tot/verletzt aufgefunden
2) (obtain) finden [Zustimmung, Erleichterung, Trost, Gegenliebe]have found one's feet — (be able to walk) laufen können; (be able to act by oneself) auf eigenen Füßen stehen
3) (recognize as present) sehen [Veranlassung, Schwierigkeit]; (acknowledge or discover to be) findenfind no difficulty in doing something — etwas nicht schwierig finden
find somebody in/out — jemanden antreffen/nicht antreffen
find somebody/something to be... — feststellen, dass jemand/etwas... ist/war
do you find him easy to get on with? — finden Sie, dass sich gut mit ihm auskommen lässt?
she finds it hard to come to terms with his death — es fällt ihr schwer, sich mit seinem Tod abzufinden
find something necessary — etwas für nötig befinden od. erachten
find something/somebody to be... — herausfinden, dass etwas/jemand... ist/war
you will find [that]... — Sie werden sehen od. feststellen, dass...
find [again] — wieder finden
6) (succeed in obtaining) finden [Zeit, Mittel und Wege, Worte]; auftreiben [Geld, Gegenstand]; aufbringen [Kraft, Energie]find it in oneself or one's heart to do something — es über sich od. übers Herz bringen, etwas zu tun
7) (ascertain by study or calculation or inquiry) findenfind what time the train leaves — herausfinden, wann der Zug [ab]fährt
8) (supply) besorgen2. nounfind somebody something or something for somebody — jemanden mit etwas versorgen
1) Fund, dermake a find/two finds — fündig/zweimal fündig werden
2) (person) Entdeckung, diePhrasal Verbs:- academic.ru/119966/find_for">find for- find out* * *1. past tense, past participle - found; verb1) (to come upon or meet with accidentally or after searching: Look what I've found!) finden2) (to discover: I found that I couldn't do the work.) feststellen2. noun(something found, especially something of value or interest: That old book is quite a find!) der Fund- find one's feet- find out* * *[faɪnd]I. nII. vt<found, found>1. (chance upon, come across)▪ to \find oneself somewhere:when we woke up we found ourselves in Calais als wir aufwachten, befanden wir uns in Calaisto \find happiness with sb mit jdm glücklich werdento \find support Unterstützung finden2. (track down, search for)▪ to \find sth/sb etw/jdn findenthe bullet found its mark die Kugel fand ihr ZielI wish I could \find more time to do the reading ich wünschte, ich hätte mehr Zeit für die Lektüreshe found her boyfriend a job sie besorgte ihrem Freund eine Stelleto \find excuses Ausreden findento \find a place/town/village on a map eine Stelle/eine Stadt/ein Dorf auf einer Karte findento \find a replacement for sb/sth Ersatz für jdn/etw findento \find the strength [to do sth] die Kraft finden[, etw zu tun]to \find the truth die Wahrheit finden▪ to \find what/where/who... herausfinden, was/wo/wer...4. MATH5. (experience)do you also \find Clive to be a nuisance? findest du auch, dass Clive total lästig ist?Linda found living in Buenos Aires a fascinating experience für Linda war es eine faszinierende Erfahrung, in Buenos Aires zu leben▪ to \find sb/sth... jdn/etw... [auf]findenshe was found unconscious sie wurde bewusstlos aufgefundenone day I found myself homeless eines Tages war ich plötzlich obdachlosto \find oneself alone auf einmal alleine sein7. (ascertain, discover)you will \find that I am right Sie werden schon sehen, dass ich Recht habeI eventually found her reading a newspaper in the library ich fand sie schließlich Zeitung lesend in der Bibliothek8. (exist)▪ to \find sth etw [vor]findenyou won't \find many people cycling to work in New York du wirst nicht viele Leute finden, die in New York mit dem Rad zur Arbeit fahren9.▶ to \find fault with sb/sth an jdm/etw etwas auszusetzen haben▶ to \find one's feet Fuß fassen▶ to \find it in oneself [or one's heart] to do sth es fertigbringen, etw zu tun▶ to \find one's tongue die Sprache wiederfindenIII. vi<found, found>▪ to \find against sb/sth gegen jdn/etw entscheiden* * *[faɪnd] vb: pret, ptp found1. vt1) finden; (COMPUT: search command) suchenhoping this letter finds you in good health — in der Hoffnung, dass Sie gesund sind
to find pleasure in sth — Freude an etw (dat)
to find comfort in sth — Trost in etw (dat) finden
we left everything as we found it — wir haben alles so gelassen, wie wir es vorgefunden haben
he was found dead in bed — er wurde tot im Bett aufgefunden
I can never find anything to say to him — ich weiß nie, was ich zu ihm sagen soll
where am I going to find the money/time? — wo nehme ich nur das Geld/die Zeit her?
