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1 date
I 1. [deit] noun1) ((a statement on a letter etc giving) the day of the month, the month and year: I can't read the date on this letter.) ημερομηνία2) (the day and month and/or the year in which something happened or is going to happen: What is your date of birth?) ημερομηνία3) (an appointment or engagement, especially a social one with a member of the opposite sex: He asked her for a date.) ραντεβού2. verb1) (to have or put a date on: This letter isn't dated.) χρονολογώ2) ((with from or back) to belong to; to have been made, written etc at (a certain time): Their quarrel dates back to last year.) χρονολογούμαι3) (to become obviously old-fashioned: His books haven't dated much.) παλιώνω,γερνώ•- dated- dateline
- out of date
- to date
- up to date II [deit] noun(the brown, sticky fruit of the date palm, a kind of tree growing in the tropics.) χουρμάς -
2 Date
subs.Time: P. and V. χρόνος, ὁ.Day: P. and V. ἡμέρα, ἡ.At no distant date: V. οὐ μάλʼ εἰς μακράν (Æsch., Supp. 925), P. οὐκ εἰς μακράν.Not distinguishing the date: P. τὸ πότε οὐ διορίζων (Dem. 414).Hellanicus has mentioned ( these things) shortly, and without due accuracy as regards dates: P. Ἑλλάνικος βραχέως τε καὶ τοῖς χρόνοις οὐκ ἀκριβῶς ἐπεμνήσθη (Thuc. 1, 97).Out of date, adj: P. and V. ἀρχαῖος, παλαιός, P. ἕωλος, ἀρχαιότροπος; see old-fashioned.The interest to date: P. οἱ γιγνόμενοι τόκοι (Dem.).——————subs.Fruit: P. βάλανος, ἡ (Xen.).Date-palm: P. φοῖνιξ, ὁ (Hdt.).Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Date
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3 date
1) χουρμάς2) ημερομηνία -
4 date
1) ημερομηνία2) χουρμάς -
5 up-to-date
1) (completed etc with the most recent information: an up-to-date dictionary; an up-to-date map; up-to-date news.) ενημερωμένος2) (modern, fashionable: up-to-date methods; up-to-date clothes.) μοντέρνος, σύγχρονος• -
6 up to date
1) (completed etc up to the present time: Is the catalogue up to date?; an up-to-date catalogue.) ενημερωμένος2) (modern and in touch with the latest ideas: This method is up to date / very up-to-date; an up-to-date method.) σύγχρονος -
7 out of date
1) (old-fashioned: This coat is out of date.) ξεπερασμένος,απαρχαιωμένος, παλιομοδίτικος2) (no longer able to be (legally) used; no longer valid: Your ticket is out of date / very out-of-date; an out-of-date directory.) άκυρος -
8 bring up-to-date
(to update: We need to bring the system up-to-date.) εκσυγχρονίζω -
9 out-of-date
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10 to date
(up to the present time: This is the best entry we've received to date.) μέχρι σήμερα -
11 stamp
[stæmp] 1. verb1) (to bring (the foot) down with force (on the ground): He stamped his foot with rage; She stamped on the insect.) χτυπώ κάτω,ποδοπατώ/βαριοπερπατώ2) (to print or mark on to: He stamped the date at the top of his letter; The oranges were all stamped with the exporter's name.) σφραγίζω,σταμπάρω3) (to stick a postage stamp on (a letter etc): I've addressed the envelope but haven't stamped it.) βάζω γραμματόσημο σε2. noun1) (an act of stamping the foot: `Give it to me!' she shouted with a stamp of her foot.) χτύπημα του ποδιού,ποδοπάτημα2) (the instrument used to stamp a design etc on a surface: He marked the date on the bill with a rubber date-stamp.) σφραγίδα,στάμπα3) (a postage stamp: He stuck the stamps on the parcel; He collects foreign stamps.) γραμματόσημο,χαρτόσημο,ένσημο4) (a design etc made by stamping: All the goods bore the manufacturer's stamp.) στάμπα• -
12 backdate
1) (to put an earlier date on (a cheque etc): He should have paid his bill last month and so he has backdated the cheque.) προχρονολογώ2) (to make payable from a date in the past: Our rise in pay was backdated to April.) δίνω αναδρομική ισχύ -
13 bring forward
1) ((also put forward) to bring to people's attention; to cause to be discussed etc: They will consider the suggestions which you have brought/put forward.) φέρνω για συζήτηση2) (to make to happen at an earlier date; to advance in time: They have brought forward the date of their wedding by one week.) επισπεύδω -
14 atlas
['ætləs](a book of maps: My atlas is out of date.) γεωγραφικός άτλας -
15 back-number
noun (an out-of-date copy or issue of a magazine etc: He collects back-numbers of comic magazines.) παλιό τεύχος -
16 behind
