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1 ♦ difficulty
♦ difficulty /ˈdɪfɪkəltɪ/n. [cu]1 difficoltà, problema: financial [technical, practical] difficulties, difficoltà finanziarie [tecniche, pratiche]; breathing [learning] difficulties, difficoltà respiratorie [di apprendimento]: He has some difficulty (in) walking, ha difficoltà a camminare; There were money difficulties, c'erano difficoltà finanziarie; He climbed the stairs with difficulty, ha salito le scale con difficoltà; They changed the tickets without difficulty, hanno cambiato i biglietti senza difficoltà; If you have difficulty understanding the form, please ask us for help, se avete difficoltà a capire il modulo, chiedeteci aiuto2 (spesso pl.) situazione difficile; difficoltà (pl.): to be in difficulties, trovarsi in difficoltà (finanziarie); to have (o to experience, to encounter) difficulties, avere (o incontrare) delle difficoltà; to get (o to run) into difficulties, trovarsi in difficoltà; to overcome a difficulty, superare una difficoltà3 difficoltà, complessità: The degree of difficulty increases as you move through the levels, il grado di difficoltà aumenta man mano che si passa al livello successivo -
2 difficulty
['dɪfɪkəltɪ]1) (of task, situation) difficoltà f.to have difficulty (in) doing sth. — avere difficoltà o faticare a fare qcs.
2) (obstacle) difficoltà f., problema m.3) (trouble)* * *plural - difficulties; noun1) (the state or quality of being hard (to do) or not easy: I have difficulty in understanding him.) difficoltà2) (an obstacle or objection: He has a habit of foreseeing difficulties.) difficoltà3) ((especially in plural) trouble, especially money trouble: The firm was in difficulties.) difficoltà* * *['dɪfɪkəltɪ]1) (of task, situation) difficoltà f.to have difficulty (in) doing sth. — avere difficoltà o faticare a fare qcs.
2) (obstacle) difficoltà f., problema m.3) (trouble) -
3 difficulty **** dif·fi·cul·ty n
['dɪfɪk(ə)ltɪ]difficoltà f invhe has difficulty in walking/breathing — ha difficoltà a camminare/di respirazione
to have difficulties with — (police, landlord) avere noie con
to get o.s. into difficulty — mettersi nei guai
to be in difficulty or difficulties — essere or trovarsi in difficoltà
English-Italian dictionary > difficulty **** dif·fi·cul·ty n
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4 slog
[slɒg] Inome colloq.1) (hard work)a hard slog — una sgobbata, un lavoraccio; (walking) una scarpinata
2) (hard stroke) botta f.II 1.1) (hit hard) colpire violentemente [ opponent]; tirare una botta a [ ball]2.to slog it out — prendersi a pugni, scazzottarsi; fig. discutere animatamente
1) (work hard) sgobbare•* * *[sloɡ] 1. past tense, past participle - slogged; verb1) (to hit hard (usually without aiming carefully): She slogged him with her handbag.) colpire (ocn violenza)2) (to make one's way with difficulty: We slogged on up the hill.) arrancare3) (to work very hard: She has been slogging all week at the shop.) sgobbare2. noun1) ((a period of) hard work: months of hard slog.) faticata, sgobbata2) (a hard blow: He gave the ball a slog.) colpo (violento)* * *[slɒɡ]1. n2. vi1) (work) faticare, sgobbare2)3. vt(ball, opponent) colpire con forza* * *slog /slɒg/n. (fam.)2 camminata lunga e faticosa; scarpinata (fam.)3 duro lavoro; faticata; sfacchinata; sgobbata: That was a hard slog!, è stata una bella sfacchinata!4 lunga camminata; scarpinata; sfacchinata (fig.)(to) slog /slɒg/v. i. e t. (fam.)1 picchiare forte; colpire con violenza3 faticare; sgobbare● to slog it out, fare una sgobbata (o una sfacchinata); ( anche) competere duramente.* * *[slɒg] Inome colloq.1) (hard work)a hard slog — una sgobbata, un lavoraccio; (walking) una scarpinata
2) (hard stroke) botta f.II 1.1) (hit hard) colpire violentemente [ opponent]; tirare una botta a [ ball]2.to slog it out — prendersi a pugni, scazzottarsi; fig. discutere animatamente
1) (work hard) sgobbare• -
5 struggle
I ['strʌgl]1) (battle, fight) lotta f. (anche fig.)to put up a (fierce) struggle — lottare, difendersi (con accanimento)
2) (scuffle) rissa f., scontro m.II ['strʌgl]I find it a real struggle to do o doing trovo davvero difficile fare; they had a struggle to do o doing — hanno fatto fatica a fare