you must take us as you find us — Sie müssen uns so nehmen, wie wir sind
if you can find it in you to... —
find next ( Comput: search command ) — weitersuchen
2) (= supply) besorgen (sb sth jdm etw)go and find me a needle — hol mir doch mal eine Nadel
did you find him what he wanted? — haben Sie bekommen, was er wollte?
we'll have to find him a desk/secretary — wir müssen einen Schreibtisch/eine Sekretärin für ihn finden
3) (= discover, ascertain) feststellen; cause herausfindenwe found the car wouldn't start —
you will find that I am right — Sie werden sehen, dass ich recht habe
it has been found that this is so — es hat sich herausgestellt, dass es so ist
4) (= consider to be) findenI don't find it easy to tell you this — es fällt mir nicht leicht, Ihnen das zu sagen
he always found languages easy/hard — ihm fielen Sprachen immer leicht/schwer
I found all the questions easy —
did you find her a good worker? — fanden Sie, dass sie gut arbeitet?
5)I found myself thinking that... — ich ertappte mich bei dem Gedanken, dass...
I find myself in an impossible situation/in financial difficulties — ich befinde mich in einer unmöglichen Situation/in finanziellen Schwierigkeiten
he awoke to find himself in prison/hospital —
quite by accident I found myself in the park I found myself quite able to deal with it — ganz zufällig fand ich mich im Park wieder ich stellte fest, dass ich durchaus fähig war, damit zurechtzukommen
6)this flower is found all over England —
you don't find bears here any more — man findet hier keine Bären mehr, hier gibt es keine Bären mehr
do you know where there is a florist's to be found? — wissen Sie, wo hier ein Blumenladen ist?
7)8) (JUR)to find sb guilty/not guilty — jdn für schuldig/nicht schuldig befinden, jdn schuldig sprechen/freisprechen
how do you find the accused? —
the court has found that... — das Gericht hat befunden, dass...
2. vi (JUR)to find for/against the accused — den Angeklagten freisprechen/verurteilen, für/gegen den Angeklagten entscheiden
3. nFund m* * *find [faınd]A s Fund m, Entdeckung f:a) Finden n, Entdecken nB v/t prät und pperf found [faʊnd]1. finden:he was found murdered er wurde ermordet aufgefunden2. finden, (an)treffen, stoßen auf (akk):be found zu finden sein, vorkommen;we found him in wir trafen ihn zu Hause an;find a good reception eine gute Aufnahme finden;find sth empty etwas leer vorfinden3. sehen, bemerken, feststellen, entdecken, (heraus)finden:I find it easy ich finde es leicht (doing, to do zu tun);find one’s way den Weg finden (to nach, zu), sich zurechtfinden (in in dat);I’ll find out my way all right ich finde schon allein hinaus;find o.s. sich finden, zu sich selbst finden, seine Fähigkeiten erkennen, sich voll entfalten ( → B 7);I found myself surrounded ich sah oder fand mich umzingelt;I found myself telling a lie ich ertappte mich bei einer Lüge5. finden:a) beschaffen, auftreibenb) erlangen, sich etwas verschaffenc) Zeit etc aufbringenin mit), jemandem etwas verschaffen, stellen, liefern:well found in clothes mit Kleidung gut ausgestattet;all found freie Station, freie Unterkunft und Verpflegung;find o.s. sich selbst versorgen ( → B 3)8. find outa) etwas entdecken, herausfinden, -bekommen, in Erfahrung bringen,b) jemanden ertappen,C v/i1. find out es herausfinden:I won’t tell you, you must find out for yourself;how did you find out about him? wie bist du ihm auf die Schliche gekommen?a) (Zivilprozess) den Beklagten verurteilen, der Klage stattgeben,b) (Strafprozess) den Angeklagten verurteilen;a) (Zivilprozess) zugunsten des Beklagten entscheiden, die Klage abweisen,b) (Strafprozess) den Angeklagten freisprechen* * *1. transitive verb,1) (get possession of by chance) finden; (come across unexpectedly) entdeckenfind that... — herausfinden od. entdecken, dass...
