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1 acknowledge
ək'noli‹1) (to admit as being fact: He acknowledged defeat; He acknowledged that I was right.) erkjenne, innrømme2) (to say (usually in writing) that one has received (something): He acknowledged the letter.) bekrefte (mottakelsen av)3) (to give thanks for: He acknowledged their help.) takke for4) (to greet someone: He acknowledged her by waving.) hilse, svare•- acknowledgmentanerkjenne--------erkjenne--------godta--------innrømme--------tilstå--------vedgåverb \/əkˈnɒlɪdʒ\/, \/ækˈnɒlɪdʒ\/1) innrømme, erkjenne, vedgå2) anerkjenne, vedstå seg3) takke for4) ( om melding e.l.) bekrefte (å ha mottatt)• acknowledged!5) ( jus) bekrefte, erkjenne, vedgåacknowledge receipt of bekrefte mottakelsen avacknowledge somebody vise at man gjenkjenner noen ved å hilseacknowledge the signature bekrefte underskriften\/navnetrekket -
2 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 -
3 disown
dis'oun(to refuse to acknowledge as belonging to oneself: to disown one's son.) nekte å vedkjenne seg/kjennes vedverb \/dɪˈsəʊn\/1) ikke kjennes ved2) ta avstand fra, fornekte, nekte å erkjenne3) forkaste -
4 receipt
rə'si:t1) (the act of receiving or being received: Please sign this form to acknowledge receipt of the money.) mottakelse2) (a written note saying that money etc has been received: I paid the bill and he gave me a receipt.) kvitteringkvitt--------kvittering--------resepsjonIsubst. \/rɪˈsiːt\/1) kvittering2) (i handelskorrespondanse, stivt) mottakelse, mottakingjeg har mottatt\/fått Deres brev3) ( gammeldags for recipe) oppskrift, botemiddel, reseptin receipt of mottakelse avon receipt of ved\/etter mottakelsen avon receipt of stamps mot vedleggelse av frimerker(advice of) receipt mottakningsbevisreceipt for kvittering påreceipt in full saldokvitteringreceipt in part avbetalingskvittering, delinnbetalingskvitteringIIverb \/rɪˈsiːt\/kvittere (for) -
5 recognize
1) (to see, hear etc (a person, thing etc) and know who or what that person, thing etc is, because one has seen or heard him, it etc before: I recognized his voice/handwriting; I recognized him by his voice.) gjenkjenne2) (to admit, acknowledge: Everyone recognized his skill.) anerkjenne, vedkjenne seg3) (to be willing to have political relations with: Many countries were unwilling to recognize the new republic.) anerkjenne4) (to accept as valid, well-qualified etc: I don't recognize the authority of this court.) anerkjenne•- recognisable
- recognizably
- recognisably
- recognitionanerkjenne--------innrømmeverb \/ˈrekəɡnaɪz\/ eller recognise1) kjenne igjen2) anerkjenne, kjennes ved, vedkjenne seg3) erkjenne (for seg selv), medgi, innse, være klar over4) påskjønne, anerkjenne, verdsette -
6 give (someone) credit (for something)
(to acknowledge and praise (someone for a good piece of work etc): He was given credit for completing the work so quickly.) gi (noen) æren for (noe)English-Norwegian dictionary > give (someone) credit (for something)
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7 give (someone) credit (for something)
(to acknowledge and praise (someone for a good piece of work etc): He was given credit for completing the work so quickly.) gi (noen) æren for (noe)English-Norwegian dictionary > give (someone) credit (for something)
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8 give (someone) credit (for something)
(to acknowledge and praise (someone for a good piece of work etc): He was given credit for completing the work so quickly.) gi (noen) æren for (noe)English-Norwegian dictionary > give (someone) credit (for something)
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9 give (someone) credit (for something)
(to acknowledge and praise (someone for a good piece of work etc): He was given credit for completing the work so quickly.) gi (noen) æren for (noe)English-Norwegian dictionary > give (someone) credit (for something)