1) (put up a fight) [person, animal] battersi; (tussle, scuffle) [people, animals, forces] lottare, battersi2) fig. (try hard) battersi, lottare3) (have difficulty) [person, company] avere delle difficoltà•* * *1. verb1) (to twist violently when trying to free oneself: The child struggled in his arms.) dibattersi2) (to make great efforts or try hard: All his life he has been struggling with illness / against injustice.) lottare3) (to move with difficulty: He struggled out of the hole.) sforzarsi; uscire2. noun(an act of struggling, or a fight: The struggle for independence was long and hard.) lotta* * *I ['strʌgl]1) (battle, fight) lotta f. (anche fig.)to put up a (fierce) struggle — lottare, difendersi (con accanimento)
2) (scuffle) rissa f., scontro m.II ['strʌgl]I find it a real struggle to do o doing trovo davvero difficile fare; they had a struggle to do o doing — hanno fatto fatica a fare
1) (put up a fight) [person, animal] battersi; (tussle, scuffle) [people, animals, forces] lottare, battersi2) fig. (try hard) battersi, lottare3) (have difficulty) [person, company] avere delle difficoltà• -
6 develop
[dɪ'veləp] 1.1) (acquire) acquisire [ knowledge]; contrarre [ illness]; prendere [ habit]; presentare, manifestare [ symptom]2) (evolve) sviluppare, ampliare [plan, project]; sviluppare, mettere a punto [technique, invention]; sviluppare [theory, argument]4) (expand, build up) sviluppare [mind, physique]; comm. sviluppare, ampliare [business, market]5) (improve) valorizzare [land, site]; risanare [ city centre]6) fot. sviluppare2.1) (evolve) [child, society, country, plot, play] svilupparsi2) (come into being) [friendship, difficulty] nascere; [crack, hole] formarsi, prodursi; [ illness] manifestarsi3) (progress, advance) [ friendship] svilupparsi; [ difficulty] accrescersi; [crack, fault] accentuarsi; [war, illness] aggravarsi; [game, story] svolgersi4) (in size, extent) [town, business] svilupparsi* * *[di'veləp]past tense, past participle - developed; verb1) (to (cause to) grow bigger or to a more advanced state: The plan developed slowly in his mind; It has developed into a very large city.) sviluppare, svilupparsi2) (to acquire gradually: He developed the habit of getting up early.) acquisire3) (to become active, visible etc: Spots developed on her face.) manifestarsi4) (to use chemicals to make (a photograph) visible: My brother develops all his own films.) sviluppare•* * *[dɪ'veləp] 1.1) (acquire) acquisire [ knowledge]; contrarre [ illness]; prendere [ habit]; presentare, manifestare [ symptom]2) (evolve) sviluppare, ampliare [plan, project]; sviluppare, mettere a punto [technique, invention]; sviluppare [theory, argument]4) (expand, build up) sviluppare [mind, physique]; comm. sviluppare, ampliare [business, market]5) (improve) valorizzare [land, site]; risanare [ city centre]6) fot. sviluppare2.1) (evolve) [child, society, country, plot, play] svilupparsi2) (come into being) [friendship, difficulty] nascere; [crack, hole] formarsi, prodursi; [ illness] manifestarsi3) (progress, advance) [ friendship] svilupparsi; [ difficulty] accrescersi; [crack, fault] accentuarsi; [war, illness] aggravarsi; [game, story] svolgersi4) (in size, extent) [town, business] svilupparsi -
7 flounder
I ['flaʊndə(r)]nome BE passera f. di mare, platessa f.II ['flaʊndə(r)]1) (anche flounder around, flounder about) (move with difficulty) dibattersi (in, through in)2) fig. (falter) [ speaker] impappinarsi; [ economy] stagnare; [career, company, leader] essere in difficoltà* * *(to move one's legs and arms violently and with difficulty (in water, mud etc): She floundered helplessly in the mud.) dibattersi* * *flounder (1) /ˈflaʊndə(r)/n. [u]il dibattersi; dimenamento; movimento stentato.flounder (2) /ˈflaʊndə(r)/ (to) flounder /ˈflaʊndə(r)/v. i.1 agitarsi; dibattersi; annaspare2 confondersi; impappinarsi3 trovarsi in difficoltà; annaspare.* * *I ['flaʊndə(r)]nome BE passera f. di mare, platessa f.II ['flaʊndə(r)]1) (anche flounder around, flounder about) (move with difficulty) dibattersi (in, through in) -
8 Wade
[weɪd]1) (in water)to wade across — guadare, passare a guado
to wade through sth. — procedere o avanzare a stento attraverso qcs.
•- wade in* * *[weid]1) (to go or walk (through water, mud etc) with some difficulty: He waded across the river towards me; I've finally managed to wade through that boring book I had to read.) (farsi strada a stento); (avanzare con sforzo)2) (to cross (a river etc) by wading: We'll wade the stream at its shallowest point.) guadare•- wader* * *[weɪd]1. vito wade through — (water, mud) camminare in, (long grass, corn) farsi strada attraverso, (fig: book) leggere con fatica
2. vt(river) guadare* * *(Surnames) Wade /weɪd/* * *[weɪd]1) (in water)to wade across — guadare, passare a guado
to wade through sth. — procedere o avanzare a stento attraverso qcs.