he was found dead/injured — er wurde tot/verletzt aufgefunden
2) (obtain) finden [Zustimmung, Erleichterung, Trost, Gegenliebe]have found one's feet — (be able to walk) laufen können; (be able to act by oneself) auf eigenen Füßen stehen
3) (recognize as present) sehen [Veranlassung, Schwierigkeit]; (acknowledge or discover to be) findenfind somebody in/out — jemanden antreffen/nicht antreffen
find somebody/something to be... — feststellen, dass jemand/etwas... ist/war
4) (discover by trial or experience to be or do) für... haltendo you find him easy to get on with? — finden Sie, dass sich gut mit ihm auskommen lässt?
she finds it hard to come to terms with his death — es fällt ihr schwer, sich mit seinem Tod abzufinden
find something necessary — etwas für nötig befinden od. erachten
find something/somebody to be... — herausfinden, dass etwas/jemand... ist/war
you will find [that]... — Sie werden sehen od. feststellen, dass...
5) (discover by search) findenfind [again] — wieder finden
6) (succeed in obtaining) finden [Zeit, Mittel und Wege, Worte]; auftreiben [Geld, Gegenstand]; aufbringen [Kraft, Energie]find it in oneself or one's heart to do something — es über sich od. übers Herz bringen, etwas zu tun
find what time the train leaves — herausfinden, wann der Zug [ab]fährt
8) (supply) besorgen2. nounfind somebody something or something for somebody — jemanden mit etwas versorgen
1) Fund, dermake a find/two finds — fündig/zweimal fündig werden
2) (person) Entdeckung, diePhrasal Verbs:- find for- find out* * *n.Fund -e m. v.(§ p.,p.p.: found)= befinden v.finden v.(§ p.,pp.: fand, gefunden)vorfinden v. -
12 catch up
vi1) ( reach person ahead)to \catch up up with sb jdn einholen;( discover after search) jdn ausfindig machen;she's \catch uping up! sie holt auf!2) ( complete)( make up lost time) etw aufarbeiten;to \catch up up on one's sleep versäumten Schlaf nachholen3) ( equal the standard)to \catch up up with sth etw einholen vt (Brit, Aus)to \catch up sb up jdn später treffen;I'll \catch up you up later ich komme später nach -
13 Science
It is a common notion, or at least it is implied in many common modes of speech, that the thoughts, feelings, and actions of sentient beings are not a subject of science.... This notion seems to involve some confusion of ideas, which it is necessary to begin by clearing up. Any facts are fitted, in themselves, to be a subject of science, which follow one another according to constant laws; although those laws may not have been discovered, nor even to be discoverable by our existing resources. (Mill, 1900, B. VI, Chap. 3, Sec. 1)One class of natural philosophers has always a tendency to combine the phenomena and to discover their analogies; another class, on the contrary, employs all its efforts in showing the disparities of things. Both tendencies are necessary for the perfection of science, the one for its progress, the other for its correctness. The philosophers of the first of these classes are guided by the sense of unity throughout nature; the philosophers of the second have their minds more directed towards the certainty of our knowledge. The one are absorbed in search of principles, and neglect often the peculiarities, and not seldom the strictness of demonstration; the other consider the science only as the investigation of facts, but in their laudable zeal they often lose sight of the harmony of the whole, which is the character of truth. Those who look for the stamp of divinity on every thing around them, consider the opposite pursuits as ignoble and even as irreligious; while those who are engaged in the search after truth, look upon the other as unphilosophical enthusiasts, and perhaps as phantastical contemners of truth.... This conflict of opinions keeps science alive, and promotes it by an oscillatory progress. (Oersted, 1920, p. 352)Most of the fundamental ideas of science are essentially simple, and may, as a rule, be expressed in a language comprehensible to everyone. (Einstein & Infeld, 1938, p. 27)A new scientific truth does not triumph by convincing its opponents and making them see the light, but rather because its opponents eventually die, and a new generation grows up that is familiar with it. (Planck, 1949, pp. 33-34)[Original quotation: "Eine neue wissenschaftliche Wahrheit pflegt sich nicht in der Weise durchzusetzen, dass ihre Gegner ueberzeugt werden und sich as