1. preposition1) (at or towards the back of: behind the door.) πίσω από2) (remaining after: The tourists left their litter behind them.) πίσω3) (in support: We're right behind him on this point.) στο πλευρό2. adverb1) (at the back: following behind.) από πίσω2) ((also behindhand [-hænd]) not up to date: behind with his work.) καθυστερημένος3) (remaining: He left his book behind; We stayed behind after the party.) πίσω3. noun(the buttocks: a smack on the behind.) πισινός -
17 contemporary
[kən'tempərəri] 1. adjective1) (living at, happening at or belonging to the same period: That chair and the painting are contemporary - they both date from the seventeenth century.) της ίδιαςεποχής2) (of the present time; modern: contemporary art.) σύγχρονος2. noun(a person living at the same time: She was one of my contemporaries at university.) -
18 dateline
noun (a north-south line drawn on maps through the Pacific Ocean, east and west of which the date is different.) μεσημβρινός αλλαγής ημερομηνίας -
19 display
[di'splei] 1. verb1) (to set out for show: The china was displayed in a special cabinet.) εκθέτω2) (to show: She displayed a talent for mimicry.) δείχνω2. noun1) ((an) act of showing or making clear: a display of military strength.) επίδειξη2) (an entertainment etc intended to show the ability etc of those taking part: a dancing display.) επίδειξη3) (something which shows or sets out something else: an advertising display.) διάταξη4) (the part of a video recorder, calculator, digital watch etc that shows numbers, the date, time, or other information.) οθόνη -
20 expire
1) ((of a limited period of time) to come to an end: His three weeks' leave expires tomorrow.) λήγω,εκπνέω2) ((of a ticket, licence etc) to go out of date: My driving licence expired last month.) λήγω3) (to die.) πεθαίνω•- expiry
См. также в других словарях:
daté — daté … Dictionnaire des rimes
date — [ dat ] n. f. • 1281; lat. médiév. data (littera) « (lettre) donnée », premiers mots de la formule indiquant la date où un acte avait été rédigé 1 ♦ Indication du jour du mois (⇒ quantième), du mois et de l année (⇒ millésime) où un acte a été… … Encyclopédie Universelle
date — I noun assigned time, day, day of the week, dies, marked time, moment, particular point of time, period, period of time, point of time, specified period of time, tempus, time, time during which anything occurs associated concepts: antedating,… … Law dictionary
date — date утилита Unix для работы с системными часами. Выводит текущую дату и время в различных форматах и позволяет устанавливать системное время. Содержание 1 Реализации 2 Использование 3 Ключи … Википедия
Date — bezeichnet: ein Treffen oder eine Verabredung, bei Verliebten auch Stelldichein Blind Date, ein verabredetes Treffen unter bisher unbekannten Personen in Programmiersprachen häufig einen Datentyp zur Speicherung von Datum und Uhrzeit bei vielen… … Deutsch Wikipedia
Date — утилита Unix для работы с системными часами. Выводит текущую дату и время в различных форматах и позволяет устанавливать системное время. Содержание 1 Использование 2 Ключи 3 См. также … Википедия
date — DATE. sub. fém. Ce qui marque le temps et le lieu où une lettre a été écrite, où un acte a été passé, etc. La date d une lettre, d un contrat, d un Arrêt, etc. Mettre la date. De fraîche date. De nouvelle date. De vieille date. Il produit une… … Dictionnaire de l'Académie Française 1798
Date My Ex — Date My Ex: Jo and Slade Format Reality Starring Jo De La Rosa Slade Smiley Myia Ingoldsby Lucas James Country of origin United States Production Runni … Wikipedia
Date — Date, n. [F. date, LL. data, fr. L. datus given, p. p. of dare to give; akin to Gr. ?, OSlaw. dati, Skr. d[=a]. Cf. {Datum}, Dose, {Dato}, {Die}.] 1. That addition to a writing, inscription, coin, etc., which specifies the time (as day, month,… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Date — Date, n.[F. datte, L. dactylus, fr. Gr. ?, prob. not the same word as da ktylos finger, but of Semitic origin.] (Bot.) The fruit of the date palm; also, the date palm itself. [1913 Webster] Note: This fruit is somewhat in the shape of an olive,… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
date — ‘time of an event’ and date ‘fruit’ are distinct words in English, and perhaps unexpectedly the latter [13] entered the language a century before the former. It came via Old French date and Latin dactylus from Greek dáktulos, which originally… … The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins