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101 counterpart
• Gegenstück, Gegenspieler -
102 counterpart
['kauntəpɑːt]n1) осо́ба (річ), що допо́внює і́ншу (до́бре до не́ї пасу́є)2) подо́ба; дубліка́т; двійни́к -
103 counterpart
аналог; эквивалент; копия; дубликат -
104 counterpart
(a person or thing equivalent to another in position etc: American teenagers and their British counterparts.) αντίστοιχος, ομόλογος -
105 counterpart
English-russian dctionary of contemporary Economics > counterpart
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106 counterpart
n1) должностное лицо, занимающее аналогичный пост (в другом учреждении, в другой стране и т.п.), коллега3) юр. противная сторона, противник (в процессе) -
107 counterpart
1) копия; дубликат2) контрагент -
108 counterpart
s.1 homólogo(a).2 contraparte, contrapartida, equivalente. -
109 counterpart
двойникдубликатколлегакопияподобиепротивоположениепротивоположностьчасть -
110 counterpart
взаимозаменяемая часть; дубликат -
111 counterpart
1. копия;2. эквивалент, аналог; сравнимый ( прибор)Англо-русский словарь промышленной и научной лексики > counterpart
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112 counterpart
коллега; копия; дубликат; противная сторона; противник (в судебном процессе) -
113 counterpart
копия, дубликат -
114 counterpart
[ˈkauntəpaːt] nounنَظير،شبيـهAmerican teenagers and their British counterparts.
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115 counterpart
(a person or thing equivalent to another in position etc: American teenagers and their British counterparts.) homologue -
116 counterpart
(a person or thing equivalent to another in position etc: American teenagers and their British counterparts.) contrapartida -
117 counterpart
аналог; эквивалент; прототип -
118 COUNTERPART
[N]INSTAR (N) -
119 counterpart
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120 counterpart
( leases)duplicata m
См. также в других словарях:
counterpart — coun·ter·part / kau̇n tər ˌpärt/ n: one of two corresponding or duplicate copies of a legal instrument Merriam Webster’s Dictionary of Law. Merriam Webster. 1996. counterpart … Law dictionary
counterpart — coun‧ter‧part [ˈkaʊntəpɑːt ǁ tərpɑːrt] noun [countable] someone or something that has the same job or purpose as someone or something in a different place: • American chief executives are paid far more than their counterparts in the UK. * * *… … Financial and business terms
Counterpart — Coun ter*part (koun t[ e]r*p[aum]rt ), n. 1. A part corresponding to another part; anything which answers, or corresponds, to another; a copy; a duplicate; a facsimile. [1913 Webster] In same things the laws of Normandy agreed with the laws of… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
counterpart — means ‘the equivalent of a person or thing in another place or system’. It can refer to many aspects of similarity but principally has to do with function and behaviour, and is typically preceded by a possessive word: • Southern schools are now… … Modern English usage
counterpart — theory … Philosophy dictionary
counterpart — mid 15c., originally countre part duplicate of a legal document, from M.Fr. contrepartie, from contre facing, opposite (see CONTRA (Cf. contra )) + partie copy of a person or thing, originally fem. pp. of partir to divide (see PARTY (Cf. party)) … Etymology dictionary
counterpart — correlate, *parallel, analogue Analogous words: *complement, supplement: duplicate, copy, facsimile, replica, *reproduction Contrasted words: antithesis, opposite, contradictory (see under OPPOSITE adj) … New Dictionary of Synonyms
counterpart — [n] match; identical part or thing analogue, carbon copy*, complement, copy, correlate, correlative, correspondent, dead ringer*, ditto*, doppelganger, duplicate, equal, equivalent, fellow, like, look alike, mate, obverse, opposite, opposite… … New thesaurus
counterpart — ► NOUN ▪ a person or thing that corresponds to or has the same function as another … English terms dictionary
counterpart — [kount′ərpärt΄] n. [ME countrepart: see COUNTER & PART2] 1. a person or thing that corresponds to or closely resembles another, as in form or function 2. a thing which, when added to another, completes or complements it 3. a copy or duplicate, as … English World dictionary
counterpart — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ direct ▪ the difficulty of translating terms with no direct counterpart in the other language ▪ modern ▪ the modern counterparts of those medieval writers ▪ female … Collocations dictionary