belehrt erklaeren, sondern vielmehr dadurch, dass die Gegner allmaehlich aussterben und dass die heranwachsende Generation von vornherein mit der Wahrheit vertraut gemacht ist." (Planck, 1990, p. 15)]I had always looked upon the search for the absolute as the noblest and most worth while task of science. (Planck, 1949, p. 46)If you cannot-in the long run-tell everyone what you have been doing, your doing has been worthless. (SchroЁdinger, 1951, pp. 7-8)Even for the physicist the description in plain language will be a criterion of the degree of understanding that has been reached. (Heisenberg, 1958, p. 168)The old scientific ideal of episteґmeґ-of absolutely certain, demonstrable knowledge-has proved to be an idol. The demand for scientific objectivity makes it inevitable that every scientific statement must remain tentative forever. It may indeed be corroborated, but every corroboration is relative to other statements which, again, are tentative. Only in our subjective experiences of conviction, in our subjective faith, can we be "absolutely certain." (Popper, 1959, p. 280)The layman, taught to revere scientists for their absolute respect for the observed facts, and for the judiciously detached and purely provisional manner in which they hold scientific theories (always ready to abandon a theory at the sight of any contradictory evidence) might well have thought that, at Miller's announcement of this overwhelming evidence of a "positive effect" [indicating that the speed of light is not independent from the motion of the observer, as Einstein's theory of relativity demands] in his presidential address to the American Physical Society on December 29th, 1925, his audience would have instantly abandoned the theory of relativity. Or, at the very least, that scientists-wont to look down from the pinnacle of their intellectual humility upon the rest of dogmatic mankind-might suspend judgment in this matter until Miller's results could be accounted for without impairing the theory of relativity. But no: by that time they had so well closed their minds to any suggestion which threatened the new rationality achieved by Einstein's world-picture, that it was almost impossible for them to think again in different terms. Little attention was paid to the experiments, the evidence being set aside in the hope that it would one day turn out to be wrong. (Polanyi, 1958, pp. 12-13)The practice of normal science depends on the ability, acquired from examplars, to group objects and situations into similarity sets which are primitive in the sense that the grouping is done without an answer to the question, "Similar with respect to what?" (Kuhn, 1970, p. 200)Science in general... does not consist in collecting what we already know and arranging it in this or that kind of pattern. It consists in fastening upon something we do not know, and trying to discover it. (Collingwood, 1972, p. 9)Scientific fields emerge as the concerns of scientists congeal around various phenomena. Sciences are not defined, they are recognized. (Newell, 1973a, p. 1)This is often the way it is in physics-our mistake is not that we take our theories too seriously, but that we do not take them seriously enough. I do not think it is possible really to understand the successes of science without understanding how hard it is-how easy it is to be led astray, how difficult it is to know at any time what is the next thing to be done. (Weinberg, 1977, p. 49)Science is wonderful at destroying metaphysical answers, but incapable of providing substitute ones. Science takes away foundations without providing a replacement. Whether we want to be there or not, science has put us in a position of having to live without foundations. It was shocking when Nietzsche said this, but today it is commonplace; our historical position-and no end to it is in sight-is that of having to philosophize without "foundations." (Putnam, 1987, p. 29)Historical dictionary of quotations in cognitive science > Science
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14 find
I [faɪnd]nome scoperta f.II 1. [faɪnd]verbo transitivo (pass., p.pass. found)1) (discover) trovare, ritrovare [thing, person]to find one's o the way trovare la strada; to find one's way out of riuscire ad uscire da [building, forest]; to find one's own way home ritrovare la strada di casa; to find sb. doing scoprire o sorprendere qcn. a fare; to find that — constatare o rendersi conto che
