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1 vanish
['væniʃ](to become no longer visible, especially suddenly: The ship vanished over the horizon; Our hopes suddenly vanished.) zmizet* * *• vymizet• zmizet• mizet -
2 disappear
[disə'piə]1) (to vanish from sight: The sun disappeared slowly below the horizon.) zmizet2) (to fade out of existence: This custom had disappeared by the end of the century.) vymizet3) (to go away so that other people do not know where one is: A search is being carried out for the boy who disappeared from his home on Monday.) ztratit se•* * *• zmizet• mizet -
3 disperse
[di'spə:s]1) (to (cause to) scatter in all directions: Some seeds are dispersed by the wind.) rozptýlit, roztrousit2) (to (cause to) spread (news etc): Information is dispersed by volunteers who distribute leaflets.) rozšířit3) (to (cause to) vanish: By this time the crowd had dispersed.) rozprchnout (se), rozejít se•* * *• rozptýlit -
4 go up in smoke
1) (to be completely destroyed by fire: The whole house went up in smoke.) úplně vyhořet2) (to vanish very quickly leaving nothing behind: All his plans have gone up in smoke.) rozplynout se v dým
См. также в других словарях:
Vanish — Van ish, v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Vanished}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Vanishing}.] [OE. vanissen, OF. vanir (in comp.): cf. OF. envanir, esvanir, esvanu[ i]r, F. s [ e]vanouir; fr. L. vanus empty, vain; cf. L. vanescere, evanescere, to vanish. See {Vain},… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Vanish — Van ish, n. (Phon.) The brief terminal part of vowel or vocal element, differing more or less in quality from the main part; as, a as in ale ordinarily ends with a vanish of i as in ill, o as in old with a vanish of oo as in foot. Rush. [1913… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Vanish — may refer to:*Vanish (brand), a toilet bowl cleaner * Vanish an episode of the TV series Criss Angel Mindfreak *Vanishing, a type of magical effect *A mathematical function having a root or a zeroee also*Forced disappearance *Vanishing… … Wikipedia
vanish — vanish, evanesce, evaporate, disappear, fade can all mean to pass from view or out of existence. Vanish implies a complete, often mysterious, and usually sudden passing; it commonly suggests absence of all trace or of any clue that would permit… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
vanish — (v.) c.1300, from aphetic form of stem of O.Fr. esvanir disappear, from V.L. *exvanire, from L. evanescere disappear, die out, from ex out (see EX (Cf. ex )) + vanescere vanish, from vanus empty (see VAIN (Cf … Etymology dictionary
vanish — [van′ish] vi. [ME vanissen, aphetic < prp. stem of OFr esvanir < VL * exvanire, for L evanescere: see EVANESCE] 1. to go or pass suddenly from sight; disappear 2. to cease to exist; come to an end 3. Math. to become zero n. Phonet. the… … English World dictionary
vanish — index depart, disappear, dissipate (spread out), evacuate, expire, leave (depart), perish … Law dictionary
vanish — [v] disappear become invisible, be lost, clear, dematerialize, die, die out, dissolve, evanesce, evaporate, exit, fade, fade away, go away, melt; concept 105 Ant. appear, arrive, come … New thesaurus
vanish — ► VERB 1) disappear suddenly and completely. 2) gradually cease to exist. 3) Mathematics become zero. DERIVATIVES vanishing adjective & noun vanishingly adverb. ORIGIN Old French esvanir, from Latin evanescere die away … English terms dictionary
vanish — v. 1) to vanish completely 2) (D; intr.) to vanish from (to vanish from sight) 3) (D; intr.) to vanish into (to vanish into thin air) * * * [ vænɪʃ] to vanish completely (D; intr.) to vanish from (to vanish from sight) (D; intr.) to vanish into… … Combinatory dictionary
vanish — verb 1 disappear suddenly and completely ADVERB ▪ just, simply ▪ I turned around and she had simply vanished. ▪ abruptly, instantly, promptly, suddenly … Collocations dictionary