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1 attendance
English-German dictionary of Electrical Engineering and Electronics > attendance
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2 attendance
English-German dictionary of Architecture and Construction > attendance
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3 attendance
noun2) (number of people present) Teilnehmerzahl, die3)* * *noun His attendance (= the number of times he attends) at school is poor; Attendances (= the number of people attending) at the concerts went down after the price of tickets increased.) das Erscheinen, die Besucherzahl* * *at·tend·ance[əˈtendən(t)s]n\attendance at lectures is compulsory bei Vorlesungen besteht Anwesenheitspflicht3. (care)to be in \attendance [on sb] [jdm] zur Verfügung stehenthe singer never goes out without his security men in \attendance der Sänger verlässt das Haus niemals ohne seine Bodyguards an seiner Seite4.* * *[ə'tendəns]n1)to be in attendance at sth —
to be in attendance on sb — jdm aufwarten, jdn bedienen
2) (= being present) Anwesenheit f (at bei)3) (= number of people present) Teilnehmerzahl frecord attendance — eine Rekordteilnehmerzahl, Rekordteilnehmerzahlen pl
* * *attendance [əˈtendəns] s1. Anwesenheit f, Besuch m:attendance compulsary Anwesenheitspflicht!;attendance at school Schulbesuch;attendance officer US Schulbeamter, der Fälle von häufigem unentschuldigtem Fehlen untersucht;attendance register Anwesenheitsbuch n2. Besucher-, Teilnehmerzahl f:there was an attendance of over 300 es waren mehr als 300 Personen anwesend3. Betreuung f:be in attendance als Brautjungfer fungieren ( → 1);attendance allowance Br Pflegegeld n (für Hilfe einer körperlich od geistig schwerbehinderten Person);attendance centre Br Heim n für Freizeitarrest (straffälliger Jugendlicher); → academic.ru/18355/dance">dance B 1, medical A 1 a4. obsa) Begleitung f, Gefolge nb) Dienerschaft f* * *noun2) (number of people present) Teilnehmerzahl, die3)* * *n.Anwesenheit f.Begleitung f.Beteiligung f.Dienstleistung f.Teilnahme f.Wartung -en f. -
4 attendance
at·tend·ance [əʼtendən(t)s] n\attendance at lectures is compulsory bei Vorlesungen besteht Anwesenheitspflicht3) ( care)to be in \attendance [on sb] [jdm] zur Verfügung stehen;the singer never goes out without his security men in \attendance der Sänger verlässt das Haus niemals ohne seine Bodyguards an seiner SeitePHRASES: -
5 attendance
<tech.gen> (by operator) ■ Wartung f -
6 attendance
• Anwesenheit, Erscheinen -
7 attendance
germ. *werdu -
8 attendance
UK / USn(presence) Anwesenheit f, (people present) Teilnehmerzahl f -
9 attendance
UK / USn(presence) Anwesenheit f, (people present) Teilnehmerzahl f -
10 attendance part
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11 attendance bonus
Englisch-Deutsch Fachwörterbuch der Wirtschaft > attendance bonus
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12 attendance fees
Englisch-Deutsch Fachwörterbuch der Wirtschaft > attendance fees
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13 attendance figures
Englisch-Deutsch Fachwörterbuch der Wirtschaft > attendance figures
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14 attendance list
Englisch-Deutsch Fachwörterbuch der Wirtschaft > attendance list
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15 attendance money
Englisch-Deutsch Fachwörterbuch der Wirtschaft > attendance money
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16 attendance of witnesses
Englisch-Deutsch Fachwörterbuch der Wirtschaft > attendance of witnesses
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17 attendance printout
attendance printout Anwesenheitsprotokoll nEnglish-German dictionary of Electrical Engineering and Electronics > attendance printout
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18 attendance recording
attendance recording Anwesenheitserfassung fEnglish-German dictionary of Electrical Engineering and Electronics > attendance recording
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19 attendance time
attendance time Anwesenheitszeit fEnglish-German dictionary of Electrical Engineering and Electronics > attendance time
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20 attendance centre
См. также в других словарях:
attendance — at‧tend‧ance [əˈtendəns] noun [countable, uncountable] 1. the number of people who attend something such as a meeting, or who go to see an event such as a football match etc: • Seven jobs were axed at the zoo after a 50% drop in attendances. 2.… … Financial and business terms
Attendance — At*tend ance, n. [OE. attendance, OF. atendance, fr. atendre, F. attendre. See {Attend}, v. t.] 1. Attention; regard; careful application. [Obs.] [1913 Webster] Till I come, give attendance to reading. 1 Tim. iv. 13. [1913 Webster] 2. The act of… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
attendance — late 14c., act of attending to one s duties, from O.Fr. atendance attention, wait, hope, expectation, from atendant, prp. of atendre (see ATTEND (Cf. attend)). Meaning action of waiting on someone dates from late 14c. (to dance attendance on… … Etymology dictionary
attendance — [n1] being present appearance, attending, being in evidence, being there, participation, presence; concept 388 Ant. absence attendance [v2] people present at event assemblage, assembly, audience, box office, company, congregation, crowd, draw,… … New thesaurus
attendance — I noun accompaniment, ministration, presence II index service (assistance) Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
attendance — ► NOUN 1) the action of attending. 2) the number of people present at a particular occasion … English terms dictionary
attendance — [ə ten′dəns] n. 1. the act of attending 2. the persons or number of persons attending 3. the degree of regularity in attending … English World dictionary
attendance — n. persons present number of persons present 1) to check attendance; to take attendance (in school) 2) average; daily; low, poor; perfect attendance 3) attendance has gone up; attendance has fallen, gone down presence 4) attendance at (attendance … Combinatory dictionary
attendance — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ good, large, record ▪ It was a record attendance for a midweek game. ▪ low, poor, sparse (esp. AmE), spotty (Am … Collocations dictionary
attendance — [[t]əte̱ndəns[/t]] attendances 1) N UNCOUNT: usu with supp Someone s attendance at an event or an institution is the fact that they are present at the event or go regularly to the institution. Her attendance at school was sporadic. 2) N VAR: usu… … English dictionary
attendance — at|tend|ance [əˈtendəns] n 1.) [U and C] the number of people who attend a game, concert, meeting etc ▪ We have an average attendance of 4000 fans per game. ▪ Last year s fair saw attendance figures of 32,000. 2.) [U and C] when someone goes to a … Dictionary of contemporary English