2) (get) trovare [job, car, seat, solution, time, energy, money]to find sth. for sb. o to find sb. sth. (to do) — trovare qcs. (da fare) a qcn
3) (encounter) trovare [word, term]; incontrare, trovare [ species]4) (consider) trovare, considerareto find sb. a bore — trovare qcn. noioso
to find sb., sth. to be — trovare che qcn., qcs. sia
to find sth. easy, hard to do — trovare qcs. facile, difficile da fare
to find it easy, difficult to do — trovare (che sia) facile, difficile fare
5) (experience) provare [pleasure, satisfaction]; trovare [ comfort]6) (reach)to find its mark, its target — colpire il bersaglio, andare a segno
to find its way to o into — riuscire a raggiungere [bin, area]
7) dir.to find sb. guilty, not guilty — dichiarare qcn. colpevole, innocente
9) inform. trovare2.verbo intransitivo (pass., p.pass. found) dir.3.to find for, against sb. — pronunciarsi a favore, contro qcn
2) (discover one's vocation) scoprire la propria vocazione•- find out••to find one's feet — cavarsela o camminare con le proprie gambe
to take sb. as one finds him, her — prendere qcn. così com'è
* * *1. past tense, past participle - found; verb1) (to come upon or meet with accidentally or after searching: Look what I've found!) trovare2) (to discover: I found that I couldn't do the work.) scoprire3) (to consider; to think (something) to be: I found the British weather very cold.) trovare2. noun(something found, especially something of value or interest: That old book is quite a find!) scoperta, ritrovamento- find out* * *find /faɪnd/n.scoperta; ritrovamento; oggetto trovato: This book [restaurant] is a real find, questo libro [ristorante] è una grande scoperta● a sure find, ( caccia) un posto dove si è sicuri di trovare la volpe; un buon appostamento; ( anche) persona (o cosa) che si può star certi di trovare.♦ (to) find /faɪnd/(pass. e p. p. found)A v. t.1 trovare; scoprire; ritrovare; reperire; rinvenire: Have you found your wallet?, hai ritrovato il portafoglio?; I can't find my ring, non trovo il mio anello; to find a job, trovare lavoro; impiegarsi; sistemarsi; to find happiness, trovare la felicità; to find oil, scoprire il petrolio; He was found after a long search, fu ritrovato dopo lunghe ricerche2 accorgersi; rendersi conto; scoprire; trovare: I find that I have been mistaken, mi accorgo che avevo torto (o mi sbagliavo); I find it difficult to believe him, trovo difficile credergli; DIALOGO → - Discussing university- I don't find it that easy to make friends quickly, non è facile per me fare amicizia rapidamente3 trovare; giudicare; reputare; stimare: I find the terms reasonable, trovo (o giudico) ragionevoli le condizioni; DIALOGO → - Talking about children- How's he finding his new school?, cosa ne pensa della scuola nuova?4 provvedere; provvedersi di; procurarsi: to find one's own tools, procurarsi gli attrezzi da lavoro5 (leg.) giudicare; dichiarare; riconoscere; emettere ( una sentenza o un verdetto): The jury found him guilty, la giuria lo ha dichiarato colpevoleB v. i.● (comput.) find and replace, trova e sostituisci ( istruzione) □ ( anche fig.) to find one's bearings, orientarsi □ to find fault with, trovar da ridire su; criticare □ to find favour with sb., incontrare il favore (o la simpatia) di q. □ to find one's feet, reggersi in piedi; riuscire a camminare (da solo); (fig.) ambientarsi; cavarsela □ to find it in one's heart, sentirsela; avere l'animo (di): I cannot find it in my heart to blame him, non me la sento di biasimarlo □ ( di proiettile) to find its mark, colpire il bersaglio; andare a segno □ to find mercy in sb., trovare compassione in q. □ to find oneself, trovarsi; ritrovarsi; ( anche) scoprirsi, accorgersi; scoprire la propria vocazione: He'll soon find himself in prison, si ritroverà presto in prigione; She found herself with plenty of spare time, si è ritrovata con parecchio tempo libero; I found myself agreeing with him, mi resi conto che ero d'accordo con lui □ to find one's place ( in a book), trovare il segno (in un libro) □ to find pleasure in st., provare piacere in qc. □ to find one's tongue, ritrovare la voce; trovare il coraggio di parlare □ ( anche fig.) to find one's way, trovare la strada.* * *I [faɪnd]nome scoperta f.II 1. [faɪnd]verbo transitivo (pass., p.pass. found)1) (discover) trovare, ritrovare [thing, person]to find one's o the way trovare la strada; to find one's way out of riuscire ad uscire da [building, forest]; to find one's own way home ritrovare la strada di casa; to find sb. doing scoprire o sorprendere qcn. a fare; to find that — constatare o rendersi conto che
