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1 differ dif·fer vi
['dɪfə(r)]1)to differ from sth — differire da qc, essere diverso (-a) da qcthis version differs from the original in several ways — questa versione differisce da quella originale in molti modi
2)to differ (with sb on or over or about sth) — dissentire (da qn su qc), discordare (da qn su qc) -
2 differ
['dɪfə(r)]1) (be different) differire, essere diverso ( from da; in per; in that per il fatto che)2) (disagree) dissentire ( from, with sb. da qcn.), non essere d'accordo ( from, with sb. con qcn.)* * *['difə]past tense, past participle - differed; verb1) ((often with from) to be not like or alike: Our views differ; Her house differs from mine.) differire2) (to disagree (with): I think we will have to agree to differ.) discordare* * *['dɪfə(r)]1) (be different) differire, essere diverso ( from da; in per; in that per il fatto che)2) (disagree) dissentire ( from, with sb. da qcn.), non essere d'accordo ( from, with sb. con qcn.) -
3 ♦ (to) differ
♦ (to) differ /ˈdɪfə(r)/v. i.1 differire; essere diverso: Our opinions differ in that respect, le nostre opinioni sono diverse a questo riguardo; How does European Spanish differ from Latin American Spanish?, in che cosa lo spagnolo europeo differisce dal latino-americano?; The landscape differs greatly between the north and the south of the island, il paesaggio è molto diverso dal nord dell'isola al sud; The prospects for recovery differ with age, le prospettive di guarigione variano con l'età; The species differ with respect to their coloration, le specie sono diverse nella pigmentazione2 non essere d'accordo; dissentire: He differed with his colleagues over (o on, about) the way to go forward, non era d'accordo con i colleghi sul modo di procedere; (form.) I beg to differ, mi permetto di dissentire● to agree to differ, riconoscere l'impossibilità di mettersi d'accordo. -
4 ♦ (to) differ
♦ (to) differ /ˈdɪfə(r)/v. i.1 differire; essere diverso: Our opinions differ in that respect, le nostre opinioni sono diverse a questo riguardo; How does European Spanish differ from Latin American Spanish?, in che cosa lo spagnolo europeo differisce dal latino-americano?; The landscape differs greatly between the north and the south of the island, il paesaggio è molto diverso dal nord dell'isola al sud; The prospects for recovery differ with age, le prospettive di guarigione variano con l'età; The species differ with respect to their coloration, le specie sono diverse nella pigmentazione2 non essere d'accordo; dissentire: He differed with his colleagues over (o on, about) the way to go forward, non era d'accordo con i colleghi sul modo di procedere; (form.) I beg to differ, mi permetto di dissentire● to agree to differ, riconoscere l'impossibilità di mettersi d'accordo. -
5 diverge
[daɪ'vɜːdʒ]verbo intransitivo [interests, opinions] divergere, differire, essere divergente; [railway line, road] dividersi, separarsito diverge from — deviare da [truth, norm]
* * *1) (to separate and go in different directions: The roads diverge three kilometres further on.) distaccarsi2) (to differ (from someone or something else); to go away (from a standard): This is where our opinions diverge.) divergere, differire•- divergent* * *[daɪ'vɜːdʒ]verbo intransitivo [interests, opinions] divergere, differire, essere divergente; [railway line, road] dividersi, separarsito diverge from — deviare da [truth, norm]
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6 ♦ venture
♦ venture /ˈvɛntʃə(r)/n.2 (econ.) iniziativa imprenditoriale rischiosa; (fin.) speculazione: a profitable venture, un investimento a rischio redditizio; a joint venture, una joint venture● (fin.) venture capital, capitale di rischio □ (fin.) venture capitalist, investitore in capitale di rischio □ at a venture, a caso; a casaccioFALSI AMICI: venture non significa ventura. (to) venture /ˈvɛntʃə(r)/A v. t.1 rischiare; mettere a repentaglio: to venture one's life, rischiare (o mettere a repentaglio) la vita; to venture one's capital, mettere a repentaglio il proprio capitale; to venture a guess, azzardare una congetturaB v. i.arrischiarsi; avventurarsi: to venture into deep water, avventurarsi in acque profonde; I didn't venture to contradict him, non mi sono arrischiato a contraddirlo; I venture to differ from you, mi permetto di dissentire (da Lei)● to venture on a mild protest, azzardare una timida protesta □ to venture out (o outside), azzardarsi a uscire ( col cattivo tempo, ecc.) □ (prov.) Nothing ventured, nothing gained, chi non risica non rosica. -
7 beg
[beg] 1.verbo transitivo (forma in -ing ecc. - gg-) chiedere (in elemosina) [food, money] ( from a); chiedere [favour, permission, forgiveness] ( from, of a); supplicare, pregare [ person] ( to do di fare)to beg sb. for sth. — chiedere qcs. a qcn. (con insistenza)
2."stop, I beg (of) you!" — "fermatevi, vi prego!"
verbo intransitivo (forma in -ing ecc. - gg-) [ person] chiedere l'elemosina ( from a); [ dog] = stare seduto con le zampe anteriori sollevate in attesa di cibo, ecc.to beg for — elemosinare, mendicare [money, food]
- beg off••* * *[beɡ] 1. past tense, past participle - begged; verb1) (to ask (someone) for (money, food etc): The old man was so poor that he had to beg in the street; He begged (me) for money.) elemosinare, chiedere l'elemosina2) (to ask (someone) desperately or earnestly: I beg you not to do it.) pregare•- beggar2. verb(to make very poor: He was beggared by the collapse of his firm.) rovinare, ridurre in miseria- beg to differ* * *[bɛɡ]1. vthe begged me to help him — mi ha supplicato or pregato di aiutarlo
I beg your pardon — (apologising) mi scusi, (not hearing) scusi?
