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1 ♦ debt
♦ debt /dɛt/n.1 (fin.) debito: to pay one's debts, pagare i debiti; to get (o to run) into debt, fare debiti; indebitarsi; to incur debts, contrarre debiti; to cancel (o to write off) a debt, cancellare un debito; to pay ( off) a debt, rimborsare un debito; to clear (o to settle) a debt, estinguere un debito; He had run up huge gambling debts, aveva accumulato enormi debiti al gioco; to get out of debt, pagare i (propri) debiti; sdebitarsi; to cancel a debt, cancellare un debito; to collect debts, recuperare crediti; to discharge a debt, pagare un debito; to service a debt, servire (o pagare gli interessi su) un debito; to settle sb. 's debts, pagare i debiti di q.; outstanding debts, debiti insoluti2 (fin.) indebitamento: Debt can force companies to operate efficiently, l'indebitamento può costringere le imprese a funzionare in modo efficiente; to be deeply (o heavily) in debt, essere immerso nei debiti; to be up to one's eyeballs (o neck) in debt, essere indebitato fino al collo3 (fin., = national debt o government debt) debito pubblico: debt conversion, conversione del debito pubblico; debt servicing, la gestione del debito pubblico; debt-to-GDP ratio, rapporto debito/PIL; a crippling national debt, un indebitamento pubblico rovinoso4 [cu] (fig.) debito (verso q.): a debt of gratitude, un debito di gratitudine; a debt of honour, un debito d'onore (o di gioco); to acknowledge one's debt to sb., riconoscere il proprio debito verso q.; I owe them a bigger debt than I can say, sono in debito con loro più di quanto possa esprimere NOTA D'USO: - debit o debt?-● debt collecting (o collection, recovery), recupero dei crediti □ debt collector, esattore di crediti □ (fin.) debt consolidation, consolidamento del debito □ (fin.) debt/equity ratio, rapporto capitale di prestito / capitale di rischio □ (fin.) debt financing, finanziamento con capitale di debito (o di terzi) □ debt owing, credito esigibile □ debt-ridden, pieno di debiti, indebitato fino al collo □ debt relief, cancellazione del debito ( dei paesi poveri) □ (leg.) debt proved in bankruptcy, debito ammesso al passivo fallimentare □ debt swap, conversione del debito (estero) □ (fin.) debt to net worth ratio, rapporto d'indebitamento ( di una società) □ bad debt, credito inesigibile □ to be out of debt, non avere più debiti; essersi sdebitato. -
2 deep
I [diːp]1) (vertically) [hole, water, wound] profondo; [snow, container, saucepan, grass] altoa hole 5 cm deep a 5 cm deep hole un buco profondo 5 cm; the floor was 10 cm deep in water — il pavimento era coperto da 10 cm d'acqua
2) (horizontally) [band, drawer, stage] largo, profondo3) (intense) [admiration, love, impression, interest, desire] profondo, grande; [ pleasure] grande; [difficulty, trouble] grosso4) (impenetrable) [darkness, mystery] profondo; [ forest] impenetrabile; [ secret] grande; [ person] misteriosothey live in deepest Wales — scherz. vivono nel profondo Galles
5) (cunning)you're a deep one! — colloq. sei un dritto!
