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1 ♦ faith
♦ faith /feɪɵ/n.1 [u] fede; fiducia; to have faith in, avere fiducia in; faith in oneself, fiducia in se stessi; blind faith, fede cieca4 [u] promessa; parola data: to break faith, mancare alla parola data; non essere di parola; to keep faith with sb., mantenere la parola data a q.; to pledge (o to give, to plight) one's faith, dare la propria parola● faith-healer, guaritore, guaritrice; santone □ faith-healing, cura (o guarigione) mediante preghiere o suggestione □ (GB) faith school, scuola (statale) di impostazione religiosa □ bad faith, malafede □ good faith, buona fede □ (fam., spec. all'imper.) to keep the faith, tenere duro; farsi coraggio □ to pin one's faith to (o upon), dare (o prestar) fede a □ O, ye of little faith!, o voi di poca fede! -
2 faith *** n
[feɪθ]1) (trust) fiduciato have faith in sb/sth — avere fiducia in qn/qc
to put one's faith in sb/sth — fidarsi di qn/qc
to keep/break faith with sb — mantenere la parola/mancare di parola con qn
to lose faith in sb/sth — perdere fiducia in qn/qc
2) (Rel: belief) fede f, religione fFaith, Hope and Charity — Fede, Speranza e Carità
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3 Faith
[feɪθ]nome proprio Fede* * *[feiƟ]1) (trust or belief: She had faith in her ability.) fiducia2) (religious belief: Years of hardship had not caused him to lose his faith.) fede3) (loyalty to one's promise: to keep/break faith with someone.) parola•- faithful- faithfully
- Yours faithfully
- faithfulness
- faithless
- faithlessness
- in all good faith
- in good faith* * *(First names) Faith /ˈfeiɵ/f.* * *[feɪθ]nome proprio Fede -
4 faith healer
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5 faith healing
nome = guarigione ottenuta per mezzo delle preghiere o della suggestione* * *nguarigione f mistica* * *nome = guarigione ottenuta per mezzo delle preghiere o della suggestione -
6 in (all) good faith
(sincerely: She made the offer in good faith.) in buona fede -
7 in (all) good faith
(sincerely: She made the offer in good faith.) in buona fede -
8 article of faith
n -
9 faithful faith·ful
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10 faithfully faith·ful·ly adv
['feɪθf(ə)lɪ]yours faithfully — (Brit: in letters) distinti saluti
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11 faithfulness faith·ful·ness n
['feɪθfʊlnɪs] -
12 faithless faith·less adj
['feɪθlɪs] -
13 faithlessness faith·less·ness n
['feɪθlɪsnɪs]faithlessness (to) — infedeltà f inv (a)
English-Italian dictionary > faithlessness faith·less·ness n
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14 good faith
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15 unfaithful un·faith·ful adj
[ʌn'feɪθfʊl] -
16 belief
[bɪ'liːf]1) (conviction, opinion) convinzione f., opinione f.to the best of my belief — per quanto ne so o mi risulta
2) (credence)to be beyond o past belief essere incredibile; stupid beyond belief — incredibilmente stupido
3) (confidence) fede f., fiducia f.* * ** * *[bɪ'liːf]1) (conviction, opinion) convinzione f., opinione f.to the best of my belief — per quanto ne so o mi risulta
2) (credence)to be beyond o past belief essere incredibile; stupid beyond belief — incredibilmente stupido
3) (confidence) fede f., fiducia f. -
17 shake
I [ʃeɪk]1) scossa f., scrollata f., scrollone m.2) (anche milk-shake) frappè m.••II 1. [ʃeɪk]in a shake o in two shakes colloq. in un batter d'occhio, in quattro e quattr'otto; to be no great shakes colloq. non valere (un) granché, non essere niente di speciale; to have the shakes — colloq. (from fear) avere la tremarella; (from cold, fever) avere i brividi; (from alcohol) tremare
1) [ person] scuotere; [blow, earthquake] fare tremare"shake before use" — "agitare prima dell'uso"
to shake salt over the dish — spargere sale sul piatto, cospargere il piatto di sale
to shake one's fist at sb. — mostrare i pugni a qcn.