2)2. vi•- beg off* * *[beg] 1.verbo transitivo (forma in -ing ecc. - gg-) chiedere (in elemosina) [food, money] ( from a); chiedere [favour, permission, forgiveness] ( from, of a); supplicare, pregare [ person] ( to do di fare)to beg sb. for sth. — chiedere qcs. a qcn. (con insistenza)
2."stop, I beg (of) you!" — "fermatevi, vi prego!"
verbo intransitivo (forma in -ing ecc. - gg-) [ person] chiedere l'elemosina ( from a); [ dog] = stare seduto con le zampe anteriori sollevate in attesa di cibo, ecc.to beg for — elemosinare, mendicare [money, food]
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8 disagree
[ˌdɪsə'griː]1) (differ) dissentire, non essere d'accordo2) (oppose)to disagree with — opporsi a [plan, proposal]
3) (conflict) [facts, results] essere in disaccordo, non concordare4)* * *[disə'ɡri:]1) ((sometimes with with) to hold different opinions etc (from someone else): We disagree about everything; I disagree with you on that point.) essere in disaccordo con2) (to quarrel: We never meet without disagreeing.) dissentire3) ((with with) (of food) to be unsuitable (to someone) and cause pain: Onions disagree with me.) non confarsi•- disagreeably
- disagreement* * *[ˌdɪsə'griː]1) (differ) dissentire, non essere d'accordo2) (oppose)to disagree with — opporsi a [plan, proposal]
3) (conflict) [facts, results] essere in disaccordo, non concordare4)
См. также в других словарях:
differ from — phr verb Differ from is used with these nouns as the subject: ↑result, ↑view Differ from is used with these nouns as the object: ↑norm … Collocations dictionary
Model acts differ from Uniform Acts, which are usually adopted by the states in virtually the same form proposed by the American Law Institute and other organizations. — Model acts differ from Uniform Acts, which are usually adopted by the states in virtually the same form proposed by the American Law Institute and other organizations. A change or alteration in existing materials. Dictionary from West s… … Law dictionary
Differ — Dif fer, v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Differed}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Differing}.] [L. differre; dif = dis + ferre to bear, carry: cf. F. diff[ e]rer. See 1st {Bear}, and cf. {Defer}, {Delay}.] 1. To be or stand apart; to disagree; to be unlike; to be… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
differ — is widely used without any complement: • While their aims and activities differ slightly, all are clubs in the sense of recruiting members R. Brown, 1993. It can be followed by from in the meaning ‘to be unlike’: • These languages…differ from the … Modern English usage
differ — late 14c., from O.Fr. differer (14c.) and directly from L. differre to set apart, differ, from dis away from (see DIS (Cf. dis )) + ferre carry (see INFER (Cf. infer)). Two senses that were present in Latin have gone separate ways in English… … Etymology dictionary
differ — UK [ˈdɪfə(r)] / US [ˈdɪfər] verb [intransitive] Word forms differ : present tense I/you/we/they differ he/she/it differs present participle differing past tense differed past participle differed 1) to be different from something else differ from … English dictionary
differ — dif|fer [ dıfər ] verb intransitive 1. ) to be different from something else: differ in: The two animals come from the same family but differ in body shape and breeding habits. differ from: English differs from Spanish in that it is not… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
differ — dif|fer W3 [ˈdıfə US ər] v [Date: 1300 1400; : French; Origin: différer [i] to delay, be different , from Latin differre, from ferre to carry ] 1.) to be different from something in some way ▪ The two systems differ in many respects. differ from… … Dictionary of contemporary English
differ — v. 1) (D; intr.) to differ about, on 2) (D; intr.) to differ from (this arrangement differs from the one I had in mind) 3) (D; intr.) to differ on; with (I differ with you on that point) * * * [ dɪfə] on with (I differ with you on that point) (D; … Combinatory dictionary
differ — verb 1 (I) to be different from something in quality, features etc (+ from): Humans differ from other mammals in their ability to speak. | differ widely/greatly: Opinions on the subject differ widely. 2 (I) if two people or groups differ about… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
differ — verb 1》 be unlike or dissimilar: actual results may differ from expectations. 2》 disagree with someone. Phrases agree to differ amicably stop arguing because agreement will never be reached. beg to differ politely disagree. Origin ME: from OFr.… … English new terms dictionary