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1 attend
[ə'tend]1) (to go to or be present at: He attended the meeting; He will attend school till he is sixteen.) dalyvauti, lankyti2) ((with to) to listen or give attention to: Attend carefully to what the teacher is saying!) klausyti, atkreipti dėmesį3) (to deal with: I'll attend to that problem tomorrow.) (iš)spręsti, pasirūpinti4) (to look after; to help or serve: Two doctors attended her all through her illness; The queen was attended by four ladies.) prižiūrėti, rūpintis•- attendant
- in attendance -
2 count
I noun(nobleman in certain countries, equal in rank to a British earl.) grafas- countessII 1. verb1) (to name the numbers up to: Count (up to) ten.) skaičiuoti2) (to calculate using numbers: Count (up) the number of pages; Count how many people there are; There were six people present, not counting the chairman.) (su)skaičiuoti3) (to be important or have an effect or value: What he says doesn't count; All these essays count towards my final mark.) būti svarbiam, turėti įtakos/vertę4) (to consider: Count yourself lucky to be here.) laikyti2. noun1) (an act of numbering: They took a count of how many people attended.) skaičiavimas2) (a charge brought against a prisoner etc: She faces three counts of theft.) kaltinimas3. adjective(see countable.)- counter- countdown
- count on
- out for the count -
3 funeral
['fju:nərəl](the ceremony before the burying or cremation of a dead body: A large number of people attended the president's funeral; ( also adjective) a funeral procession.) laidotuvės -
4 invitation
[invi'teiʃən]1) (a (written) request to come or go somewhere: Have you received an invitation to their party?; We had to refuse the invitation to the wedding.) (pa)kvietimas2) (the act of inviting: He attended the committee meeting on the invitation of the chairman.) (pa)kvietimas -
5 leave
I [li:v] past tense, past participle - left; verb1) (to go away or depart from, often without intending to return: He left the room for a moment; They left at about six o'clock; I have left that job.) išeiti, išvykti, mesti2) (to go without taking: She left her gloves in the car; He left his children behind when he went to France.) palikti3) (to allow to remain in a particular state or condition: She left the job half-finished.) pamesti, palikti4) (to let (a person or a thing) do something without being helped or attended to: I'll leave the meat to cook for a while.) palikti5) (to allow to remain for someone to do, make etc: Leave that job to the experts!) palikti6) (to make a gift of in one's will: She left all her property to her son.) palikti•- leave out
- left over II [li:v] noun1) (permission to do something, eg to be absent: Have I your leave to go?) leidimas2) ((especially of soldiers, sailors etc) a holiday: He is home on leave at the moment.) atostogos•- take one's leave of- take one's leave -
6 mayoress
1) (a mayor's wife: The mayor and mayoress attended the dinner.) mero žmona2) (a female mayor: She has just been elected mayoress.) merė -
7 officially
[ə'fiʃəli]1) ((negative unofficially) as an official: He attended the ceremony officially.) kaip oficialus asmuo2) (formally: The new library was officially opened yesterday.) oficialiai3) (according to what is announced publicly (though not necessarily true in fact): Officially he is on holiday - actually he is working on a new book.) oficialiai, formaliai•- officious
- officiously
- officiousness
- office-bearer
- through the kind offices of
- through the offices of -
8 reception
[rə'sepʃən]1) (the act of receiving or being received: His speech got a good reception.) priėmimas, sutikimas2) (a formal party or social gathering to welcome guests: a wedding reception.) priimtuvės3) (the quality of radio or television signals: Radio reception is poor in this area.) priėmimas4) (the part of a hotel, hospital etc where visitors enter and are attended to.) priimamasis• -
9 relative
['relətiv]noun (a member of one's family; a relation: All his relatives attended the funeral.) giminė -
10 reunion
[ri:ju:njən]1) (a meeting of people who have not met for some time: We attended a reunion of former pupils of our school.) susitikimas, susiėjimas2) (the act of reuniting or state of being reunited.) susijungimas•- reunite -
11 Sunday school
(a school attended by children on Sundays for religious instruction.) sekmadieninė mokykla
См. также в других словарях:
attended — attended; un·attended; … English syllables
Attended — Attend At*tend , v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Attended}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Attending}.] [OE. atenden, OF. atendre, F. attendre, to expect, to wait, fr. L. attendre to stretch, (sc. animum), to apply the mind to; ad + tendere to stretch. See {Tend}.] 1. To … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
attended by obstacles — index difficult Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
attended with death — index deadly Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
attended with risk — index dangerous Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
attended — adjective That attends … Wiktionary
attended — at·tend || É™ tend v. be present in a place; care for, serve (attend to); accompany … English contemporary dictionary
attended — See attendance … Ballentine's law dictionary
attended — adjective 1. playing or singing with instrumental or vocal accompaniment • Syn: ↑accompanied • Ant: ↑unaccompanied (for: ↑accompanied) 2. having a caretaker or other watcher • Syn: ↑ … Useful english dictionary
attended mode — This is the mode that a communications program is in while you are operating it. See also unattended mode … Dictionary of telecommunications
attended before court — represented in court … English contemporary dictionary