6) (intellectually profound) [thought, meaning, book, thinker, knowledge] profondo; [ discussion] approfondito9) (long) [shot, serve] in profondità••II [diːp]to be in deep — colloq. esserci dentro fino al collo
III [diːp]the deep — il mare, l'oceano
1) (a long way down) [dig, cut] profondamente, in profonditàto dig deeper into an affair — fig. scavare più a fondo in una faccenda
to sink deeper into debt — fig. essere sempre più sommerso dai debiti
deep in o into nel centro o nel cuore di; to go deep into the woods addentrarsi nel bosco; deep in the heart of Texas nel cuore del Texas; deep in space nelle profondità dello spazio; deep in my heart nel profondo del mio cuore; to be deep in thought, discussion essere immerso nei pensieri, in una discussione; deep into the night — fino a tarda notte
deep down o inside in fondo in fondo; deep down she was frightened in fondo in fondo aveva paura; to go deep [faith, loyalty] essere profondo; to run deep — [belief, feeling, prejudice] essere ben radicato
4) sport [hit, kick, serve] in profondità* * *[di:p] 1. adjective1) (going or being far down or far into: a deep lake; a deep wound.) profondo2) (going or being far down by a named amount: a hole six feet deep.) di profondità3) (occupied or involved to a great extent: He is deep in debt.) immerso4) (intense; strong: The sea is a deep blue colour; They are in a deep sleep.) profondo5) (low in pitch: His voice is very deep.) profondo2. adverb(far down or into: deep into the wood.) profondamente- deepen- deeply
- deepness
- deep-freeze 3. verb(to freeze and keep (food) in this.) congelare- deep-sea- in deep water* * *I [diːp]1) (vertically) [hole, water, wound] profondo; [snow, container, saucepan, grass] altoa hole 5 cm deep a 5 cm deep hole un buco profondo 5 cm; the floor was 10 cm deep in water — il pavimento era coperto da 10 cm d'acqua
2) (horizontally) [band, drawer, stage] largo, profondo3) (intense) [admiration, love, impression, interest, desire] profondo, grande; [ pleasure] grande; [difficulty, trouble] grosso4) (impenetrable) [darkness, mystery] profondo; [ forest] impenetrabile; [ secret] grande; [ person] misteriosothey live in deepest Wales — scherz. vivono nel profondo Galles
5) (cunning)you're a deep one! — colloq. sei un dritto!
6) (intellectually profound) [thought, meaning, book, thinker, knowledge] profondo; [ discussion] approfondito9) (long) [shot, serve] in profondità••II [diːp]to be in deep — colloq. esserci dentro fino al collo
III [diːp]the deep — il mare, l'oceano
1) (a long way down) [dig, cut] profondamente, in profonditàto dig deeper into an affair — fig. scavare più a fondo in una faccenda
to sink deeper into debt — fig. essere sempre più sommerso dai debiti
deep in o into nel centro o nel cuore di; to go deep into the woods addentrarsi nel bosco; deep in the heart of Texas nel cuore del Texas; deep in space nelle profondità dello spazio; deep in my heart nel profondo del mio cuore; to be deep in thought, discussion essere immerso nei pensieri, in una discussione; deep into the night — fino a tarda notte
deep down o inside in fondo in fondo; deep down she was frightened in fondo in fondo aveva paura; to go deep [faith, loyalty] essere profondo; to run deep — [belief, feeling, prejudice] essere ben radicato
4) sport [hit, kick, serve] in profondità -
3 sink
I [sɪŋk]1) (in kitchen) lavello m., acquaio m., lavandino m.; (in bathroom) lavabo m., lavandino m.2) (cesspit) pozzo m. nero; fig. cloaca f.II 1. [sɪŋk]1) affondare [ ship]2) (bore) perforare [ oilwell]; scavare [ foundations]to sink one's teeth into — affondare i denti in [ sandwich]
4) BE colloq. buttare giù [ drink]2.to sink money into sth. — investire denaro in qcs
1) (fail to float) [ship, object, person] affondareto sink without a trace — fig. [idea, project etc.] cadere nell'oblio
2) (drop to lower level) [ sun] calare, tramontare; [ cake] abbassarsi; [pressure, water level, production] abbassarsi, calare3) (subside) [building, wall] crollareto sink into — [ person] affondare in [ mud]; [ country] cadere in [ anarchy]; [ celebrity] cadere in [ obscurity]
to sink under the weight of — [ shelf] piegarsi sotto il peso di [ boxes]; [person, company] crollare sotto il peso di [ debt]