•- wade in -
9 wade
[weɪd]1) (in water)to wade across — guadare, passare a guado
to wade through sth. — procedere o avanzare a stento attraverso qcs.
•- wade in* * *[weid]1) (to go or walk (through water, mud etc) with some difficulty: He waded across the river towards me; I've finally managed to wade through that boring book I had to read.) (farsi strada a stento); (avanzare con sforzo)2) (to cross (a river etc) by wading: We'll wade the stream at its shallowest point.) guadare•- wader* * *[weɪd]1. vito wade through — (water, mud) camminare in, (long grass, corn) farsi strada attraverso, (fig: book) leggere con fatica
2. vt(river) guadare* * *wade /weɪd/n.2 guado.(to) wade /weɪd/A v. i.B v. t.guadare: We waded the river, abbiamo guadato il fiume● to wade in, ( di un guerriero) gettarsi nella mischia; (fig. fam.) buttarsi dentro (qc.); mettercisi ( al lavoro, ecc.) di buona lena (fam.: di buzzo buono) □ (fam.) to wade into sb., attaccare (o aggredire) q. con grande foga; ( sport) entrare decisamente su ( un avversario) □ (fam.) to wade into st., mettersi di buona lena a fare qc. □ to wade through blood (o slaughter), farsi largo seminando strage □ to wade through mud, avanzare faticosamente nel fango □ (fig.) to wade through urgent correspondence, sbrigare a fatica delle lettere urgenti.* * *[weɪd]1) (in water)to wade across — guadare, passare a guado
to wade through sth. — procedere o avanzare a stento attraverso qcs.
•- wade in -
10 ease
I [iːz]1) (lack of difficulty) facilità f.for ease of — per comodità di [use, reference]
to put sb. at (their) ease — mettere qcn. a proprio agio
to take one's ease — rilassarsi, riposarsi
to put sb.'s mind at ease — rassicurare qcn. ( about circa)
3) mil.4) (confidence of manner) disinvoltura f., naturalezza f.5) (affluence) agiatezza f., benessere m.II 1. [iːz]1) (lessen) attenuare, lenire [ pain]; allentare [ tension]; alleviare [ worry]; allontanare [ problem]; ridurre [ congestion]; liberarsi di [ burden]2) (make easier) distendere [ situation]; facilitare [ communication]to ease sth. into — fare entrare delicatamente qcs. in
2.to ease sth. out of — fare uscire delicatamente qcs. da
1) (lessen) [ tension] allentarsi; [pain, pressure] attenuarsi; [ congestion] ridursi; [rain, rate] diminuire2) (become easier) [ situation] distendersi; [ problem] semplificarsi3) econ. [ price] calare, scendere•- ease off- ease up* * *[i:z] 1. noun1) (freedom from pain or from worry or hard work: a lifetime of ease.) agio2) (freedom from difficulty: He passed his exam with ease.) facilità3) (naturalness: ease of manner.) disinvoltura2. verb1) (to free from pain, trouble or anxiety: A hot bath eased his tired limbs.) alleviare, recare sollievo2) ((often with off) to make or become less strong, less severe, less fast etc: The pain has eased (off); The driver eased off as he approached the town.) calmare, calmarsi; rallentare3) (to move (something heavy or awkward) gently or gradually in or out of position: They eased the wardrobe carefully up the narrow staircase.) spostare con cautela•- easily- easiness
- easy 3. interjection(a command to go or act gently: Easy! You'll fall if you run too fast.) piano!- easy-going
- at ease
- easier said than done
- go easy on
- stand at ease
- take it easy
- take one's ease* * *I [iːz]1) (lack of difficulty) facilità f.for ease of — per comodità di [use, reference]
to put sb. at (their) ease — mettere qcn. a proprio agio
to take one's ease — rilassarsi, riposarsi
to put sb.'s mind at ease — rassicurare qcn. ( about circa)
3) mil.4) (confidence of manner) disinvoltura f., naturalezza f.5) (affluence) agiatezza f., benessere m.II 1. [iːz]1) (lessen) attenuare, lenire [ pain]; allentare [ tension]; alleviare [ worry]; allontanare [ problem]; ridurre [ congestion]; liberarsi di [ burden]2) (make easier) distendere [ situation]; facilitare [ communication]to ease sth. into — fare entrare delicatamente qcs. in
2.to ease sth. out of — fare uscire delicatamente qcs. da
1) (lessen) [ tension] allentarsi; [pain, pressure] attenuarsi; [ congestion] ridursi; [rain, rate] diminuire2) (become easier) [ situation] distendersi; [ problem] semplificarsi3) econ. [ price] calare, scendere•- ease off- ease up -
11 easily
['iːzɪlɪ]1) (with no difficulty) [win, open] facilmente, agevolmente2) (readily) [laugh, cry] facilmente3) (comfortably) [ breathe] bene, senza difficoltà; [ talk] con disinvoltura4) (unquestionably) senza dubbio5) (probably)he could easily die — è facile o probabile che muoia