to shake hands with sb. to shake sb.'s hand stringere la mano a qcn., dare una stretta di mano a qcn.; shake hands on the deal suggellare l'affare con una stretta di mano; to shake hands on it — (after argument) fare pace dandosi la mano
3) AE (get rid of) liberarsi di2.1) (tremble) [person, hand, voice, leaf, building, windows] tremareto shake with — tremare per [cold, emotion]; trasalire o tremare per [ fear]; torcersi o sbellicarsi da [ laughter]
they shook on it — (on deal, agreement) conclusero l'affare, l'accordo con una stretta di mano; (after argument) fecero la pace dandosi la mano
3."shake!" — "qua la mano!"
to shake oneself — [person, animal] scuotersi
- shake up* * *[ʃeik] 1. past tense - shook; verb1) (to (cause to) tremble or move with jerks: The explosion shook the building; We were shaking with laughter; Her voice shook as she told me the sad news.) far tremare2) (to shock, disturb or weaken: He was shaken by the accident; My confidence in him has been shaken.) scuotere, turbare2. noun1) (an act of shaking: He gave the bottle a shake.) scossa, scrollata2) (drink made by shaking the ingredients together vigorously: a chocolate milk-shake.) frappé•- shaking- shaky
- shakily
- shakiness
- shake-up
- no great shakes
- shake one's fist at
- shake one's head
- shake off
- shake up* * *shake /ʃeɪk/n.1 scossa; scrollata; scrollo; scrollone: Give him a shake, dagli una scossa (o una scrollata); He gave the tree a good shake, diede uno scrollone all'albero; a shake of the head, una scrollata di capo; un cenno di diniego3 (fam.) scossa di terremoto; terremoto6 (pl.) – the shakes, febbre con brividi; tremore; forte tremito ( da alcol o droga); delirium tremens7 (fam.) tremarella10 (mus.) trillo● shake-out, (econ.) rallentamento dell'attività, ristagno; ( Borsa) eliminazione dal mercato ( degli investitori più deboli); (metall.) sformatura; = shake-up, rimescolamento; scossone (fig.); movimento ( di funzionari); riorganizzazione, ristrutturazione, ridimensionamento ( di un'azienda); rimpasto ( del personale, del governo, ecc.); ( sport) lotta, battaglia: the title shake-up, la lotta per il titolo □ to be all of a shake, tremare come una foglia □ (fam. USA) fair shake, trattamento equo; buona occasione; chance: to give sb. a fair shake, trattare q. con equità; to get a fair shake, essere trattato con giustizia; ( anche) avere qualche chance □ (fam.) to give sb. the shakes, far venire la tremarella a q. □ (fam.) in two shakes ( of a lamb's tail), in un secondo; in un baleno; in un batter d'occhio □ (fam.) no great shakes, che non vale molto; non un gran che; niente di straordinario: He's a good bowler, but he's no great shakes as batsman, è un bravo lanciatore, ma come battitore non vale molto.♦ (to) shake /ʃeɪk/A v. t.1 scuotere; agitare; scrollare; fare sbattere: to shake one's head, scuotere il capo ( per disapprovare, ecc.); The wind shook the branches [the window-shutters], il vento scuoteva i rami [faceva sbattere le imposte]; to shake one's fist at sb., agitare il pugno contro q.; to shake sb. 's faith, scuotere la fede di q.2 scuotere (fig.); turbare; impressionare: He was badly shaken by the news, fu molto scosso dalla notizia5 (fam.) liberarsi di; distanziare; seminare (fam.); togliersi ( un'idea, ecc.) dalla testa: He succeeded in shaking his pursuers, è riuscito a seminare gli inseguitori; I can't shake the feeling that I met him somewhere before, non riesco a togliermi dalla testa la sensazione di averlo già incontrato da qualche parteB v. i.1 tremare; tremolare; barcollare; traballare; vibrare: The earth was shaking, la terra tremava; I was shaking like a leaf ( o a jelly), tremavo come una foglia; He was shaking with rage, tremava dalla rabbia; The house shakes whenever a train passes by, la casa vibra ogni volta che passa il treno; His hands are shaking, gli tremano le mani2 (mus.) trillare● to shake sb. by the hand, dare (o stringere) la mano a q. □ to shake sb. 