-
1 abirren
v/i (trennb., ist -ge-) stray; vom Weg abirren lose one’s way; vom Thema abirren fig. go off the subject, go ( oder fly) off at a tangent umg.* * *ạb|ir|renvi sep aux sein (geh)to lose one's way; (fig = abschweifen) (Gedanken) to wandervom Weg(e) abirren — to wander off the path, to stray from the path
* * *ab|ir·renvom Thema \abirren to digress, to deviate from the subject2. (von der Richtung abkommen)vom Weg \abirren to stray* * *abirren v/i (trennb, ist -ge-) stray;vom Weg abirren lose one’s way;* * *v.to stray v. -
2 entfernen
I v/t1. (beseitigen) remove ( von oder aus from); (wegnehmen) take away; (herausnehmen) take out, extract; mit Messer: excise; (abnehmen) take off; (wegräumen) clear (away); EDV delete, wipe umg.2. jemanden entfernen aus Haus, Zimmer: turn s.o. out ( aus of); aus Amt: remove s.o. (from); aus Schule: exclude s.o. (from), expel s.o. (from), kick s.o. out (of) umg.3. euph. (töten) eliminate, dispose of4. (Ggs. näher bringen) put at a distance (auch fig.), distance fig., estrange fig.II v/refl1. leave; Person: auch go away, take o.s. off umg.; (sich zurückziehen) withdraw; unerlaubtes Entfernen von der Truppe absence (Am. away) without leave, AWOL2. Schritte: recede, move away, get fainter3. (verschwinden) (gradually) disappear4. fig. von einem Thema: deviate ( von from), digress, stray (from); von einer Meinung: distance o.s. (from)5. fig.: sich von jemandem entfernen become estranged from s.o.; sich ( voneinander) entfernen drift ( oder grow) apart; stärker: become estranged* * *das Entfernenremoval* * *ent|fẹr|nen [Ent'fɛrnən] ptp entfe\#rnt1. vtto remove ( von, aus from)jdn aus der Schule entfernen — to expel sb from school
das entfernt uns ( weit) vom Thema — that takes us a long way from our subject
2. vr1)sich von seinem Posten/Arbeitsplatz entfernen — to leave one's post/position
sich unerlaubt von der Truppe entfernen (Mil) — to go absent without leave
2) (fig) (von from) (von jdm) to become estranged; (von Thema) to depart, to digress; (von Wahrheit) to depart, to deviateer hat sich sehr weit von seinen früheren Ansichten entfernt — he has come a long way from his earlier views
* * *1) (to knock out of place: He accidentally dislodged a stone from the wall.) dislodge2) (to take away: Will someone please remove all this rubbish!; He removed all the evidence of his crimes; I can't remove this stain from my shirt; He has been removed from the post of minister of education.) remove3) (to get rid of: This detergent shifts stains.) shift* * *ent·fer·nen *[ɛntˈfɛrnən]I. vt1. (beseitigen)▪ [jdm] etw \entfernen to take out sb's sthjdm den Blinddarm \entfernen to take out [or remove] sb's appendixjdn aus der Schule \entfernen to expel sb [from school]4. (weit abbringen)das entfernt uns vom Thema that takes us off the subjectII. vr1. (weggehen)2. (nicht bei etw bleiben)* * *1.transitives Verb2) (geh.): (fortbringen) remove2.reflexives Verb go awaysich vom Weg entfernen — go off or leave the path
* * *A. v/t1. (beseitigen) remove (aus from); (wegnehmen) take away; (herausnehmen) take out, extract; mit Messer: excise; (abnehmen) take off; (wegräumen) clear (away); IT delete, wipe umg2.jemanden entfernen aus Haus, Zimmer: turn sb out (aus of); aus Amt: remove sb (from); aus Schule: exclude sb (from), expel sb (from), kick sb out (of) umg3. euph (töten) eliminate, dispose ofB. v/runerlaubtes Entfernen von der Truppe absence (US away) without leave, AWOL2. Schritte: recede, move away, get fainter3. (verschwinden) (gradually) disappear4. fig von einem Thema: deviate (von from), digress, stray (from); von einer Meinung: distance o.s. (from)5. fig:sich von jemandem entfernen become estranged from sb;* * *1.transitives Verb1) remove <stain, wart, etc.>; take out <tonsils etc.>2) (geh.): (fortbringen) remove2.reflexives Verb go awaysich vom Weg entfernen — go off or leave the path
* * *v.to dislodge v.to eliminate v.to remove v.to take off v.to take out v.to unplug v.
См. также в других словарях:
deviate from the proper path — index lapse (fall into error) Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
deviate from — phr verb Deviate from is used with these nouns as the object: ↑norm, ↑path … Collocations dictionary
deviate — [dē′vē āt΄; ] for adj. & n. [, dē vēit] vi. deviated, deviating [< LL deviatus, pp. of deviare, to turn aside < de , from + via, road: see VIA] to turn aside (from a course, direction, standard, doctrine, etc.); diverge; digress vt. to… … English World dictionary
deviate — [v] stray from normal path aberrate, angle off, avert, bear off, bend, bend the rules*, break pattern, circumlocate, contrast, deflect, depart, depart from, differ, digress, divagate, diverge, drift, edge off*, err, get around, go amiss, go… … New thesaurus
deviate — I (Roget s IV) v. Syn. deflect, digress, swerve, shy, vary, wander, stray, turn aside, veer, bear off, go out of control, divagate, depart from, break the pattern, go amiss, err, angle away, angle off, diverge, leave the beaten path, not conform … English dictionary for students
deviate — deviable, adj. deviability /dee vee euh bil i tee/, n. deviator, n. v. /dee vee ayt /; adj., n. /dee vee it/, v., deviated, deviating, adj., n. v.i. 1. to turn aside, as from a route, way, course, etc. 2. to depart or swerve, as from a procedure … Universalium
path — noun 1 way across land ADJECTIVE ▪ long ▪ narrow ▪ steep ▪ winding ▪ cobblestone (esp. AmE), dirt … Collocations dictionary
deviate — de•vi•ate v. [[t]ˈdi viˌeɪt[/t]] adj., n. [[t] ɪt[/t]] v. at•ed, at•ing, adj. n. 1) to turn aside, as from a route or course 2) to depart, as from an accepted procedure, standard, or course of action 3) to digress, as from a line of thought 4) to … From formal English to slang
deviate — de|vi|ate1 [ˈdi:vieıt] v [Date: 1600 1700; : Late Latin; Origin: deviatus, from [i]Latin via way ] to change what you are doing so that you are not following an expected plan, idea, or type of behaviour deviate from ▪ The plane had to deviate… … Dictionary of contemporary English
deviate — [[t]di͟ːvieɪt[/t]] deviates, deviating, deviated VERB (disapproval) To deviate from something means to start doing something different or not planned, especially in a way that causes problems for others. [V from n] They stopped you as soon as you … English dictionary
deviate — 1 verb (I) formal to change what you are doing so that you are not following an expected plan, idea, or type of behaviour (+ from): The plane had to deviate from its normal flight path. 2 adjective AmE formal deviant … Longman dictionary of contemporary English