* * *1) (without difficulty: She won the race easily.) facilmente2) (by far: This is easily the best book I've read this year.) di gran lunga, senza dubbio3) (very probably: It may easily rain tomorrow.) probabilmente* * *['iːzɪlɪ]1) (with no difficulty) [win, open] facilmente, agevolmente2) (readily) [laugh, cry] facilmente3) (comfortably) [ breathe] bene, senza difficoltà; [ talk] con disinvoltura4) (unquestionably) senza dubbio5) (probably)he could easily die — è facile o probabile che muoia
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12 negotiate
[nɪ'gəʊʃɪeɪt] 1.1) (discuss) negoziare, trattare"to be negotiated" — "trattabile"
2) (manoeuvre around) (riuscire a) superare [turn, obstacle]3) (deal with) risolvere [ problem]; superare [ difficulty]2.verbo intransitivo negoziare, trattare* * *[ni'ɡəuʃieit]1) (to bargain or discuss a subject in order to agree.) negoziare2) (to arrange (a treaty, payment etc), usually after a long discussion.) negoziare3) (to get past (an obstacle or difficulty).) superare•- negotiation* * *[nɪ'gəʊʃɪeɪt] 1.1) (discuss) negoziare, trattare"to be negotiated" — "trattabile"
2) (manoeuvre around) (riuscire a) superare [turn, obstacle]3) (deal with) risolvere [ problem]; superare [ difficulty]2.verbo intransitivo negoziare, trattare -
13 appreciation
[əˌpriːʃɪ'eɪʃn]1) (gratitude) apprezzamento m., riconoscimento m.2) (awareness) comprensione f.to have no appreciation of — non rendersi conto di [difficulty, importance]
3) (enjoyment) apprezzamento m.4) letter. scol. (commentary) critica f.5) econ. rivalutazione f. (of, in di)* * *1) (gratefulness: I wish to show my appreciation for what you have done.) riconoscenza, gratitudine2) (the state of valuing or understanding something: a deep appreciation of poetry.) comprensione3) (the state of being aware of something: He has no appreciation of our difficulties.) comprensione4) (an increase in value.) aumento5) (a written article etc which describes the qualities of something: an appreciation of the new book.) critica* * *appreciation /əpri:ʃɪˈeɪʃn/n. [u]1 apprezzamento; riconoscimento (del valore di qc.)3 comprensione ( di una difficoltà altrui, ecc.): He showed no appreciation for my predicament, non ha mostrato nessuna comprensione della mia difficile posizione4 valutazione critica; giudizio critico; critica; commento: an exercise in literary appreciation, un esercizio di critica letteraria; to write an appreciation of a prose passage, scrivere un commento di un brano di prosa5 (fin.) aumento di valore (o di prezzo); rivalutazione; plusvalenza; apprezzamento ( di una valuta).* * *[əˌpriːʃɪ'eɪʃn]1) (gratitude) apprezzamento m., riconoscimento m.2) (awareness) comprensione f.to have no appreciation of — non rendersi conto di [difficulty, importance]
3) (enjoyment) apprezzamento m.4) letter. scol. (commentary) critica f.5) econ. rivalutazione f. (of, in di) -
14 fraught
[frɔːt]aggettivo [situation, atmosphere] teso, carico di tensione; [ relationship] tesoto be fraught with — [ situation] essere pieno di [danger, difficulty]
* * *fraught /frɔ:t/A a.1 carico; denso; gravido; pieno: fraught with risk, pieno di rischi; fraught with meaning, denso di significatoB n.* * *[frɔːt]aggettivo [situation, atmosphere] teso, carico di tensione; [ relationship] tesoto be fraught with — [ situation] essere pieno di [danger, difficulty]
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15 hardship
['hɑːdʃɪp]2) С (ordeal) prova f., traversia f.* * *noun ((something which causes) pain, suffering etc: a life full of hardship.) stento* * *hardship /ˈhɑ:dʃɪp/n. [cu]fatica; pena; privazione; sofferenza; stento; sacrificio: a life of hardship, una vita di stenti; (leg.) hardship clause, clausola di avversità (spec. nei contratti internazionali).* * *['hɑːdʃɪp]2) С (ordeal) prova f., traversia f. -
16 inconvenient
[ˌɪŋkən'viːnɪənt]1) [location, arrangement, device] scomodo; [ time] scomodo, inopportuno2) eufem. (embarrassing) [fact, incident] sconveniente, disdicevole* * *[inkən'vi:njənt] 1. adjective(causing trouble or difficulty; awkward: He has come at a very inconvenient time.) inopportuno2. verb(to cause trouble or difficulty to: I hope I haven't inconvenienced you.) incomodare, disturbare* * *inconvenient /ɪnkənˈvi:nɪənt/a.1 che reca disturbo; fastidioso; molesto; importuno; incomodo; scomodo; seccante: If it's not inconvenient for you, we could meet tomorrow, se non Le è d'incomodo, potremmo vederci domani; an inconvenient time, un'ora scomoda2 (arc.) non conveniente; sconvenienteinconveniently avv. FALSI AMICI: nell'inglese attuale inconvenient non significa inconveniente.* * *[ˌɪŋkən'viːnɪənt]1) [location, arrangement, device] scomodo; [ time] scomodo, inopportuno2) eufem. (embarrassing) [fact, incident] sconveniente, disdicevole -