•- sink in* * *[siŋk] 1. past tense - sank; verb1) (to (cause to) go down below the surface of water etc: The torpedo sank the battleship immediately; The ship sank in deep water.) affondare2) (to go down or become lower (slowly): The sun sank slowly behind the hills; Her voice sank to a whisper.) calare, scendere; tramontare3) (to (cause to) go deeply (into something): The ink sank into the paper; He sank his teeth into an apple.) penetrare, filtrare4) ((of one's spirits etc) to become depressed or less hopeful: My heart sinks when I think of the difficulties ahead.) (deprimersi)5) (to invest (money): He sank all his savings in the business.) investire2. noun(a kind of basin with a drain and a water supply connected to it: He washed the dishes in the sink.) lavandino, lavello, lavabo- sunken- be sunk
- sink in* * *I [sɪŋk]1) (in kitchen) lavello m., acquaio m., lavandino m.; (in bathroom) lavabo m., lavandino m.2) (cesspit) pozzo m. nero; fig. cloaca f.II 1. [sɪŋk]1) affondare [ ship]2) (bore) perforare [ oilwell]; scavare [ foundations]to sink one's teeth into — affondare i denti in [ sandwich]
4) BE colloq. buttare giù [ drink]2.to sink money into sth. — investire denaro in qcs
1) (fail to float) [ship, object, person] affondareto sink without a trace — fig. [idea, project etc.] cadere nell'oblio
2) (drop to lower level) [ sun] calare, tramontare; [ cake] abbassarsi; [pressure, water level, production] abbassarsi, calare3) (subside) [building, wall] crollareto sink into — [ person] affondare in [ mud]; [ country] cadere in [ anarchy]; [ celebrity] cadere in [ obscurity]
to sink under the weight of — [ shelf] piegarsi sotto il peso di [ boxes]; [person, company] crollare sotto il peso di [ debt]
•- sink in
См. также в других словарях:
debt — W2S2 [det] n [Date: 1200 1300; : Old French; Origin: dette, from Latin debitum, from debere to owe ] 1.) a sum of money that a person or organization owes debt of ▪ This over ambitious strategy has saddled them with debts of around $3,000,000.… … Dictionary of contemporary English
debt — [ det ] noun *** 1. ) count an amount of money that you owe: By this time we had debts of over $15,000. run up a debt (=let it increase): She had run up debts of nearly $10,000. pay (off)/repay a debt: Many people experience difficulty in paying… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
debt — n. 1) to contract, incur, run up a debt; to get into, go into debt 2) to collect, recover a debt 3) to discharge, pay (off), settle; wipe out; write off a debt 4) to cancel; repudiate a debt 5) a bad; outstanding, unsettled debt 6) a business;… … Combinatory dictionary
debt — noun 1 sum of money owed ADJECTIVE ▪ big, crippling, enormous, heavy, high, huge, large, massive, substantial ▪ … Collocations dictionary
debt — 01. He is over $5,000 in [debt], and may have to declare bankruptcy. 02. It is impossible for the developing countries of the world to pay off their [debts] to the richer countries. 03. I can t afford to buy a car. I m already in [debt] from… … Grammatical examples in English
debt — [[t]de̱t[/t]] ♦♦ debts 1) N VAR A debt is a sum of money that you owe someone. → See also bad debt Three years later, he is still paying off his debts... Shrinking economies mean falling tax revenues and more government debt. ...reducing the… … English dictionary
debt */*/*/ — UK [det] / US noun Word forms debt : singular debt plural debts 1) a) [countable] an amount of money that you owe By this time we had debts of over £15,000. run up a debt (= let it increase): She had run up debts of nearly £10,000. pay… … English dictionary
debt — debtless, adj. /det/, n. 1. something that is owed or that one is bound to pay to or perform for another: a debt of $50. 2. a liability or obligation to pay or render something: My debt to her for advice is not to be discharged easily. 3. the… … Universalium
debt — noun Etymology: Middle English dette, debte, from Anglo French dette something owed, from Vulgar Latin *debita, from Latin, plural of debitum debt, from neuter of debitus, past participle of debēre to owe, from de + habēre to have more at give… … New Collegiate Dictionary
Debt relief — is the partial or total forgiveness of debt, or the slowing or stopping of debt growth, owed by individuals, corporations, or nations. From antiquity through the 19th century, it refers to domestic debts, in particular agricultural debts and… … Wikipedia
Debt restructuring — is a process that allows a private or public company – or a sovereign entity – facing cash flow problems and financial distress, to reduce and renegotiate its delinquent debts in order to improve or restore liquidity and rehabilitate so that it… … Wikipedia