's composure, far perdere la calma a q. □ to shake one's finger at sb., minacciare (o rimproverare) q. scuotendo l'indice □ to shake hands, darsi (o stringersi) la mano: We shook hands, ci stringemmo la mano; They reached an agreement and shook hands on it, si sono messi d'accordo e hanno sugellato l'intesa con una stretta di mano □ to shake hands with sb., stringere (o dare) la mano a q. □ (fam.) to shake a leg, far quattro salti; ballare; sbrigarsi: Shake a leg!, sbrigati! □ (mecc.: di dado, ecc.) to shake loose, allentarsi per effetto delle vibrazioni □ (fam.) to shake the money tree, fare grossi guadagni □ to shake oneself, scuotersi; darsi una scossa □ (fam.) Let's shake on it!, qua la mano! ( per suggellare un accordo) □ (fam.) to be shaking in one's shoes (o boots), avere una gran fifa; essere mezzo morto dalla paura.* * *I [ʃeɪk]1) scossa f., scrollata f., scrollone m.2) (anche milk-shake) frappè m.••II 1. [ʃeɪk]in a shake o in two shakes colloq. in un batter d'occhio, in quattro e quattr'otto; to be no great shakes colloq. non valere (un) granché, non essere niente di speciale; to have the shakes — colloq. (from fear) avere la tremarella; (from cold, fever) avere i brividi; (from alcohol) tremare
1) [ person] scuotere; [blow, earthquake] fare tremare"shake before use" — "agitare prima dell'uso"
to shake salt over the dish — spargere sale sul piatto, cospargere il piatto di sale
to shake one's fist at sb. — mostrare i pugni a qcn.
to shake hands with sb. to shake sb.'s hand stringere la mano a qcn., dare una stretta di mano a qcn.; shake hands on the deal suggellare l'affare con una stretta di mano; to shake hands on it — (after argument) fare pace dandosi la mano
3) AE (get rid of) liberarsi di2.1) (tremble) [person, hand, voice, leaf, building, windows] tremareto shake with — tremare per [cold, emotion]; trasalire o tremare per [ fear]; torcersi o sbellicarsi da [ laughter]
they shook on it — (on deal, agreement) conclusero l'affare, l'accordo con una stretta di mano; (after argument) fecero la pace dandosi la mano
3."shake!" — "qua la mano!"
to shake oneself — [person, animal] scuotersi
- shake up -
18 confidence
['kɒnfɪdəns]1) (faith) fiducia f.to have (every) confidence in sb., sth. — avere (piena) fiducia in qcn., qcs.
to put one's confidence in sb. — riporre la propria fiducia in qcn
2) pol.3) (self-assurance) sicurezza f. di sé, fiducia f. in se stesso4) (certainty) certezza f.to take sb. into one's confidence — confidarsi con qcn.
to tell sb. sth. in (strict) confidence — dire qcs. a qcn. in confidenza o in via strettamente confidenziale
6) (secret) confidenza f.* * *['konfidəns]1) (trust or belief in someone's ability: I have great confidence in you.) fiducia2) (belief and faith in one's own ability: She shows a great deal of confidence for her age.) fiducia in se stesso* * *['kɒnfɪdəns]1) (faith) fiducia f.to have (every) confidence in sb., sth. — avere (piena) fiducia in qcn., qcs.
to put one's confidence in sb. — riporre la propria fiducia in qcn
2) pol.3) (self-assurance) sicurezza f. di sé, fiducia f. in se stesso4) (certainty) certezza f.to take sb. into one's confidence — confidarsi con qcn.
to tell sb. sth. in (strict) confidence — dire qcs. a qcn. in confidenza o in via strettamente confidenziale
6) (secret) confidenza f. -
19 steady
I 1. ['stedɪ]1) (gradual) [increase, decline] progressivo2) (continual) [breathing, drip] regolare; [ progress] costante; [ stream] regolare, costante; [ rain] persistenteto keep o hold sth. steady tenere fermo qcs.; he isn't very steady on his feet (from age) non è molto saldo sulle gambe; (from drunkenness) barcolla un po'; to hold steady — econ. [ interest rates] rimanere stabile
5) (reliable) [ job] fisso, stabile; [ boyfriend] fisso; [ relationship] stabile2.3.to go steady with sb. — fare coppia fissa con qcn
interiezione BE colloq.II 1. ['stedɪ]steady on! — (reprovingly) fai attenzione!
1) (keep still) tenere fermo [ladder, camera]2) (control)2.verbo intransitivo stabilizzarsi3.to steady oneself — (physically) riprendere l'equilibrio; (mentally) mettere la testa a posto, mettere giudizio
* * *['stedi] 1. adjective1) ((negative unsteady) firmly fixed, balanced or controlled: The table isn't steady; You need a steady hand to be a surgeon.) fermo, stabile2) (regular or even: a steady temperature; He was walking at a steady pace.) costante, regolare3) (unchanging or constant: steady faith.) solido4) ((of a person) sensible and hardworking in habits etc: a steady young man.) serio, posato2. verb(to make or become steady: He stumbled but managed to steady himself; His heart-beat gradually steadied.) stabilizzarsi; ritrovare l'equilibrio- steadily- steadiness
- steady on! - steady !* * *I 1. ['stedɪ]1) (gradual) [increase, decline] progressivo2) (continual) [breathing, drip] regolare; [ progress] costante; [ stream] regolare, costante; [ rain] persistenteto keep o hold sth. steady tenere fermo qcs.; he isn't very steady on his feet (from age) non è molto saldo sulle gambe; (from drunkenness) barcolla un po'; to hold steady — econ. [ interest rates] rimanere stabile
5) (reliable) [ job] fisso, stabile; [ boyfriend] fisso; [ relationship] stabile2.3.to go steady with sb. — fare coppia fissa con qcn
interiezione BE colloq.II 1. ['stedɪ]steady on! — (reprovingly) fai attenzione!
1) (keep still) tenere fermo [ladder, camera]2) (control)2.verbo intransitivo stabilizzarsi3.to steady oneself — (physically) riprendere l'equilibrio; (mentally) mettere la testa a posto, mettere giudizio
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20 trust
I [trʌst]1) (faith) fiducia f., fede f.to take sth. on trust — accettare qcs. sulla fiducia o sulla parola
3) econ. (large group of companies) trust m.4) econ. società f. di investimento, fondo m. comune di investimentoII 1. [trʌst]1) (believe) avere fiducia in, credere in [person, judgment]2) (rely on) fidarsi ditrust her! — (amused or annoyed) vatti a fidare!