17 Little
I 1. ['lɪtl](compar. less; superl. least) quantisostantivo femminilelittle chance — poche o scarse possibilità
2.there's little sense o point non ha molto senso; he speaks little German parla poco il tedesco; with no little difficulty non senza difficoltà; I see little of Paul these days — in questi giorni vedo Paul molto di rado
it says very little for her — non depone molto a suo favore, non le fa molto onore
little or nothing — quasi nulla, praticamente niente
••little by little — poco a poco, poco per volta, gradualmente
••to make little of — (disparage) dare poca importanza a, non dare peso a [ victory]; (not understand) non capire molto, capirci poco di [ speech]
Note:When little is used as a quantifier ( little time, little hope, little money, little chance), it is translated by poco / poca / pochi / poche: poco tempo, poca speranza, pochi soldi, poche possibilità. For examples and particular usages, see I below. - When a little is used as a pronoun ( give me a little), it is translated by un po' or un poco: dammene un po' / un poco. - When little is used alone as a pronoun ( there is little I can do), it is very often translated non... un granché: non posso fare un granché. - For examples of these and other uses of little as a pronoun ( to do as little as possible etc.), see the entry below. - For uses of little and a little as adverbs, see the entry below. - Note that less and least are treated as separate entries in the dictionaryII ['lɪtl]1) (not much) [speak, eat, go] poco2) (scarcely)3) (not at all)4) a little (bit) (slightly) un po'a little less, more — un po' meno, un po' più
stay a little longer — rimani ancora un po' o un po' di più
5) as little asIII ['lɪtl]aggettivo (compar. less; superl. least) When little is used with nouns to express such qualities as smallness, prettiness or disparagement, Italian may convey the same meaning by means of suffixes that alter the sense of the noun: a little house = una casetta; a little old man = un vecchietto; my little brother = il mio fratellino; her little sister = la sua sorellina; little girl = ragazzina; a little hat = un cappellino; little Mary = Mariuccia; a nasty little man = un perfido ometto; a silly little woman = una stupida donnetta. - Please note that, although smaller and smallest are generally used instead of littler e littlest, the Italian translation does not change: più piccolo, il più piccolo1) (small) piccoloa little house — una piccola casa, una casetta
a little something — qualcosina, una cosina
2) (young) [sister, boy] piccolowhen I was little — quando ero piccolo, da piccolo
3) (feeble) [gesture, nod] piccoloa little voice said... — una vocina flebile disse
4) (lacking influence) [farmer, businessman] piccolo6) (short) [nap, holiday, break] breve* * *['litl] 1. adjective1) (small in size: He is only a little boy; when she was little (= a child).) piccolo2) (small in amount; not much: He has little knowledge of the difficulties involved.) poco3) (not important: I did not expect her to make a fuss about such a little thing.) piccolo, (poco importante)2. pronoun((only) a small amount: He knows little of the real world.) poco3. adverb1) (not much: I go out little nowadays.) poco2) (only to a small degree: a little-known fact.) poco3) (not at all: He little knows how ill he is.) (per niente)•- a little- little by little
- make little of* * *(Surnames) Little /ˈlɪtl/* * *I 1. ['lɪtl](compar. less; superl. least) quantisostantivo femminilelittle chance — poche o scarse possibilità
2.there's little sense o point non ha molto senso; he speaks little German parla poco il tedesco; with no little difficulty non senza difficoltà; I see little of Paul these days — in questi giorni vedo Paul molto di rado
it says very little for her — non depone molto a suo favore, non le fa molto onore
little or nothing — quasi nulla, praticamente niente
••little by little — poco a poco, poco per volta, gradualmente
••to make little of — (disparage) dare poca importanza a, non dare peso a [ victory]; (not understand) non capire molto, capirci poco di [ speech]