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10 recognise
1) (to see, hear etc (a person, thing etc) and know who or what that person, thing etc is, because one has seen or heard him, it etc before: I recognized his voice/handwriting; I recognized him by his voice.) gjenkjenne2) (to admit, acknowledge: Everyone recognized his skill.) anerkjenne, vedkjenne seg3) (to be willing to have political relations with: Many countries were unwilling to recognize the new republic.) anerkjenne4) (to accept as valid, well-qualified etc: I don't recognize the authority of this court.) anerkjenne•- recognisable
- recognizably
- recognisably
- recognition
См. также в других словарях:
acknowledge — 1 Acknowledge, admit, own, avow, confess are synonymous when they mean to disclose something against one’s will or inclination. All usually imply some sort of pressure as that of the law or of conscience leading to the disclosure. Acknowledge or… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
acknowledge — ac*knowl edge ([a^]k*n[o^]l [e^]j), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {acknowledged} ([a^]k*n[o^]l [e^]jd); p. pr. & vb. n. {acknowledging} ([a^]k*n[o^]l [e^]j*[i^]ng).] [Prob. fr. pref. a + the verb knowledge. See {Knowledge}, and cf. {Acknow}.] 1. To own or… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
acknowledge — ac·knowl·edge vt edged, edg·ing 1: to indicate recognition and acceptance of the power of taxation in the general and state governments is acknowledged to be concurrent McCulloch v. Maryland, 17 U.S. 316 (1819) 2 a: to show by word or act that… … Law dictionary
acknowledge — ac‧knowl‧edge [əkˈnɒlɪdʒ ǁ ˈnɑː ] verb [transitive] 1. to tell someone that you have received something such as a letter they have sent to you: • We shall be grateful if you will kindly acknowledge receipt of this letter. 2. to admit or accept… … Financial and business terms
acknowledge — [v1] verbally recognize authority accede, accept, acquiesce, agree, allow, approve, attest to, certify, defend, defer to, endorse, grant, own, ratify, recognize, subscribe to, support, take an oath, uphold, yield; concepts 8,50,88 Ant. forswear,… … New thesaurus
acknowledge — [ak näl′ij, əknäl′ij] vt. acknowledged, acknowledging [earlier aknowledge < ME knowlechen < knowleche (see KNOWLEDGE): infl. by ME aknowen < OE oncnawan, to understand, know, with Latinized prefix] 1. to admit to be true or as stated;… … English World dictionary
acknowledge — (v.) 1550s, a blend of Middle English aknow (from O.E. oncnawan understand, from on + cnawan recognize; see KNOW (Cf. know)) and Middle English knowlechen admit, acknowledge (c.1200; see KNOWLEDGE (Cf. knowledge)). In the merger, a parasitic c… … Etymology dictionary
acknowledge — ► VERB 1) accept or admit the existence or truth of. 2) confirm receipt of or gratitude for. 3) greet with words or gestures. ORIGIN from the obsolete verb knowledge (in the same sense) … English terms dictionary
acknowledge */*/ — UK [əkˈnɒlɪdʒ] / US [əkˈnɑlɪdʒ] verb [transitive] Word forms acknowledge : present tense I/you/we/they acknowledge he/she/it acknowledges present participle acknowledging past tense acknowledged past participle acknowledged 1) a) to accept or… … English dictionary
acknowledge — ac|knowl|edge W3S3 [əkˈnɔlıdʒ US ˈna: ] v [T] ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(admit)¦ 2¦(recognize something s importance)¦ 3¦(accept somebody s authority)¦ 4¦(thank)¦ 5¦(show you notice somebody)¦ 6¦(say you have received something)¦ ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ [Date: 1400 1500; Origin … Dictionary of contemporary English
acknowledge — acknowledgeable, adj. acknowledger, n. /ak nol ij/, v.t., acknowledged, acknowledging. 1. to admit to be real or true; recognize the existence, truth, or fact of: to acknowledge one s mistakes. 2. to show or express recognition or realization of … Universalium