-
21 bereave
bain de -
22 bereave
be.reave[bir'i:v] vt 1 privar de, roubar. 2 deixar desolado (geralmente em pp bereaved) pela perda de parente etc. the bereaved a família e os amigos do defunto. -
23 bereave
v (past і p.p. bereaved, bereft)1) втрачати близькихthe bereaved husband — чоловік, що недавно втратив дружину
2) губити, втрачати (щось)* * *v1) (bereaved, bereft) pass позбавляти2) заст. пограбувати, відняти ( що-небудь) -
24 bereave
-
25 bereave
v. elinden almak, yoksun bırakmak; sevdiğini almak* * *elinden al -
26 bereave of
yoksun bırak -
27 bereave
[birí:v]transitive verboropati, odvzeti, prikrajšati; osamiti, užalostiti -
28 bereave
vt. 빼앗다(deprive)(be\bereaved lf one, s mother 어머니를 여의다/be bereft of hope 히망을 잃다) -
29 bereave
(bereaved, bereft) რისიმე დაკარგვა / მოკლება / არქონაbereft of reason გიჟი, შეშლილიbereft of hope იმედდაკარგული, უიმედოthe accident bereaved her of her child უბედურმა შემთხვევამ მას ბავშვი დააკარგვინა -
30 bereave
محروم كردن ، داغديدهكردن -
31 bereave
vt ([pret] #d, bereft; [pp] #d, bereft) oteti, oduzeti, lišiti, ostaviti u očajanju, ucviliti, ucvijeliti* * *
lišiti
oduzeti -
32 bereave
v. onteigenen, stelenbereave1[ birrie:v] 〈werkwoord; voornamelijk passief〉♦voorbeelden:the accident bereaved him of his daughter • bij het ongeval verloor hij zijn dochter————————bereave2♦voorbeelden: -
33 bereave
[bɪ'riːv]verbo transitivo lett.1) (pass., p.pass. bereaved) (by death) orbare [person, family]* * *[bɪ'riːv]verbo transitivo lett.1) (pass., p.pass. bereaved) (by death) orbare [person, family] -
34 bereave
atņemt, laupīt -
35 bereave
лишува од* * *v. tr ужалена; a bereaved mother ужалена мајка; (fig.) he was bereft of his wits тој беше избезумен; лишува; уплакан, натажен -
36 bereave
v. beröva, fråntaga, förlora -
37 bereave
v privar, desposseir -
38 bereave
-
39 bereave
• lišiti; oduzeti; otrgnuti; ožalostiti; porobiti; ucveliti -
40 bereave
• ottaa pois• riistää• ryöstää• viedä• anastaa
См. также в других словарях:
Bereave — Be*reave (b[ e]*r[=e]v ), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Bereaved} (b[ e]*r[=e]vd ), {Bereft} (b[ e]*r[e^]ft ); p. pr. & vb. n. {Bereaving.}] [OE. bireven, AS. bere[ a]fian. See {Be }, and {Reave.}] [1913 Webster] 1. To make destitute; to deprive; to… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
bereave — index deprive, despoil Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
bereave — (v.) O.E. bereafian to deprive of, take away, seize, rob, from be + reafian rob, plunder, from P.Gmc. *raubojanan, from PIE *reup to snatch (see RAPID (Cf. rapid)). A common Germanic formation (Cf. O.Fris. birava despoil, O.S. biroban, Du … Etymology dictionary
bereave — ► VERB (be bereaved) ▪ be deprived of a close relation or friend through their death. DERIVATIVES bereavement noun. ORIGIN Old English … English terms dictionary
bereave — [bē rēv′, birēv′] vt. bereaved or bereft [bireft′] bereaving [ME bireven < OE bereafian, to deprive, rob < be , BE + reafian, akin to Ger rauben: see REAVE1] 1. to deprive or rob; dispossess: now usually in the pp. bereft [she was bereft of … English World dictionary
bereave — transitive verb ( reaved or bereft; reaving) Etymology: Middle English bereven, from Old English berēafian, from be + rēafian to rob more at reave Date: before 12th century 1. to deprive of something usually used with … New Collegiate Dictionary
bereave — bereavement, n. bereaver, n. /bi reev /, v.t., bereaved or bereft, bereaving. 1. to deprive and make desolate, esp. by death (usually fol. by of): Illness bereaved them of their mother. 2. to deprive ruthlessly or by force (usually fol. by of):… … Universalium
bereave — verb /bɪˈriːv/ To take away someone or something important or close Death bereaved him of his wife. See Also: reave … Wiktionary
bereave — Synonyms and related words: abridge, bleed, curtail, cut off, deprive, deprive of, disentitle, disinherit, dispossess, divest, drain, ease one of, leave, leave behind, lighten one of, lose, milk, mine, orphan, oust, rob, strip, take away from,… … Moby Thesaurus
bereave — see ROB … The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins
bereave — v. a. Wright’s L. P. p. 101 … Oldest English Words