Note:When little is used as a quantifier ( little time, little hope, little money, little chance), it is translated by poco / poca / pochi / poche: poco tempo, poca speranza, pochi soldi, poche possibilità. For examples and particular usages, see I below. - When a little is used as a pronoun ( give me a little), it is translated by un po' or un poco: dammene un po' / un poco. - When little is used alone as a pronoun ( there is little I can do), it is very often translated non... un granché: non posso fare un granché. - For examples of these and other uses of little as a pronoun ( to do as little as possible etc.), see the entry below. - For uses of little and a little as adverbs, see the entry below. - Note that less and least are treated as separate entries in the dictionaryII ['lɪtl]1) (not much) [speak, eat, go] poco2) (scarcely)3) (not at all)4) a little (bit) (slightly) un po'a little less, more — un po' meno, un po' più
stay a little longer — rimani ancora un po' o un po' di più
5) as little asIII ['lɪtl]aggettivo (compar. less; superl. least) When little is used with nouns to express such qualities as smallness, prettiness or disparagement, Italian may convey the same meaning by means of suffixes that alter the sense of the noun: a little house = una casetta; a little old man = un vecchietto; my little brother = il mio fratellino; her little sister = la sua sorellina; little girl = ragazzina; a little hat = un cappellino; little Mary = Mariuccia; a nasty little man = un perfido ometto; a silly little woman = una stupida donnetta. - Please note that, although smaller and smallest are generally used instead of littler e littlest, the Italian translation does not change: più piccolo, il più piccolo1) (small) piccoloa little house — una piccola casa, una casetta
a little something — qualcosina, una cosina
2) (young) [sister, boy] piccolowhen I was little — quando ero piccolo, da piccolo
3) (feeble) [gesture, nod] piccoloa little voice said... — una vocina flebile disse
4) (lacking influence) [farmer, businessman] piccolo6) (short) [nap, holiday, break] breve -
18 Major
I 1. ['meɪdʒə(r)]1) (important) [change, event, role] importante; [damage, crisis] grave; [influence, difference, difficulty] grandea major operation — med. una grossa operazione
2) (main) principale3) mus. maggiore4) BE scol.2.Jones major — = il più vecchio tra due studenti che si chiamano Jones
1) mil. maggiore m.2) AE univ. materia f. di specializzazione3) dir. maggiorenne m. e f.4) mus. tono m. maggioreII ['meɪdʒə(r)]verbo intransitivo AE univ.* * *['mei‹ə] 1. adjective(great, or greater, in size, importance etc: major and minor roads; a major discovery.) maggiore, più importante2. noun1) ((often abbreviated to Maj. when written) the rank next below lieutenant-colonel.) maggiore2) ((American) the subject in which you specialize at college or university: a major in physics; Her major is psychology.)3. verb((with in) (American) to study a certain subject in which you specialize at college or university: She is majoring in philosophy.) (studiare come materia principale all'università)- majority- major-general
- the age of majority* * *(Surnames) Major /ˈmeɪdʒə(r)/* * *I 1. ['meɪdʒə(r)]1) (important) [change, event, role] importante; [damage, crisis] grave; [influence, difference, difficulty] grandea major operation — med. una grossa operazione
2) (main) principale3) mus. maggiore4) BE scol.2.Jones major — = il più vecchio tra due studenti che si chiamano Jones
1) mil. maggiore m.2) AE univ. materia f. di specializzazione3) dir. maggiorenne m. e f.4) mus. tono m. maggioreII ['meɪdʒə(r)]verbo intransitivo AE univ. -
19 major
I 1. ['meɪdʒə(r)]1) (important) [change, event, role] importante; [damage, crisis] grave; [influence, difference, difficulty] grandea major operation — med. una grossa operazione
2) (main) principale3) mus. maggiore4) BE scol.2.Jones major — = il più vecchio tra due studenti che si chiamano Jones
1) mil. maggiore m.2) AE univ. materia f. di specializzazione3) dir. maggiorenne m. e f.4) mus. tono m. maggioreII ['meɪdʒə(r)]verbo intransitivo AE univ.* * *['mei‹ə] 1. adjective(great, or greater, in size, importance etc: major and minor roads; a major discovery.) maggiore, più importante2. noun1) ((often abbreviated to Maj. when written) the rank next below lieutenant-colonel.) maggiore2) ((American) the subject in which you specialize at college or university: a major in physics; Her major is psychology.)3. verb((with in) (American) to study a certain subject in which you specialize at college or university: She is majoring in philosophy.) (studiare come materia principale all'università)- majority- major-general
