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1 accept
ək'sept1) (to take (something offered): He accepted the gift.) ta imot2) (to believe in, agree to or acknowledge: We accept your account of what happened; Their proposal was accepted; He accepted responsibility for the accident.) godta, akseptere•- acceptably
- acceptance
- acceptedgodkjenne--------godtaverb \/əkˈsept\/, \/ækˈsept\/1) godkjenne, akseptere, slutte seg til2) motta, ta imotta imot \/ si ja (takk) til en innbydelse3) godta, erkjenne, finne seg i, gå med på4) ( handel) akseptereaccept as betrakte som(the) accepted thing det som er allment vedtatt\/akseptertbe widely accepted få bred tilslutning\/aksept -
2 delight
1. verb1) (to please greatly: I was delighted by/at the news; They were delighted to accept the invitation.) fryde, glede2) (to have or take great pleasure (from): He delights in teasing me.) finne glede ved2. noun((something which causes) great pleasure: Peacefulness is one of the delights of country life.) fryd, stor glede, behag- delightfullygledeIsubst. \/dɪˈlaɪt\/1) glede, fornøyelse, (vel)behag2) fryd, nytelse3) henrykkelsea delight to the eye en fryd for øyettake (a) delight in finne glede i, synes det er morsomt å, ha lyst til, glede seg overIIverb \/dɪˈlaɪt\/glede, frydedelight at glede seg overdelight in finne glede i, glede seg over -
3 be inclined to
1) (to have a tendency to (do something): He is inclined to be a bit lazy.) være tilbøyelig til, ha en tendens til2) (to have a slight desire to (do something): I am inclined to accept their invitation.) ha lyst til/på -
4 refuse
I rə'fju:z verb1) (not to do what one has been asked, told or is expected to do: He refused to help me; She refused to believe what I said; When I asked him to leave, he refused.) nekte, avvise2) (not to accept: He refused my offer of help; They refused our invitation; She refused the money.) avslå, vegre seg3) (not to give (permission etc): I was refused admittance to the meeting.) nekte•- refusalII 'refju:s noun(rubbish; waste material from eg a kitchen.) avfall, søppel- refuse collection vehicleavfall--------avslå--------avvise--------nekte--------søppelIsubst. \/ˈrefjuːs\/1) avfall, spill, skrot, rusk, søppel2) ( handel) feilvarerefuse matter avfallsstoffthe refuse of society samfunnets avskumIIverb \/rɪˈfjuːz\/1) vegre (seg), nekte2) avslå, si nei til, avvise, refusere, forsmå, vrake, frabe seg3) ( om hest) refusere, vegre å ta (et hinder), bråstoppe
См. также в других словарях:
accept — [ak sept′, əksept′] vt. [ME accepten < OFr accepter < L acceptare < pp. stem of accipere < ad , to + capere, to take: see HAVE] 1. to take (what is offered or given); receive, esp. willingly 2. to receive favorably; approve [to accept … English World dictionary
invitation — noun 1 (C) a written or spoken request to someone, inviting them to go somewhere or do something (+ to): Did you get an invitation to the party? | invitation to do sth: Shortly afterwards, Dawson received an invitation to speak at a scientific… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
accept — verb 1 GIFT/OFFER/INVITATION (I, T) to take something that someone offers you, or to agree to do something that someone asked you to do: Please accept this small gift. | I ve decided to accept the job. | Are you going to accept their invitation?… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
accept — /ak sept /, v.t. 1. to take or receive (something offered); receive with approval or favor: to accept a present; to accept a proposal. 2. to agree or consent to; accede to: to accept a treaty; to accept an apology. 3. to respond or answer… … Universalium
accept — ac•cept [[t]ækˈsɛpt[/t]] v. t. 1) to take or receive (something offered) 2) to receive with approval or favor: to accept a proposal[/ex] 3) to receive or admit as adequate or satisfactory: to accept an apology[/ex] 4) to respond or answer… … From formal English to slang
invitation — in|vi|ta|tion [ˌınvıˈteıʃən] n 1.) a written or spoken request to someone, inviting them to go somewhere or do something ▪ Shortly afterwards, Dawson received an invitation to speak at a scientific conference. ▪ She accepted his invitation to… … Dictionary of contemporary English
Invitation to treat — (or invitation to bargain in the United States) is a contract law term. It comes from the Latin phrase invitatio ad offerendum and means inviting an offer . Or as Andrew Burrows writes, an invitation to treat is an expression of willingness to… … Wikipedia
accept — ac‧cept [əkˈsept] verb [intransitive, transitive] 1. to take or agree to take something that has been offered: • The steel workers have accepted a 3% wage offer. accept something from somebody • Doctors should not accept expensive gifts from… … Financial and business terms
accept — accept, except There is little danger of confusion in spoken contexts, since all they have in common is their similar pronunciation in running discourse, but their spelling is open to confusion. David Crystal reports in his book Who Cares About… … Modern English usage
accept — ac|cept W1S1 [əkˈsept] v ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(gift/offer/invitation)¦ 2¦(situation/problem etc)¦ 3¦(think somebody/something is good enough)¦ 4¦(become part of a group)¦ 5¦(agree to take/deal with something)¦ 6¦(suggestion/advice)¦ 7¦(believe an… … Dictionary of contemporary English
accept — verb 1 take/receive ADVERB ▪ eagerly, gladly, graciously, gratefully, willingly ▪ She graciously accepted my apology. ▪ reluctantly … Collocations dictionary