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1 property
['propəti]plural - properties; noun1) (something that a person owns: These books are my property.) lastnina2) (land or buildings that a person owns: He has property in Scotland.) posest3) (a quality (usually of a substance): Hardness is a property of diamonds.) lastnost4) ((usually abbreviated to prop [prop]) a small piece of furniture or an article used by an actor in a play.) rekvizit* * *[prɔpəti]nounlastnina, last, posest, imetje; physics lastnost; karakteristika, svojskost, posebnost; plural gledališki rekviziti; American (TV) dekorpersonal property — osebna lastnina, premičnine -
2 property tax
[prɔpətitæks]nouneconomy zemljiški davek -
3 property-man
[prɔpətimən]nountheatre rekviziter -
4 nationalize
['næ-]verb (to make (especially an industry) the property of the nation as a whole rather than the property of an individual.) podržaviti* * *[naešnəlaiz]transitive verbnacionalizirati, podržaviti; naturalizirati -
5 recovery
noun ((an) act or process of recovering: The patient made a remarkable recovery after his illness; the recovery of stolen property.) okrevanje; povrnitev* * *[rikʌveri]nounponovna (za)dobitev; povračilo, izterjava; dobivanje (rude); space reševanje; chemistry rekuperacija; okrevanje ( from od), ozdravljenje, rešitevhe is past (beyond) recovery — ni mu pomoči, je neozdravljiv (izgubljen) -
6 nationalise
['næ-]verb (to make (especially an industry) the property of the nation as a whole rather than the property of an individual.) podržaviti -
7 assets
noun plural (the total property, money etc of a person, company etc.) aktiva* * *[aesets]nounplural premoženjsko stanje, aktiva; gotovina, čisto premoženje -
8 belong
[bi'loŋ]1) ((with to) to be the property of: This book belongs to me.) biti last (nekoga)2) ((with to) to be a native, member etc of: I belong to the sailing club.) biti član3) ((with with) to go together with: This shoe belongs with that shoe.) prilegati se•* * *[bilɔŋ]intransitive verb (to, in, with, under, among) pripadati; spadati; tikati se; spodobiti se; American biti rojento belong together — skladati se, razumeti se -
9 commandeer
[komən'diə](to seize (private property) for use by the army etc during wartime: They commandeered the castle.) zaseči, rekvirirati* * *[kɔməndíə]transitive verbmilitary rekvirirati; prisilno novačiti; prisvojiti, prisvajati si -
10 common
['komən] 1. adjective1) (seen or happening often; quite normal or usual: a common occurrence; These birds are not so common nowadays.) običajen2) (belonging equally to, or shared by, more than one: This knowledge is common to all of us; We share a common language.) skupen3) (publicly owned: common property.) javen4) (coarse or impolite: She uses some very common expressions.) prostaški5) (of ordinary, not high, social rank: the common people.) poprečen6) (of a noun, not beginning with a capital letter (except at the beginning of a sentence): The house is empty.) obči2. noun((a piece of) public land for everyone to use, with few or no buildings: the village common.) občinsko zemljišče- commoner- common knowledge
- common law
- common-law
- commonplace
- common-room
- common sense
- the Common Market
- the House of Commons
- the Commons
- in common* * *I [kɔmən]adjective ( commonly adverb)skupen, javen; navaden, poprečen, obči; prostaški, plebejski, vulgarento make common cause with — podpirati kaj, delati za isto stvarslang common or garden — zelo vsakdanji, šablonskimusic common chord — trozvokgrammar common gender — dvojni spolII [kɔmən]nounobčinsko zemljišče, občinski pašnik; juridically dohodek od zemljišča -
11 communism
['komjunizəm]((often with capital) a system of government under which there is no private industry and (in some forms) no private property, most things being state-owned.) komunizem* * *[kɔmjunizm]nounkomunizem -
12 convey
[kən'vei]1) (to carry: Huge ships convey oil from the Middle East.) prevažati2) (to transfer the ownership of (property by legal means).) prenesti•- conveyancing
- conveyor
- conveyor belt* * *[kənvéi]transitive verb(to) poslati, prenesti, prepeljati, prevažati; izraziti, sporočiti; izročiti -
13 conveyancing
noun (the branch of the law dealing with transfer of property.) prenos imovine* * *[kənvéiənsiŋ]nounjuridically prenos imovine -
14 damage
['dæmi‹] 1. noun1) (injury or hurt, especially to a thing: The storm did/caused a lot of damage; She suffered brain-damage as a result of the accident.) škoda2) ((in plural) payment for loss or injury suffered: The court awarded him $5,000 damages.) odškodnina2. verb(to make less effective or less usable etc; to spoil: The bomb damaged several buildings; The book was damaged in the post.) poškodovati- damaged* * *I [daemidž]noun(to) škoda, zgubaplural odškodnina, kompenzacija; vrednost, cena; colloquially what's the damage? — koliko stane?damage by sea — havarija, poškodba ladjeII [daemidž]transitive verb(po)škodovati, (po)kvariti; (o)klevetati, (o)sramotiti -