- the age of majority* * *major (1) /ˈmeɪdʒə(r)/n.● Major General, (mil., in GB e in USA) Maggior Generale, ( un tempo) Generale di Divisione; (aeron. mil., in USA) Generale di Divisione Aerea (cfr. ingl. Air Vice Marshal, sotto air).NOTA D'USO: - major o mayor?- ♦ major (2) /ˈmeɪdʒə(r)/A a.1 maggiore; più grande; più importante; di primaria importanza; di maggior peso (o rilievo): Milton's major works, le opere maggiori di Milton; the major share of the profits, la maggior parte degli utili; DIALOGO → - Dental fees- Obviously, if there's any major dental work to do that will cost more, naturalmente se fosse necessario un lavoro dentistico più consistente costerà di più; a major disaster, un disastro gravissimo; a major problem, un problema grave; major road, arteria principale; strada maestra; (med.) major surgery, alta chirurgia3 (leg.) maggiorenne4 (mus.) maggiore: major key [interval, scale], chiave [intervallo, scala] maggiore; concert in G major, concerto in sol maggiore5 ( un tempo, nelle scuole inglesi; posposto al cognome) il maggiore ( di due studenti con lo stesso cognome, fratelli o no): Smith major, il maggiore dei due SmithB n.1 (leg.) maggiorenne2 (econ., fin.) major; grande complesso; azienda di enorme importanza3 (filos.) (la) maggiore; premessa maggiore4 ( all'università: in USA, Canada, Austral. e NZ) disciplina scelta come prima materia ( in un corso di laurea); ( anche) studente che si specializza in ( una disciplina): a nuclear physics major, uno studente di (o che si specializza in) fisica nucleare● (fin.) major shareholder, azionista principale; azionista di riferimento □ (stor. o scherz.) major-domo, maggiordomo □ (mil., mus.) major drum, tamburo maggiore □ ( nelle università USA, ecc.) major subject, materia di specializzazione □ ( nel bridge) major suit, seme di cuori (o di quadri).* * *I 1. ['meɪdʒə(r)]1) (important) [change, event, role] importante; [damage, crisis] grave; [influence, difference, difficulty] grandea major operation — med. una grossa operazione
2) (main) principale3) mus. maggiore4) BE scol.2.Jones major — = il più vecchio tra due studenti che si chiamano Jones
1) mil. maggiore m.2) AE univ. materia f. di specializzazione3) dir. maggiorenne m. e f.4) mus. tono m. maggioreII ['meɪdʒə(r)]verbo intransitivo AE univ. -
20 scrape
I [skreɪp]1) colloq. (awkward situation)to get into a scrape — mettersi nei guai o nei pasticci
to get sb. into a scrape — fare finire qcn. nei pasticci
to give sth. a scrape — raschiare qcs
3) (sound) (of cutlery, shovels) rumore m. stridulo; (of boots) raschio m.II 1. [skreɪp]1) (clean) pelare [ vegetables]; strofinare, sfregare [ shoes]2) (damage) graffiare, scalfire [car part, furniture]3) (injure) scorticare, sbucciare [elbow, knee etc.]4) (making noise) strisciare [chair, feet]5) colloq. (get with difficulty)2.to scrape a living — sbarcare il lunario, tirare avanti ( doing facendo)
1)to scrape against sth. — [ car part] strisciare contro qcs
2) (economize) fare economia•••* * *[skreip] 1. verb1) (to rub against something sharp or rough, usually causing damage: He drove too close to the wall and scraped his car.) strisciare2) (to clean, clear or remove by rubbing with something sharp: He scraped his boots clean; He scraped the paint off the door.) strofinare3) (to make a harsh noise by rubbing: Stop scraping your feet!) (stropicciare i piedi)4) (to move along something while just touching it: The boat scraped against the landing-stage.) rasentare5) (to make by scraping: The dog scraped a hole in the sand.) raspare2. noun1) (an act or sound of scraping.) stridore2) (a mark or slight wound made by scraping: a scrape on the knee.) scorticatura3) (a situation that may lead to punishment: The child is always getting into scrapes.) guai•- scraper- scrape the bottom of the barrel
- scrape through
- scrape together/up* * *[skreɪp]1. n2) fig pasticcio, guaioto get into a scrape — mettersi nei pasticci or nei guai
to get out of a scrape — tirarsi fuori dai pasticci or dai guai
2. vt3. vi(make sound) grattareto scrape (against) — strusciare (contro)•* * *scrape /skreɪp/n.1 [uc] raschiata; raschiatura2 [u] rumore stridulo; stridore; raschio: the scrape of chalk on the blackboard, lo stridore del gesso sulla lavagna3 scorticatura; spellatura; graffio; scalfittura; sbucciatura: He had a nasty scrape on his knee, aveva una brutta scorticatura sul ginocchio5 (fig. fam.) difficoltà; guaio; imbarazzo; imbroglio; impiccio: to get into a scrape, cacciarsi nei guai; inguaiarsi; to get out of a scrape, uscire da una situazione difficile; trarsi d'impaccio; cavarsela7 (fam. scherz.) rasatura8 (fam.) raschiamento; aborto procurato.