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1 instorten
1 [met geweld (doen) instromen] pour (into)♦voorbeelden:haar hele wereld was ingestort • her whole world had collapsedde zaak staat op instorten • the business is about to collapse2 de patiënt stortte weer in • the patient had/suffered a relapseop instorten staan • be about to collapse/to have a nervous breakdown -
2 failliet
failliet1I 〈de〉1 [persoon] bankruptII 〈 het〉♦voorbeelden:1 de devaluatie betekende het failliet van zijn politiek • the devaluation signified the collapse of his policy————————failliet21 bankrupt♦voorbeelden:iemand failliet verklaren • declare someone bankrupt -
3 in elkaar storten
in elkaar stortencollapse, cave in 〈 gebouw〉; 〈 geestelijk〉 collapse, crack upVan Dale Handwoordenboek Nederlands-Engels > in elkaar storten
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4 ineenzakken
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5 inzakken
4 [met betrekking tot personen] relapse♦voorbeelden: -
6 storten
♦voorbeelden:de golven storten over het schip • the waves sweep over the deckII 〈 overgankelijk werkwoord〉♦voorbeelden:zand storten • dump sandIII 〈wederkerend werkwoord; zich storten〉1 [zich werpen] throw oneself2 [+ op] [met hartstocht aanpakken] throw oneself (into) ⇒ dive/plunge (into)♦voorbeelden:zich in het verderf storten • work one's own destructionzich op een idee storten • fasten upon an idea♦voorbeelden:1 het gestorte bedrag is … • the sum paid is …geld storten bij een bank • pay money into a bank, deposit money with a bankin een fonds storten • transfer to a fundeen tientje op een girorekening storten • pay ten guilders into a giro accountop eigen rekening storten • deposit into one's own accounthet te veel gestorte wordt terugbetaald • the excess payment will be refunded -
7 Middeleeuwen
n. Middle Ages, period in European history which began after the collapse of the West Roman Empire in the 4th and 5th centuries and continued until the Renaissance in 15th century -
8 afbrokkeling
n. crumbling, falling apart, disintegration, collapse; breaking into small crumbs -
9 afkalven
v. cave, give way, collapse; calve, give birth to a calf -
10 afkalving
n. collapse; calve, give birth to a calf -
11 afkapper
n. breakdown, collapse -
12 begeven
adj. forsaken, abandoned, deserted, neglected--------v. collapse, breakdown; proceed, move forward -
13 breakdown
n. breakdown, collapse, downfall -
14 breekpunt
n. breaking point, point of collapse, point of falling apart -
15 brokkelen
v. crumble, fall to pieces, shatter, collapse; break into small crumbs -
16 brokkeling
n. crumbling, falling apart, disintegration, collapse; breaking into small crumbs -
17 collaps
n. collapse, breakdown, crash; falling in; compression, hiding of subdirectories or libraries which are secondary to the heading of the current library (Computers) -
18 crash
n. crash, smash, wreck; downfall, collapse; condition in which the computer becomes stuck during an operation and must be restarted (Computers) -
19 debacle
n. debacle, rout, defeat, collapse, devastation, havoc -
20 doorbuigen
v. bend, sag; collapse, give way
См. также в других словарях:
Collapse! — Genres Puzzle Developers GameHouse Publishers GameHouse (RealNetworks) Platforms Windows, Mac OS X … Wikipedia
Collapse — Разрабо … Википедия
Collapse — Col*lapse , v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Collapsed}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Collapsing}] [L. collapsus, p. p. of collabi to collapse; col + labi to fall, slide. See {Lapse}.] 1. To fall together suddenly, as the sides of a hollow vessel; to close by falling or … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Collapse — Pays d’origine France Genre musical Metal industriel Années d activité 1994 – Aujourd hui Labels … Wikipédia en Français
collapse — ● collapse nom masculin (anglais collapse, affaissement) Dommage susceptible de survenir au cours du séchage artificiel du bois, se traduisant par des affaissements et des déformations internes … Encyclopédie Universelle
collapse — [n] downfall, breakdown bankruptcy, basket case*, cataclysm, catastrophe, cave in, conk out*, crackup*, crash, debacle, destruction, disintegration, disorganization, disruption, exhaustion, failure, faint, flop, prostration, ruination, ruining,… … New thesaurus
collapse — [kə laps′] vi. collapsed, collapsing [< L collapsus, pp. of collabi < com , together + labi, to fall: see LAP1] 1. to fall down or fall to pieces, as when supports or sides fail to hold; cave in; shrink together suddenly 2. to break down… … English World dictionary
Collapse — Col*lapse , n. 1. A falling together suddenly, as of the sides of a hollow vessel. [1913 Webster] 2. A sudden and complete failure; an utter failure of any kind; a breakdown. [Colloq.] [1913 Webster] 3. (Med.) Extreme depression or sudden failing … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
collapse — index catastrophe, debacle, decline, defeat, destruction, deteriorate, detriment, disaster, disease … Law dictionary
collapse — (v.) 1732, from L. collapsus, pp. of collabi fall together, from com together (see COM (Cf. com )) + labi to fall, slip (see LAPSE (Cf. lapse)). The adj. collapsed is attested from c.1600, from L. collapsus, and perhaps this suggested a verb. R … Etymology dictionary
collapse — ► VERB 1) suddenly fall down or give way. 2) (of a person) fall down as a result of physical breakdown. 3) fail suddenly and completely. ► NOUN 1) an instance of a structure collapsing. 2) a sudden failure or breakdown. ORIGIN … English terms dictionary