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1 publiek
publiek1〈 het〉1 [bezoekers] public ⇒ 〈 sport〉 crowd, 〈 film, toneel〉 audience, 〈 boek, krant〉 readership, 〈 klanten〉 clientele, 〈 museum〉 visitors2 [de massa] (general) public♦voorbeelden:een breed publiek proberen te bereiken • try to cater for a broad publicdie twee scholen hebben een verschillend publiek • those two schools have pupils from different backgroundsveel publiek trekken • draw a good crowdop het publiek spelen • play to the galleryiemand uit het publiek • someone in the audience/crowdhet grote publiek • the general publictoegankelijk voor (het) publiek • open to the (general) public————————publiek21 [algemeen bekend] public2 [voor iedereen bestemd] public♦voorbeelden:iets publiek maken • make something public; 〈 onthullen〉 disclose something; 〈 aankondigen〉 announce somethingiemand publiek te schande maken • disgrace someone in publicpubliek worden • become public knowledgein het publiek optreden • appear in publicde vergadering is niet publiek • the meeting is not open to the publiceen publieke vrouw • a woman of the streetsiets publiek verkopen • sell something by public auctionII 〈 bijvoeglijk naamwoord〉1 [algemeen] public2 [van de overheid] public♦voorbeelden:de publieke zaak • the public interesteen publieke zaak • a public matterpublieke werken • public works -
2 iets publiek maken
iets publiek makenVan Dale Handwoordenboek Nederlands-Engels > iets publiek maken
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3 doek
2 [projectiescherm] screen♦voorbeelden:het doek valt • 〈 ook figuurlijk〉 the curtain falls/drops; 〈figuurlijk; informeel ook〉 it's curtainsII 〈de〉1 [stuk stof] cloth♦voorbeelden:hij had zijn arm in een doek • he had his arm in a sling -
4 iets uit de doeken doen
iets uit de doeken doenVan Dale Handwoordenboek Nederlands-Engels > iets uit de doeken doen
См. также в других словарях:
disclose something secret — index confide (divulge) Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
disclose */*/ — UK [dɪsˈkləʊz] / US [dɪsˈkloʊz] verb [transitive] Word forms disclose : present tense I/you/we/they disclose he/she/it discloses present participle disclosing past tense disclosed past participle disclosed 1) to give information to people,… … English dictionary
disclose — dis|close [dısˈkləuz US ˈklouz] v [T] formal [Date: 1400 1500; : Old French; Origin: desclore, from Medieval Latin disclaudere to open ] 1.) to make something publicly known, especially after it has been kept secret = ↑reveal ▪ Some companies… … Dictionary of contemporary English
disclose — verb (T) 1 to make something publicly known, especially after it has been kept secret from the public: The Security Service is unlikely to disclose any information. | disclose that: It has recently been disclosed that 30% of donations are spent… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
disclose — dis|close [ dıs klouz ] verb transitive ** 1. ) to give information to people, especially information that was secret: Most of the people interviewed requested that their identity not be disclosed. disclose that: They were reluctant to disclose… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
disclose — /dɪs kləυz/ verb to tell something that was previously unknown to other people or secret ● The bank has no right to disclose details of my account to the tax office … Dictionary of banking and finance
disclose — verb make (secret or new information) known. ↘allow (something hidden) to be seen. Derivatives discloser noun disclosure noun Origin ME: from OFr. desclos , stem of desclore, based on L. claudere to close … English new terms dictionary
divulge, disclose — These terms mean to make known to others what was intended to be kept secret, private, or confidential. Divulge is more likely to be used when something previously secret is revealed to a small number of people or a particular group; disclose… … Dictionary of problem words and expressions
let something slip — REVEAL, disclose, divulge, let out, give away, blurt out; give the game away; informal let on, blab, let the cat out of the bag, spill the beans; Brit. informal blow the gaff. → slip * * * let something drop/slip/ … Useful english dictionary
bring something to light — REVEAL, disclose, expose, uncover, show up, unearth, dig up/out, bring to notice, identify, hunt out, nose out. → light * * * bring something to light come to light phrase if facts are brought to light or come to light, people discover them New… … Useful english dictionary
lay something bare — REVEAL, disclose, divulge, show, expose, exhibit, uncover, unveil, unmask, make a clean breast of, make known, make public. → lay * * * lay something bare phrase to make something known that has been hidden or secret All the facts of the… … Useful english dictionary