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1 ascribe
(to think of as done or caused by someone or something: He ascribed his success to the help of his friends.) tillegge, tilskrivetilskriveverb \/əˈskraɪb\/tilskrive, tilleggeascribe something to somebody tillegge noen noe -
2 humour
'hju:mə 1. noun1) (the ability to amuse people; quickness to spot a joke: He has a great sense of humour.) humor2) (the quality of being amusing: the humour of the situation.) humor2. verb(to please (someone) by agreeing with him or doing as he wishes: There is no point in telling him he is wrong - just humour him instead.) snakke noen etter munnen, føye- humorist- humorous
- humorously
- humorousness
- - humouredhumorIsubst. \/ˈhjuːmə\/ eller humor1) humor, morsomheter, komikk2) humoristisk litteratur, humoristisk film3) lune, humør, stemningjeg er ikke i humør til å bli motsagt \/ jeg ønsker ikke å bli motsagt4) sinnelag, temperament, lynne5) plutselig innfall6) nykke, pussig trekk, pussighet7) (historisk, fysiologi, også cardinal humour)væske, kroppsvæske• within alternative medicine healers still ascribe diseases to the four cardinal humoursinnen alternativ medisin tilskriver behandlere fremdeles sykdommer til de fire væsketypene (blod, flegma\/slim, gul galle og sort galle)the humour of something det humoristiske ved noe, det morsomme ved noe, det lystige ved noehumours pussigheter, pussige trekkin (a) bad humour i dårlig humørin (a) good humour i godt humørbe in the humour for være i humør til, være klar for, være opplagt til, være rede forout of humour i dårlig humør utilfreds sintput somebody out of humour sette noen i dårlig humør, få noen i dårlig humørsense of humour humoristisk sans, sans for humorwhen the humour takes one når man er i det humøret, når man er i det hjørnetwry humour besk humor, tørr humorIIverb \/ˈhjuːmə\/ eller humor1) føye2) snakke etter munnenhumour somebody føye noensnakke noen etter munnen la noen få viljen sin, la noen få det som de vilhumour somebody's whims føye noen i lunene deres
См. также в других словарях:
Ascribe — As*cribe , v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Ascribed}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Ascribing}.] [L. ascribere, adscribere, to ascribe; ad + scribere to write: cf. OF. ascrire. See {Scribe}.] 1. To attribute, impute, or refer, as to a cause; as, his death was ascribed… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
ascribe — [ə skrīb′] vt. ascribed, ascribing [ME ascriben (also ascriven < OFr ascriv , stem of ascrire) < L ascribere < ad , to + scribere, to write: see SCRIBE] 1. to assign (something) to a supposed cause; impute; attribute 2. to regard… … English World dictionary
ascribe — I verb accord, accredit, adsignare, affiliate, allege to belong, apply, appropriate, ascribere, assign, attach, attribuere, attribute, charge with, connect with, credit with, derive from, filiate, give, impute, point to, predicate, refer to,… … Law dictionary
ascribe — ► VERB (ascribe to) 1) attribute (a particular cause, person, or period) to. 2) regard (a quality) as belonging to. DERIVATIVES ascribable adjective ascription noun. ORIGIN Latin ascribere, from scribere write … English terms dictionary
ascribe to — index blame Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
ascribe — (v.) mid 14c., ascrive, from O.Fr. ascrivre to inscribe; attribute, impute, from L. ascribere to write in, to add to in a writing, from ad to (see AD (Cf. ad )) + scribere to write (see SCRIPT (Cf. script)). Spelling restored by 16c. Related … Etymology dictionary
ascribe — ascribe, attribute, impute, assign, refer, credit, accredit, charge mean to lay something (creditable, discreditable, or neutral) to the account of a person or thing. The first four of these words are often used interchangeably without marked… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
ascribe — [v] assign to source accredit, attribute, charge, credit, hang on, impute, lay, pin on*, refer, reference, set down; concepts 39,49 … New thesaurus
ascribe to — phrasal verb [transitive] Word forms ascribe to : present tense I/you/we/they ascribe to he/she/it ascribes to present participle ascribing to past tense ascribed to past participle ascribed to formal 1) ascribe something to something to believe… … English dictionary
ascribe — [[t]əskra͟ɪb[/t]] ascribes, ascribing, ascribed 1) VERB If you ascribe an event or condition to a particular cause, you say or consider that it was caused by that thing. [FORMAL] [V n to n] An autopsy eventually ascribed the baby s death to… … English dictionary
ascribe — transitive verb (ascribed; ascribing) Etymology: Middle English, from Latin ascribere, from ad + scribere to write more at scribe Date: 15th century to refer to a supposed cause, source, or author • ascribable adjective Synonyms: ascribe,… … New Collegiate Dictionary