(to) scrape /skreɪp/v. t. e i.1 raschiare; raspare; grattare; scrostare: to scrape the bottom of a boat, raschiare il fondo d'una barca; to scrape the plaster from the wall, scrostare l'intonaco dalla parete3 sfregare; fregare; strofinare; strisciare (su o contro qc.): The ship scraped ( against) a rock, la nave sfregò su uno scoglio; to scrape a greasy saucepan, fregare un tegame sporco di grasso4 scricchiolare; stridere; grattare: The chalk scraped on the blackboard, il gesso stridette sulla lavagna5 ( spesso to scrape up, to scrape together) racimolare; raggranellare: to scrape together the money for a trip, raggranellare i soldi per fare una gita7 (tecn.) raschiettare; raschinare● to scrape along the walls, rasentare i muri ( camminando) □ to scrape one's boots ( clean), pulirsi i piedi; fregare le scarpe (o gli stivali) sul raschietto □ (fig. fam.) to scrape ( the bottom of) the barrel, raschiare il fondo del barile; prendere quel che c'è di peggio (o gli avanzi, ecc.) □ (fam.) to scrape one's chin, radersi □ to scrape one's feet, stropicciare i piedi; scalpitare □ to scrape a living, sbarcare il lunario; tirare avanti □ to scrape (on) the fiddle, strimpellare il violino □ to scrape one's plate, pulire il piatto ( senza lasciarvi traccia di cibo) □ ( calcio, ecc.: del pallone) to scrape the post, rasentare il palo; fare la barba al palo □ to scrape the skin of a potato, pelare una patata.* * *I [skreɪp]1) colloq. (awkward situation)to get into a scrape — mettersi nei guai o nei pasticci
to get sb. into a scrape — fare finire qcn. nei pasticci
to give sth. a scrape — raschiare qcs
3) (sound) (of cutlery, shovels) rumore m. stridulo; (of boots) raschio m.II 1. [skreɪp]1) (clean) pelare [ vegetables]; strofinare, sfregare [ shoes]2) (damage) graffiare, scalfire [car part, furniture]3) (injure) scorticare, sbucciare [elbow, knee etc.]4) (making noise) strisciare [chair, feet]5) colloq. (get with difficulty)2.to scrape a living — sbarcare il lunario, tirare avanti ( doing facendo)
1)to scrape against sth. — [ car part] strisciare contro qcs
2) (economize) fare economia•••
См. также в других словарях:
difficulty — difficulty, hardship, rigor, vicissitude are synonyms only when they mean something which demands effort and endurance if it is to be overcome or one s end achieved. Difficulty, the most widely applicable of these terms, applies to any condition … New Dictionary of Synonyms
Difficulty — Dif fi*cul*ty, n.; pl. {Difficulties}. [L. difficultas, fr. difficilis difficult; dif = dis + facilis easy: cf. F. difficult[ e]. See {Facile}.] 1. The state of being difficult, or hard to do; hardness; arduousness; opposed to {easiness} or… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
difficulty — [dif′i kul΄tē, dif′ikəl΄tē] n. pl. difficulties [ME & OFr difficulte < L difficultas < difficilis, difficult < dis , not + facilis, easy: see FACILE] 1. the condition or fact of being difficult 2. something that is difficult, as a hard… … English World dictionary
difficulty — [n1] problem; situation requiring great effort adversity, arduousness, awkwardness, barricade, check, complication, crisis, crux, dead end, deadlock, deep water*, dilemma, distress, emergency, exigency, fix*, frustration, hardship, hazard,… … New thesaurus
difficulty — late 14c., from O.Fr. difficulté, from L. difficultatem (nom. difficultas) difficulty, distress, poverty, from difficilis hard, from dis not, away from (see DIS (Cf. dis )) + facilis easy (see FACILE (Cf. facile)) … Etymology dictionary
difficulty — index adversity, aggravation (annoyance), bar (obstruction), burden, complex (entanglement) … Law dictionary
difficulty — ► NOUN (pl. difficulties) 1) the state or condition of being difficult. 2) a difficult or dangerous situation or circumstance. ORIGIN Latin difficultas, from facultas ability, opportunity … English terms dictionary
Difficulty level — In general usage, difficulty level refers to the relative difficulty of completing a task or objective. In computer and video games, the term specifically delineates the ease or difficulty with which an average user may complete a game or a part… … Wikipedia
difficulty — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ considerable, enormous, extreme, grave, great, major, real, serious, severe ▪ We had enormous difficulty … Collocations dictionary
difficulty */*/*/ — UK [ˈdɪfɪk(ə)ltɪ] / US [ˈdɪfɪkəltɪ] noun Word forms difficulty : singular difficulty plural difficulties Metaphor: A difficult idea or situation is like a knot or something that is tied up, tangled, or twisted. When you deal with it successfully … English dictionary
difficulty — dif|fi|cul|ty [ dıfıkəlti ] noun *** 1. ) uncount how difficult something is: The courses vary in content and difficulty. 2. ) uncount if you have difficulty with something, you are not able to do it easily: difficulty (in) doing something: Six… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English