-
1 rive ned
demolish -
2 rive
demolish, grate, rake, rip, shred, tear* * *subst. [ hageredskap] rake verb. (matlaging) grate verb. [ rive istykker] tear, rip verb. [ rive ned] tear, demolish verb. [ dele opp] grate, shred verb. [ svi] sting, bite, burn verb. [ rive opp] pull, grab verb. [ velte] knock down -
3 rasere
demolish, destroy* * *verb. raze, level with the ground -
4 demolere
verb. (militær) demolish -
5 nedrive
verb. pull down, destroy verb. demolish -
6 rive ned en bro
verb. demolish a bridge -
7 ødelegge
destroy, mess, rasere, ruin, spoil* * *verb. [ rive] demolish (f.eks. ) verb. destroy (f.eks.a house, a ship, a town; somebody's happiness, somebody s peace of mind
) verb. [ tilintetgjøre] destroy (f.eks.destroy an army; all his letters were destroyed in the fire
) verb. [ slå i stykker] smash, break (f.eks. ) verb. [ ved plantesykdom] blight (f.eks. ) verb. [ moralsk] corrupt, deprave verb. [ fortære] eat away (f.eks.acid eats away metal; the sea eats away the coastline
) verb. [ beskadige] spoil, damage (f.eks.the books are damaged by sea water; the rain has damaged the roads
) verb. [ spolere] mar, spoil (f.eks.don't spoil the fun; cook has spoilt the soup
) verb. [ legge i ruiner] ruin, shatter (f.eks.the house was shattered by the bomb
) verb. [ økonomisk] ruin (f.eks.these speculations ruined him; he ruined his father's business
) verb. [ skjemme bort] spoil (f.eks. )
См. также в других словарях:
Demolish — De*mol ish, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Demolished}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Demolishing}.] [F. d[ e]molir, fr. L. demoliri, p. p. demolitus; de + moliri to set a thing in motion, to work, construct, from moles a huge mass or structure. See {Mole} a mound, and … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
demolish — index consume, damage, defeat, destroy (efface), devastate, eliminate (eradicate), eradicate … Law dictionary
demolish — 1560s, from M.Fr. demoliss , prp. stem of démolir to destroy, tear down (late 14c.), from L. demoliri tear down, from de down (see DE (Cf. de )) + moliri build, construct, from moles (gen. molis) massive structure (see … Etymology dictionary
demolish — *destroy, raze Analogous words: wreck, *ruin, dilapidate: devastate, *ravage, waste, sack Antonyms: construct … New Dictionary of Synonyms
demolish — [v] destroy; consume annihilate, break, bulldoze, burst, crack, crush, decimate, defeat, devastate, devour, dilapidate, dismantle, eat, flatten, gobble up, knock down, level, obliterate, overthrow, overturn, pulverize, put away, put in toilet*,… … New thesaurus
demolish — ► VERB 1) pull or knock down (a building). 2) comprehensively refute or defeat. 3) humorous eat up (food) quickly. ORIGIN Latin demoliri, from moliri construct … English terms dictionary
demolish — [di mäl′ish] vt. [< extended stem of Fr démolir < L demoliri, to pull down, destroy < de , down + moliri, to build, construct < moles, a mass: see MOLE3] 1. to pull down, tear down, or smash to pieces (a building, etc.) 2. to destroy; … English World dictionary
demolish — [[t]dɪmɒ̱lɪʃ[/t]] demolishes, demolishing, demolished 1) VERB To demolish something such as a building means to destroy it completely. [V n] A storm moved directly over the island, demolishing buildings and flooding streets... [V n] The building… … English dictionary
demolish — [16] To demolish something is etymologically to ‘deconstruct’ it. The word comes from demoliss , the stem of Old French demolir, which in turn came from Latin dēmōlīrī ‘throw down, demolish’. This was a compound verb formed from the prefix dē ,… … The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins
demolish */ — UK [dɪˈmɒlɪʃ] / US [dɪˈmɑlɪʃ] verb [transitive] Word forms demolish : present tense I/you/we/they demolish he/she/it demolishes present participle demolishing past tense demolished past participle demolished 1) a) to deliberately destroy a… … English dictionary
demolish — [16] To demolish something is etymologically to ‘deconstruct’ it. The word comes from demoliss , the stem of Old French demolir, which in turn came from Latin dēmōlīrī ‘throw down, demolish’. This was a compound verb formed from the prefix dē ,… … Word origins