15 dispossess
[dispə'zes](to take (property) away from: He was dispossessed of all his lands.) razlastiti* * *[dispəzés]transitive verb(of) odvze(ma)ti; razlastiti, (o)ropati; pregnati, spoditito dispossess s.o. of an error — odpreti komu oči -
16 dowry
plural - dowries; noun(money and property brought by a woman to her husband when they marry.) dota* * *[dáuri]noundota, bala; nadarjenost, talent -
17 estate
[i'steit]1) (a large piece of land owned by one person or a group of people etc: They have an estate in Ireland.) posestvo2) (a piece of land developed for building etc: a housing/industrial estate.) zemljišče3) (a person's total possessions (property, money etc): His estate was divided among his sons.) posest•- estate-car* * *[istéit]nounarchaic stanje; posestvo, posest, zemljišče; dediščina; konkurzna masacolloquially fourth estate — tisk -
18 fixed
1) (arranged in advance; settled: a fixed price.) določen2) (steady; not moving: a fixed gaze/stare.) negiben3) (arranged illegally or dishonestly: The result was fixed.) dogovorjen* * *[fikst]adjectivedoločen; ustaljen, stalen, nespremenljiv, trdenfixed idea — uprta misel, fiksna ideja -
19 flog
[floɡ]past tense, past participle - flogged; verb(to beat; to whip: You will be flogged for stealing the money.) naklestiti; bičati- flogging- flog a dead horse* * *[flɔg](na)klestiti, šibati, bičatito flog a dead horse — premlevati stare stvari, mlatiti prazno slamo, brez smotra zapravljati čas in denarto flog s.th. out of s.o. — izbiti komu kajslang premagati ga; slang to flog Army property — prodati last armade -
20 freehold
adjective ((of land, property etc) belonging completely to the owner, not just for a certain time.) v popolni lasti* * *[frí:hould]nounsvobodno posestvo
См. также в других словарях:
Property — is any physical or virtual entity that is owned by an individual. An owner of property has the right to consume, sell, mortgage, transfer and exchange his or her property.cite web|url=http://www.businessdictionary.com/definition/property.html|titl… … Wikipedia
property — prop·er·ty n pl ties [Anglo French propreté proprieté, from Latin proprietat proprietas, from proprius own, particular] 1: something (as an interest, money, or land) that is owned or possessed see also asset, estate, interest … Law dictionary
Property — • The person who enjoys the full right to dispose of it insofar as is not forbidden by law Catholic Encyclopedia. Kevin Knight. 2006. Property Property … Catholic encyclopedia
property — prop‧er‧ty [ˈprɒpəti ǁ ˈprɑːpər ] noun properties PLURALFORM 1. [uncountable] LAW all the things that someone owns: • Some of the stolen property was found in Mason s house. • The President supports a tax cut on profits from sales of property… … Financial and business terms
property — and property rights are central to capitalist societies. Perhaps because they are largely taken for granted in this context they have received relatively little attention from sociologists. By comparison, political philosophers and economists… … Dictionary of sociology
Property — Prop er*ty, n.; pl. {Properties}. [OE. proprete, OF. propret[ e] property, F. propret[ e] neatness, cleanliness, propri[ e]t[ e] property, fr. L. proprietas. See {Proper}, a., and cf. {Propriety}.] [1913 Webster] 1. That which is proper to… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
property — c.1300, nature, quality, later possession (a sense rare before 17c.), from an Anglo Fr. modification of O.Fr. propriete (12c., Fr. propreté), from L. proprietatem (nom. proprietas) ownership, property, propriety, lit. special character (a loan… … Etymology dictionary
property — Includes money, goods, things in action, land and every description of property, whether real or personal, legal or equitable, and whether situated in Canada or elsewhere, and includes obligations, easements and every description of estate,… … Glossary of Bankruptcy
property — [präp′ər tē] n. pl. properties [ME proprete < OFr proprieté < L proprietas < proprius, one s own] 1. a) the right to possess, use, and dispose of something; ownership [property in land] b) something, as a piece of writing, in which… … English World dictionary
Property — Prop er*ty, v. t. [1913 Webster] 1. To invest which properties, or qualities. [Obs.] Shak. [1913 Webster] 2. To make a property of; to appropriate. [Obs.] [1913 Webster] They have here propertied me. Shak. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
property — [n1] possessions, real estate acreage, acres, assets, belongings, buildings, capital, chattels, claim, dominion, effects, equity, estate, farm, freehold, goods, holdings, home, house, inheritance, land, means, ownership, plot, possessorship,… … New thesaurus