2) (get) trovare [job, car, seat, solution, time, energy, money]to find sth. for sb. o to find sb. sth. (to do) — trovare qcs. (da fare) a qcn
3) (encounter) trovare [word, term]; incontrare, trovare [ species]4) (consider) trovare, considerareto find sb. a bore — trovare qcn. noioso
to find sb., sth. to be — trovare che qcn., qcs. sia
to find sth. easy, hard to do — trovare qcs. facile, difficile da fare
to find it easy, difficult to do — trovare (che sia) facile, difficile fare
5) (experience) provare [pleasure, satisfaction]; trovare [ comfort]6) (reach)to find its mark, its target — colpire il bersaglio, andare a segno
to find its way to o into — riuscire a raggiungere [bin, area]
7) dir.to find sb. guilty, not guilty — dichiarare qcn. colpevole, innocente
9) inform. trovare2.verbo intransitivo (pass., p.pass. found) dir.3.to find for, against sb. — pronunciarsi a favore, contro qcn
2) (discover one's vocation) scoprire la propria vocazione•- find out••to find one's feet — cavarsela o camminare con le proprie gambe
to take sb. as one finds him, her — prendere qcn. così com'è
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15 descubrir
descubrir ( conjugate descubrir) verbo transitivo 1 ‹tierras/oro/artista› to discover 2 ‹complot/engaño› to uncover; ‹ fraude› to detect 3
descubrir verbo transitivo
1 (algo oculto o ignorado) to discover (un plan secreto) to uncover (oro, petróleo, etc) to find
2 (algo tapado) to uncover, (una placa conmemorativa) to unveil
3 (enterarse) to find out: descubrió que no era hija de su padre, she found out that she wasn't her father's daughter
4 (revelar, manifestar) to give away ' descubrir' also found in these entries: Spanish: adivinar - delatar - desvelar - encontrarse - hallar - instigación - sacar - coger - destapar - encontrar English: bare - bean - call - detect - dig out - discover - expose - find - find out - search out - see - show up - smell out - strike - uncover - unveil - cat - divine - ferret - rediscover - spot - spy - trace - unearth -
16 rummage
рыться глагол: имя существительное:таможенный досмотр (rummage, custom house examination)обыск (search, rummage) -
17 dig
diɡ
1. present participle - digging; verb1) (to turn up (earth) with a spade etc: to dig the garden.) cavar2) (to make (a hole) in this way: The child dug a tunnel in the sand.) cavar3) (to poke: He dug his brother in the ribs with his elbow.) golpear
2. noun(a poke: a dig in the ribs; I knew that his remarks about women drivers were a dig at me (= a joke directed at me).) puñetazo, codazo, golpe- digger- dig out
- dig up
dig vb cavartr[dɪg]1 (poke, prod) codazo3 (by archaeologists) excavación nombre femenino1 (ground, garden) cavar (en); (by machine - tunnel, trench) excavar; (by hand - hole) hacer, cavar; (potatoes etc) sacar; (site) excavar2 (thrust, jab, press) clavar, hincar1 (person - by hand) cavar; (- by machine) excavar; (animal) escarbar; (on site) hacer excavaciones, excavar2 (cut) clavarse3 (mine - for oil) hacer prospecciones de; (- for minerals) extraer1 SMALLBRITISH ENGLISH/SMALL (lodgings) alojamiento m sing, pensión f sing; (room) habitación f sing alquilada\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto be dug in (settled) estar instalado,-ato dig deep into one's pockets (willingly) contribuir generosamente 2 (reluctantly) rascarse el bolsilloto dig oneself in SMALLMILITARY/SMALL atrincherarseto dig oneself into a hole meterse en un apuroto dig one's heels in mantenerse en sus treceto dig one's own grave cavarse su propia tumbato dig somebody in the ribs darle un codazo a alguiento dig (up) (the) dirt on somebody sacarle los trapos sucios a relucir a alguiento have/take/make a dig at somebody meterse con alguien1) : cavar, excavarto dig a hole: cavar un hoyo2) extract: sacarto dig up potatoes: sacar papas del suelo3) poke, thrust: clavar, hincarhe dug me in the ribs: me dio un codazo en las costillas4)to dig up discover: descubrir, sacar a luzdig vi: cavar, excavardig n1) poke: codazo m2) gibe: pulla f3) excavation: excavación fn.• empujón s.m.• excavación s.f.• pulla s.f.• rehilete s.m.v.(§ p.,p.p.: dug) = cavar v.• empujar v.• excavar v.
