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discovered

  • 1 discover

    1) (to find by chance, especially for the first time: Columbus discovered America; Marie Curie discovered radium.) ανακαλύπτω
    2) (to find out: Try to discover what's going on!) ανακαλύπτω

    English-Greek dictionary > discover

  • 2 be on to (someone)

    (to have discovered (a person's) trick, secret etc: The thieves realized that the police were on to them.) έχω μυριστεί

    English-Greek dictionary > be on to (someone)

  • 3 be on to (someone)

    (to have discovered (a person's) trick, secret etc: The thieves realized that the police were on to them.) έχω μυριστεί

    English-Greek dictionary > be on to (someone)

  • 4 brazen it out

    (to face a situation with impudent boldness: She knew her deception had been discovered but decided to brazen it out.) αντιμετωπίζω με αναίδεια

    English-Greek dictionary > brazen it out

  • 5 come to light

    (to be discovered: The theft only came to light when the owners returned from holiday.) αποκαλύπτομαι

    English-Greek dictionary > come to light

  • 6 conspiracy

    [-'spi-]
    - plural conspiracies - noun ((a plan made by) conspiring: The government discovered the conspiracy in time.) συνωμοσία

    English-Greek dictionary > conspiracy

  • 7 dope

    [dəup] 1. noun
    (any drug or drugs: He was accused of stealing dope from the chemist.) ναρκωτικά,πρέζα
    2. verb
    (to drug: They discovered that the racehorse had been doped.) ντοπάρω

    English-Greek dictionary > dope

  • 8 examination

    1) ((a) close inspection: Make a thorough examination of the area where the crime took place; On examination the patient was discovered to have appendicitis.) εξέταση
    2) ((also exam) a test of knowledge or ability: school examinations; She is to take a French/dancing exam; ( also adjective) examination/exam papers; He failed/passed the English exam.) διαγώνισμα
    3) ((a) formal questioning (eg of a witness).) εξέταση

    English-Greek dictionary > examination

  • 9 gold-rush

    noun (a rush of people to a part of a country where gold has been discovered.) πυρετός του χρυσού, χρυσοθηρία

    English-Greek dictionary > gold-rush

  • 10 grab

    1. past tense, past participle - grabbed; verb
    1) (to seize, grasp or take suddenly: He grabbed a biscuit.) αρπάζω
    2) (to get by rough or illegal means: Many people tried to grab land when oil was discovered in the district.) (υφ)αρπάζω
    2. noun
    (a sudden attempt to grasp or seize: He made a grab at the boy.) αρπαγή, δράξιμο

    English-Greek dictionary > grab

  • 11 new

    [nju:] 1. adjective
    1) (having only just happened, been built, made, bought etc: She is wearing a new dress; We are building a new house.) νέος,καινούριος
    2) (only just discovered, experienced etc: Flying in an aeroplane was a new experience for her.) πρωτόγνωρος
    3) (changed: He is a new man.) ξαναγεννημένος,άλλος
    4) (just arrived etc: The schoolchildren teased the new boy.) νεόφερτος,αρχάριος
    2. adverb
    (freshly: new-laid eggs.) φρεσκο-,νέο-
    - newcomer
    - newfangled
    - new to

    English-Greek dictionary > new

  • 12 perpetual

    [pə'pe uəl]
    (lasting for ever or for a long time; occurring repeatedly over a long time: He lives in perpetual fear of being discovered; perpetual noise.) αέναος,συνεχής

    English-Greek dictionary > perpetual

  • 13 scheme

    [ski:m] 1. noun
    1) (a plan or arrangement; a way of doing something: a colour scheme for the room; There are various schemes for improving the roads.) σχέδιο
    2) (a (usually secret) dishonest plan: His schemes to steal the money were discovered.) μηχανορραφία/πλεκτάνη,κομπίνα
    2. verb
    (to make (especially dishonest) schemes: He was punished for scheming against the President; They have all been scheming for my dismissal.)
    - scheming

