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1 wither
['wiðə]((of plants etc) to (cause to) fade, dry up, or decay: The plants withered because they had no water; The sun has withered my plants.) izsušiti* * *[wíðə]transitive verbizsušiti, oveniti, napraviti ovenelo; figuratively oslabiti, uničitito wither with a look colloquially uničiti s pogledom; intransitive verb (često wither up) (o)veneti; osušiti se, osahniti; figuratively oslabeti, hirati, propasti; prenehati, miniti, izginiti; pasti, padati (cene); figuratively ginitito wither away — odmirati, oslabeti
См. также в других словарях:
fade — [fād] vi. faded, fading [ME faden < OFr fader < fade, pale < VL * fatidus, prob. < L fatuus (see FATUOUS); infl. by vapidus, VAPID] 1. to become less distinct; lose color, brilliance, etc. 2. to lose freshness or strength; wither;… … English World dictionary
fade — [c]/feɪd / (say fayd) verb (faded, fading) –verb (i) 1. to lose freshness, vigour, strength, or health: the flower faded. 2. to lose brightness or vividness, as light or colour. 3. (of radio signals) to lose strength due to interference phenomena …
fade — fadable, adj. fadedly, adv. fadedness, n. /fayd/, v., faded, fading, n. v.i. 1. to lose brightness or vividness of color. 2. to become dim, as light, or lose brightness of illumination. 3. to lose freshness, vigor, strength, or health: The tulips … Universalium
fade — [[t]feɪd[/t]] v. fad•ed, fad•ing, n. 1) to lose brightness or vividness of color 2) to become dim, as light, or lose brightness of illumination 3) to lose freshness, vigor, strength, or health 4) to disappear or die gradually (often fol. by away… … From formal English to slang
fade — I. verb (faded; fading) Etymology: Middle English, from Anglo French *fader, from fade feeble, insipid, from Vulgar Latin *fatidus, alteration of Latin fatuus fatuous, insipid Date: 14th century intransitive verb 1. to lose freshness, strength,… … New Collegiate Dictionary
Fade — Fade, v. t. To cause to wither; to deprive of freshness or vigor; to wear away. [1913 Webster] No winter could his laurels fade. Dryden. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
fade — ► VERB 1) gradually grow faint and disappear. 2) lose or cause to lose colour. 3) (with reference to a film or video image or recorded sound) increase or decrease in clarity or volume. ► NOUN ▪ an act or instance of fading. ORIGIN Old French… … English terms dictionary
fade in — Cause to appear (or disappear) light, sound or picture gradually, in manipulating machinery for TV, radio, cinema or stage production … A concise dictionary of English slang
fade out — Cause to appear (or disappear) light, sound or picture gradually, in manipulating machinery for TV, radio, cinema or stage production … A concise dictionary of English slang
fade — v. & n. v. 1 intr. & tr. lose or cause to lose colour. 2 intr. lose freshness or strength; (of flowers etc.) droop, wither. 3 intr. a (of colour, light, etc.) disappear gradually; grow pale or dim. b (of sound) grow faint. 4 intr. (of a feeling… … Useful english dictionary
fade out — verb become weaker (Freq. 1) The sound faded out • Syn: ↑dissolve, ↑fade away • Derivationally related forms: ↑fadeout, ↑dissolve (for: ↑ … Useful english dictionary