I
1. dɪg1)a) \<\<ground\>\> cavar; \<\<holeench\>\> ( by hand) cavar; ( by machine) excavarb) \<\<potatoes\>\> sacar*c) ( Archeol) excavar2) (jab, thrust)to dig somebody in the ribs — darle* or (fam) pegarle* un codazo en las costillas a alguien
2.
vi1)a) ( excavate - by hand) cavar; (- by machine) excavar; \<\<dog\>\> escarbarto dig for oil — hacer* prospecciones petrolíferas
b) ( Archeol) hacer* excavaciones, excavar2) ( search) buscar*•Phrasal Verbs:- dig in- dig into- dig out- dig up
II
1) ( Archeol) excavación f2) ( jab - with elbow) codazo m; (- with pin) pinchazo mto give somebody a dig in the ribs — darle* un codazo en las costillas a alguien
3) ( critical remark) (colloq) pulla f; ( hint) indirecta fto have a dig at somebody/something — meterse con alguien/algo
[dɪɡ] (vb: pt, pp dug)to live in digs — vivir en una habitación alquilada, una pensión etc
1. N1) (Archeol) excavación f3) * (=taunt) indirecta f, pulla fto have a dig at sb — lanzar una indirecta or una pulla a algn
2. VT1) [+ hole] [person] cavar, excavar; [machine] excavar; [animal] cavar, escarbar- dig one's own grave2) (=break up) [+ ground] remover3) (=cultivate) [+ garden] cultivar, cavar en5) (=extract) [+ coal] extraer, sacar6) (=thrust)to dig sth into sth — clavar algo en algo, hundir algo en algo
7) (=prod) empujar; (with elbow) dar un codazo a8) (esp US)† * (=enjoy)I don't dig jazz — no me gusta el jazz, el jazz no me dice nada
dig this! — ¡mira esto!
3. VI2) (=search) ahondarto dig deeper into a subject — ahondar or profundizar en un tema
- dig deep into one's pocket- dig in- dig into- dig out- dig over- dig up* * *
I
1. [dɪg]1)a) \<\<ground\>\> cavar; \<\<hole/trench\>\> ( by hand) cavar; ( by machine) excavarb) \<\<potatoes\>\> sacar*c) ( Archeol) excavar2) (jab, thrust)to dig somebody in the ribs — darle* or (fam) pegarle* un codazo en las costillas a alguien
2.
vi1)a) ( excavate - by hand) cavar; (- by machine) excavar; \<\<dog\>\> escarbarto dig for oil — hacer* prospecciones petrolíferas
b) ( Archeol) hacer* excavaciones, excavar2) ( search) buscar*•Phrasal Verbs:- dig in- dig into- dig out- dig up
II
1) ( Archeol) excavación f2) ( jab - with elbow) codazo m; (- with pin) pinchazo mto give somebody a dig in the ribs — darle* un codazo en las costillas a alguien
3) ( critical remark) (colloq) pulla f; ( hint) indirecta fto have a dig at somebody/something — meterse con alguien/algo
to live in digs — vivir en una habitación alquilada, una pensión etc
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18 inquire
1. intransitive verb2) (seek information) sich erkundigen (about, after nach, of bei)2. transitive verbsich erkundigen nach, fragen nach [Weg, Namen]* * *2) ((with about) to ask for information about: They inquired about trains to London.) sich erkundigen3) ((with after) to ask for information about the state of (eg a person's health): He enquired after her mother.) sich erkundigen4) ((with for) to ask to see or talk to (a person): Someone rang up inquiring for you, but you were out.) fragen5) ((with for) to ask for (goods in a shop etc): Several people have been inquiring for the new catalogue.) fragen6) ((with into) to try to discover the facts of: The police are inquiring into the matter.) untersuchen•- academic.ru/38347/inquiry">inquiry- make inquiries* * *in·quire* * *[In'kwaɪə(r)]1. vtthe time, a name, the way sich erkundigen nach, fragen nachhe inquired what/whether/when etc... — er erkundigte sich or fragte, was/ob/wann etc...