3) (entrust)to trust sb. with sth. — affidare qcs. a qcn
4) (hope) sperare, avere fiducia2.3.to trust in — avere fiducia in [ person]; confidare in [God, fortune]
* * *1. verb1) (to have confidence or faith; to believe: She trusted (in) him.) avere fiducia2) (to give (something to someone), believing that it will be used well and responsibly: I can't trust him with my car; I can't trust my car to him.) fidarsi3) (to hope or be confident (that): I trust (that) you had / will have a good journey.) sperare2. noun1) (belief or confidence in the power, reality, truth, goodness etc of a person or thing: The firm has a great deal of trust in your ability; trust in God.) fiducia2) (charge or care; responsibility: The child was placed in my trust.) cura, custodia3) (a task etc given to a person by someone who believes that they will do it, look after it etc well: He holds a position of trust in the firm.) fiducia, responsabilità4) (arrangement(s) by which something (eg money) is given to a person to use in a particular way, or to keep until a particular time: The money was to be held in trust for his children; ( also adjective) a trust fund) (amministrazione fiduciaria)5) (a group of business firms working together: The companies formed a trust.) trust•- trustee- trustworthy
- trustworthiness
- trusty
- trustily
- trustiness* * *I [trʌst]1) (faith) fiducia f., fede f.to take sth. on trust — accettare qcs. sulla fiducia o sulla parola
3) econ. (large group of companies) trust m.4) econ. società f. di investimento, fondo m. comune di investimentoII 1. [trʌst]1) (believe) avere fiducia in, credere in [person, judgment]2) (rely on) fidarsi ditrust her! — (amused or annoyed) vatti a fidare!
3) (entrust)to trust sb. with sth. — affidare qcs. a qcn
4) (hope) sperare, avere fiducia2.3.to trust in — avere fiducia in [ person]; confidare in [God, fortune]
См. также в других словарях:
Faith — • In the Old Testament, the Hebrew word means essentially steadfastness. As signifying man s attitude towards God it means trustfulness or fiducia Catholic Encyclopedia. Kevin Knight. 2006. Faith Faith … Catholic encyclopedia
Faith — is a belief in the trustworthiness of an idea. Formal usage of the word faith is usually reserved for concepts of religion, as in theology, where it almost universally refers to a trusting belief in a transcendent reality, or else in a Supreme… … Wikipedia
faith — [feɪθ] noun [uncountable] 1. confidence that someone or something can be trusted or will work properly: faith in • We have faith in our staff. • Don t put too much faith in competition … Financial and business terms
Faith — Faith is in general the persuasion of the mind that a certain statement is true (Phil. 1:27; 2 Thess. 2:13). Its primary idea is trust. A thing is true, and therefore worthy of trust. It admits of many degrees up to full assurance of faith, in … Easton's Bible Dictionary
faith — W2 [feıθ] n ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(trust/confidence in somebody/something)¦ 2¦(religion)¦ 3 break faith with somebody/something 4 keep faith with somebody/something 5 good faith 6 bad faith 7 an act of faith ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ [Date: 1200 1300; : Old French; Origin:… … Dictionary of contemporary English
Faith — (f[=a]th), n. [OE. feith, fayth, fay, OF. feid, feit, fei, F. foi, fr. L. fides; akin to fidere to trust, Gr. pei qein to persuade. The ending th is perhaps due to the influence of such words as truth, health, wealth. See {Bid}, {Bide}, and cf.… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Faith — bezeichnet: Orte in den Vereinigten Staaten: Faith (Arkansas) Faith (Minnesota) Faith (Missouri) Faith (North Carolina) Faith (South Dakota) Personen mit dem Familien oder Künstlernamen Faith Adam Faith (1940–2003), englischer Popsänger,… … Deutsch Wikipedia
faith — [ feıθ ] noun *** 1. ) uncount strong belief in or trust of someone or something: have faith in: I m delighted to know you have such faith in me. lose faith in: The public have lost faith in what the government is doing. put your faith in… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
Faith — Saltar a navegación, búsqueda Faith (en castellano: fe) puede referirse a: Música Faith (1981), álbum de la banda británica The Cure; Faith (1987), álbum de George Michael; Faith (1987), canción de George Michael; Faith (2003), canción de Celine… … Wikipedia Español
faith — [fāth] n. [ME feith < OFr feid, fei < L fides, confidence, belief (in LL(Ec), the Christian religion) < fidere, to trust < IE base * bheidh , to urge, be convinced > BIDE, Gr peithein, to persuade, L foedus, a compact] 1.… … English World dictionary
faith — n 1 a: allegiance or loyalty to a duty or a person b: sincerity or honesty of intentions see also bad faith, good faith 2: fidelity to one s promises and obligations … Law dictionary