-
1 materialize
1) (to take solid or bodily form: The figure materialized as we watched with astonishment.) bli til virkelighet, stige fram2) ((of something expected or hoped for) to happen: I don't think her plans will materialize.) bli noe avmaterialisereverb \/məˈtɪərɪəlaɪz\/ eller materialise1) materialisere (seg), legemliggjøres2) ( overført) ta fast form, virkeliggjøre(s), realisere(s), gå i oppfyllelse3) åpenbare seg, vise seg, dukke opp4) ( sjelden) få til å materialisere seg, fremkalle -
2 materialise
1) (to take solid or bodily form: The figure materialized as we watched with astonishment.) bli til virkelighet, stige fram2) ((of something expected or hoped for) to happen: I don't think her plans will materialize.) bli noe avverb \/məˈtɪərɪəlaɪz\/se ➢ materialize -
3 flesh
fleʃ1) (the soft substance (muscles etc) that covers the bones of animals.) kjøtt2) (the soft part of fruit: the golden flesh of a peach.) kjøtt•- fleshy- flesh and blood
- in the fleshkjøttIsubst. \/fleʃ\/1) kjøtt2) ( bibelsk) kjød3) flesk, fett4) ( botanikk) fruktkjøtt5) (gammeldags, mat) kjøtt6) hudall flesh alt levende, menneskeslektenexact\/have\/demand one's pound of flesh se➢ pound, 1flesh and fell med hud og hårgo the way of all flesh gå bort, døin good flesh i godt hold, velføddin the flesh legemlig, i levende live, personlig, i virkelighetenlose flesh bli tynnmake one's flesh creep få det til å gå kaldt nedover ryggen på en, få en til å grøssematerialize in the flesh bli til kjøtt og blodmore than flesh and blood can stand mer enn et menneske kan holde utone's own flesh and blood ens eget kjøtt og blodpress the flesh (slang, om kongelige, politikere e.l.) håndhilse på folkproud flesh dødkjøttput on flesh legge på segsins of the flesh se ➢ sin, 1IIverb \/fleʃ\/1) ( om hunder) gjøre blodtørstig (ved å la dem smake kjøtt av vilt)2) ( om hud e.l.) skrape -
4 material
mə'tiəriəl 1. noun1) (anything out of which something is, or may be, made: Tables are usually made from solid material such as wood.) materiale2) (cloth: I'd like three metres of blue woollen material.) stoff, tøy2. adjective1) (consisting of solid(s), liquid(s), gas(es) or any combination of these: the material world.) materiell, stofflig2) (belonging to the world; not spiritual: He wanted material things like money, possessions and power.) verdslig, materiell3) (essential or important: evidence that is material to his defence.) avgjørende, betydningsfull•- materialize
- materialise
- materialization
- materialisationemne--------materiale--------materiell--------saker--------stoff--------stofflig--------tekstil--------tøyIsubst. \/məˈtɪərɪəl\/1) materiale, stoff (også overført)hun er et skuespilleremne\/skuespillertalent2) stoff, tøymaterials materiell, materialematerial(s) clerk materiellforvalter, lagersjefraw material(s) ( også overført) råmaterialeunwrought material råemne, ubehandlet materialewriting material skrivesakerIIadj. \/məˈtɪərɪəl\/1) materiell, fysisk2) ( også filosofi) materialistisk3) vesentlig, påtakelig, betydelig4) relevant, betydningsfull• is it material to your argument?5) ( jus) avgjørende, hoved-material to ( jus) ha avgjørende betydning formaterial witness viktig vitne, hovedvitne
См. также в других словарях:
materialize — is first recorded in 1710 and its first meaning was transitive (with an object): to materialize an idea was to realize it and to materialize a spirit was to make the spirit appear. Its intransitive use, now more familiar, dates from the late 19c … Modern English usage
Materialize — Ma*te ri*al*ize, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Materialized}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Materializing}.] [Cf. F. mat[ e]rialiser.] 1. To invest with material characteristics; to make perceptible to the senses; hence, to present to the mind through the medium of… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Materialize — Ma*te ri*al*ize, v. i. 1. To appear as a material form; to take substantial shape. [Colloq.] [1913 Webster] 2. To come into existence; as, the promised donations never materialized. [PJC] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
materialize — index embody, emerge, form, occur (happen), realize (make real), substantiate Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton … Law dictionary
materialize — (v.) 1710, represent as material, from MATERIAL (Cf. material) (adj.) + IZE (Cf. ize). Meaning “appear in bodily form” is 1880, in spiritualism. Related: Materialized; materializing … Etymology dictionary
materialize — externalize, objectify, incarnate, embody, actualize, *realize, hypostatize, reify … New Dictionary of Synonyms
materialize — [v] come into being actualize, appear, become concrete, become real, become visual, be incarnate, be realized, coalesce, come about, come to pass, corporealize, develop, embody, emerge, entify, evolve, exteriorize, externalize, happen,… … New thesaurus
materialize — (also materialise) ► VERB 1) become actual fact; happen. 2) appear in bodily form. DERIVATIVES materialization noun … English terms dictionary
materialize — [mə tir′ē əl īz΄] vt. materialized, materializing 1. to give material form or characteristics to; represent in material form 2. to make (a spirit, etc.) appear in bodily form 3. to make materialistic vi. 1. to become fact; develop into something… … English World dictionary
materialize — (BrE also ise) verb ADVERB ▪ never ▪ The hoped for boom never materialized. ▪ suddenly ▪ A waiter suddenly materialized at her elbow. ▪ ful … Collocations dictionary
materialize — materialization, n. materializer, n. /meuh tear ee euh luyz /, v., materialized, materializing. v.i. 1. to come into perceptible existence; appear; become actual or real; be realized or carried out: Our plans never materialized. 2. to assume… … Universalium