    English-Greek dictionary > scheme

  • 14 see the light

    1) (to be born, discovered, produced etc: After many problems his invention finally saw the light (of day).) γεννιέμαι: βλέπω το φως της ημέρας, δημοσιότητας
    2) (to be converted to someone else's point of view etc.) πείθομαι: αφυπνίζομαι

    English-Greek dictionary > see the light

  • 15 source

    [so:s]
    1) (the place, person, circumstance, thing etc from which anything begins or comes: They have discovered the source of the trouble.) πηγή
    2) (the spring from which a river flows: the source of the Nile.) πηγή

    English-Greek dictionary > source

  • 16 Discovery

    subs.
    P. εὕρεσις, ἡ, V. νεύρεσις, ἡ.
    Disclosure: P. μήνυσις, ἡ.
    Invention, thing discovered: P. and V. εὕρημα, τό, Ar. and V. ἐξεύρημα, τό.

    Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Discovery

  • 17 Insoluble

    adj.
    Not to be dissolved: P. ἄτηκτος.
    Not to be discovered: Ar. and P. τέκμαρτος, V. δυσμαθής, δυστέκμαρτος, ἀξύμβλητος, δυσεύρετος, ἄσκοπος.

    Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Insoluble

  • 18 Transpire

    v. intrans.
    P. and V. συμβαίνειν, γίγνεσθαι; happen.
    Be discovered: see Discover.

    Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Transpire

См. также в других словарях:

  • DiscoverEd — is an educational search engine built by Creative Commons.[1][2] References ^ http://discovered.creativecommons.org/ ^ http://learn.creativecommons.org/wp content/uploads/2009/07/di …   Wikipedia

  • discovered — discovered; un·discovered; …   English syllables

  • Discovered — Discover Dis*cov er, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Discovered}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Discovering}.] [OE. discoveren, discuren, descuren, OF. descovrir, descouvrir, F. d[ e]couvrir; des (L. dis ) + couvrir to cover. See {Cover}.] 1. To uncover. [Obs.] [1913… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • discovered — adjective discovered or determined by scientific observation (Freq. 2) variation in the ascertained flux depends on a number of factors the discovered behavior norms discovered differences in achievement no explanation for the observed phenomena… …   Useful english dictionary

  • discovered — Having acquired actual knowledge of something, such as defalcation by an employee within the coverage of a fidelity bond. Anno: 23 ALR2d 1076. See after discovered; discover …   Ballentine's law dictionary

  • Discovered text (archaeology) — Discovered texts are texts before the discovery of which their existences were forgotten or not widely known. Contents 1 Discovered texts in China 1.1 17th Century 1.2 20th Century 2 Discovere …   Wikipedia

  • Discovered Money — is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization that was founded in 2009 and received tax exempt status from the Internal Revenue Service in 2010 with an effective date of its 2009 inception.[1] The organization is based in Lake Forest, California. The… …   Wikipedia

  • discovered peril — dis·cov·ered peril n: last clear chance Merriam Webster’s Dictionary of Law. Merriam Webster. 1996 …   Law dictionary

  • Discovered attack — In chess, a discovered attack is an attack revealed when one piece moves out of the way of another.[1] Discovered attacks can be extremely powerful, as the piece moved can make a threat independently of the piece it reveals. Like many chess… …   Wikipedia

  • discovered peril doctrine — The doctrine of discovered peril (or last clear chance ) is regarded as a limitation of, or an exception to, the general rule of contributory negligence precluding a plaintiffs recovery. It is founded on considerations of public policy, deduced… …   Black's law dictionary

  • discovered peril doctrine — The doctrine of discovered peril (or last clear chance ) is regarded as a limitation of, or an exception to, the general rule of contributory negligence precluding a plaintiffs recovery. It is founded on considerations of public policy, deduced… …   Black's law dictionary

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