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1 close an account
rekening vereffenen, afrekenen -
2 draw
n. attractie, trekking; (uit)verloting; gelijk spel, remise--------v. tekenen; trekken; opnemen; trekken (v.e. pistool)draw1[ dro:] 〈 zelfstandig naamwoord〉3 aantrekkingskracht ⇒ attractie, trekpleister♦voorbeelden:————————draw2♦voorbeelden:draw near • naderen, dichterbij komendraw off • (zich) terugtrekken, weggaanhe drew alongside the bus • hij ging naast de bus rijden→ draw apart draw apart/, draw away draw away/, draw back draw back/, draw in draw in/, draw on draw on/, draw out draw out/, draw up draw up/♦voorbeelden:the chimney doesn't draw • de schoorsteen trekt nietdraw one's sword against • ten strijde trekken tegendraw along • voorttrekkendraw aside • opzij trekken, apart nemendraw back the curtains • de gordijnen opentrekken/doendraw off • uittrekken, afdoendraw together • samentrekken, nader tot elkaar komendraw someone into a conversation • iemand in een gesprek betrekken2 draw a circle • een cirkel trekken/beschrijvendraw inspiration from • inspiratie opdoen uitdraw on/upon • een beroep doen op, putten uit, gebruik maken vanI'll have to draw upon my savings • ik zal mijn spaargeld moeten aanspreken4 (te voorschijn) halen ⇒ uittrekken; 〈 figuurlijk〉 ontlokken; naar buiten brengen/halen; (af)tappen 〈bier enz.〉5 van de ingewanden ontdoen ⇒ ontweien, schoonmaken10 〈 sport〉een bepaald(e) richting/effect geven aan 〈 de bal〉 ⇒ 〈 biljart〉 trekken; 〈 cricket, golf〉 (te veel) naar s slaan 〈 van rechtshandige〉; (te veel) naar rechts slaan 〈 van shandige〉♦voorbeelden:2 draw a deep breath • diep inademen, diep ademhalenhis story drew tears • zijn verhaal maakte de ogen vochtighe refused to be drawn • hij liet zich niet uit zijn tent lokkendraw forth • te voorschijn halenshe drew all her savings from her account • zij nam al haar spaargeld op (van haar rekening)
См. также в других словарях:
close an account — to kill With imagery from banking or story telling? We were all hoping you would close his account. (Sohmer, 1988 an FBI agent had been told where a murderer was hiding) … How not to say what you mean: A dictionary of euphemisms
close an account — shut an account, make an account inactive … English contemporary dictionary
close — vb 1 Close, shut are very close synonyms in the sense of to stop or fill in an opening by means of a closure (as a door, a gate, a lid, or a cover) and are often used interchangeably. However, they may have distinctive nuances of meaning and… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
close — The close is the period at the end of the trading session. Sometimes used to refer to closing price. Related: opening. Bloomberg Financial Dictionary The period at the end of the trading session officially designated by the exchange during which… … Financial and business terms
close — close1 W1S1 [kləuz US klouz] v ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(shut)¦ 2¦(move parts together)¦ 3¦(shut for period of time)¦ 4¦(stop operating)¦ 5¦(end)¦ 6 close an account 7¦(in money markets)¦ 8 close a deal/sale/contract etc 9¦(offer finishes)¦ … Dictionary of contemporary English
close — 1 verb 1 SHUT (I, T) to shut something so that there is no longer a space or hole, or to become shut in this way: Ann closed her book and stood up. | close a door/window/gate: Would you mind if I closed the window? | close the… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
account — /ə kaυnt/ noun 1. a record of financial transactions over a period of time, such as money paid, received, borrowed or owed ● Please send me your account or a detailed or an itemized account. 2. (in a shop) an arrangement which a customer has to… … Marketing dictionary in english
account — /ə kaυnt/ noun 1. a record of financial transactions over a period of time, such as money paid, received, borrowed or owed ● Please send me your account or a detailed or an itemised account. 2. (in a shop) an arrangement which a customer has to… … Dictionary of banking and finance
close — I. verb (closed; closing) Etymology: Middle English, from Anglo French clos , stem of clore, from Latin claudere to shut, close; perhaps akin to Greek kleiein to close more at clavicle Date: 13th century transitive verb 1. a. to move so as to bar … New Collegiate Dictionary
close — verb To finish, bring to an end, conclude, terminate, complete, wind up; as, to close an account, a bargain, a trial, an estate, or public books, such as tax books. In accounting, to transfer the balance of a temporary or contra or adjunct… … Black's law dictionary
close — verb To finish, bring to an end, conclude, terminate, complete, wind up; as, to close an account, a bargain, a trial, an estate, or public books, such as tax books. In accounting, to transfer the balance of a temporary or contra or adjunct… … Black's law dictionary