2. visich erkundigen (about nach), fragen (about nach, wegen)"inquire within" — "Näheres im Geschäft"
* * *inquire [ınˈkwaıə(r)]of sb bei jemandem)B v/iafter, for nach;inquire after sb sich nach jemandem oder jemandes Befinden erkundigen;“inquire within” „Näheres im Hause (zu erfragen)“2. Untersuchungen anstellen, nachforschen:* * *1. intransitive verb1) (make search) Untersuchungen anstellen ( into über + Akk.)2) (seek information) sich erkundigen (about, after nach, of bei)2. transitive verbsich erkundigen nach, fragen nach [Weg, Namen]* * *(about, after) v.sich erkundigen (nach) v. v.abfragen v.erfragen v.erkundigen v.nachforschen v. -
19 raise
поднимать имя существительное:восстающая выработка (raise, rise)глагол:увеличивать ставку (raise, sweeten)выкормить (bring up, rear, raise) -
20 ferret out
phr v вынюхивать, разведывать, выпытывать, разузнаватьСинонимический ряд:1. find (verb) come across; come upon; discover; find; happen upon; locate; position; stumble on2. seek (verb) cast about; hunt; quest; search for; search out; seek
- 1
- 2
См. также в других словарях:
discover by search — index locate Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
Search engine submission — is how a webmaster submits a web site directly to a search engine. While Search Engine Submission is often seen as a way to promote a web site, it generally is not necessary. Because the major search engines like Google, Yahoo, and MSN use… … Wikipedia
search — I verb chase after, closely examine, comb, delve, examine, examine by inspection, explore, ferret, follow the trail of, go through, hunt, indagate, inquire into, inspect, investigate, look into, look over, look through, probe, pry into, pursue,… … Law dictionary
search\ one's\ heart — • search one s heart • search one s soul v. phr. formal To study your reasons and acts; try to discover if you have been fair and honest. The teacher searched his heart trying to decide if he had been unfair in failing Tom … Словарь американских идиом
search\ one's\ soul — • search one s heart • search one s soul v. phr. formal To study your reasons and acts; try to discover if you have been fair and honest. The teacher searched his heart trying to decide if he had been unfair in failing Tom … Словарь американских идиом
discover — ► VERB 1) find unexpectedly or in the course of a search. 2) become aware of (a fact or situation). 3) be the first to find or observe (a place, substance, or scientific phenomenon). DERIVATIVES discoverable adjective discoverer noun … English terms dictionary
Search engine optimization — SEO redirects here. For other uses, see SEO (disambiguation). Internet marketing … Wikipedia
search — searchable, adj. searchableness, n. searcher, n. /serrch/, v.t. 1. to go or look through (a place, area, etc.) carefully in order to find something missing or lost: They searched the woods for the missing child. I searched the desk for the letter … Universalium
search — I. verb Etymology: Middle English cerchen, from Anglo French cercher, sercher to travel about, investigate, search, from Late Latin circare to go about, from Latin circum round about more at circum Date: 14th century transitive verb 1. to look… … New Collegiate Dictionary
Search for extraterrestrial intelligence — The search for extraterrestrial intelligence is sometimes abbreviated as SETI. For other uses, see SETI (disambiguation). Screen shot of the screensaver for SETI@home, a distributed computing project in which volunteers donate idle computer power … Wikipedia
discover */*/*/ — UK [dɪˈskʌvə(r)] / US [dɪˈskʌvər] verb [transitive] Word forms discover : present tense I/you/we/they discover he/she/it discovers present participle discovering past tense discovered past participle discovered Metaphor: Discovering things such… … English dictionary