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1 dominate
['dɒmɪneɪt] 1.verbo transitivo dominare [person, town, market]2.an area dominated by factories, shops — un'area fortemente industrializzata, fortemente commerciale
verbo intransitivo [ person] dominare; [issue, question] predominare, prevalere* * *[-neit]1) (to have command or influence (over): The stronger man dominates the weaker.) dominare2) (to be most strong or most noticeable etc (in): The skyline is dominated by the castle.) dominare* * *['dɒmɪneɪt] 1.verbo transitivo dominare [person, town, market]2.an area dominated by factories, shops — un'area fortemente industrializzata, fortemente commerciale
verbo intransitivo [ person] dominare; [issue, question] predominare, prevalere -
2 command
I [kə'mɑːnd] [AE -'mænd]1) (order) comando m., ordine m.to carry out, give a command — eseguire, dare un ordine
2) (military control) comando m.to give sb. command of sth. — affidare a qcn. il comando di qcs.
to be in command of — essere al comando di, comandare [ troops]
to be under the command of sb. — essere agli ordini di qcn.
to have sth. at one's command — avere qcs. a propria disposizione
4) inform. comando m.II 1. [kə'mɑːnd] [AE -'mænd]1) (order)to command sb. to do — ordinare a qcn. di fare
2) (obtain as one's due) ispirare [ affection]; incutere [ respect]; suscitare [ admiration]3) (dispose of) disporre di [funds, support, majority]4) (dominate) dominare [ valley]5) mil. comandare [ regiment]; dominare [air, sea]2.verbo intransitivo comandare* * *1. verb1) (to order: I command you to leave the room immediately!) ordinare2) (to have authority over: He commanded a regiment of soldiers.) comandare3) (to have by right: He commands great respect.) meritare2. noun1) (an order: We obeyed his commands.) comando, ordine2) (control: He was in command of the operation.) comando•- commander
- commanding
- commandment
- commander-in-chief* * *I [kə'mɑːnd] [AE -'mænd]1) (order) comando m., ordine m.to carry out, give a command — eseguire, dare un ordine
2) (military control) comando m.to give sb. command of sth. — affidare a qcn. il comando di qcs.
to be in command of — essere al comando di, comandare [ troops]
to be under the command of sb. — essere agli ordini di qcn.
to have sth. at one's command — avere qcs. a propria disposizione
4) inform. comando m.II 1. [kə'mɑːnd] [AE -'mænd]1) (order)to command sb. to do — ordinare a qcn. di fare
2) (obtain as one's due) ispirare [ affection]; incutere [ respect]; suscitare [ admiration]3) (dispose of) disporre di [funds, support, majority]4) (dominate) dominare [ valley]5) mil. comandare [ regiment]; dominare [air, sea]2.verbo intransitivo comandare -
3 control
I 1. [kən'trəʊl]1) U (domination) controllo m. (of di); (of operation, project) controllo m., direzione f. (of di); (of life, fate) dominio m. (of, over su); (of disease, social problem) lotta f. (of contro), contenimento m. (of di)to be in control of — controllare [ territory]; controllare, dirigere [operation, organization]; avere padronanza di, avere sotto controllo [ problem]
to have control over — controllare [ territory]; avere autorità su [ person]; essere padrone o arbitro di [fate, life]
to take control of — assumere il controllo di [territory, operation]; prendere in mano [ situation]
to be under sb.'s control — [ person] essere sotto il controllo o in balia di qcn.; [organization, party] essere sotto il controllo di qcn.
to be under control — [fire, problem] essere sotto controllo
to bring o get o keep [sth.] under control tenere sotto controllo [animals, riot]; circoscrivere [fire, problem]; to be out of control [crowd, riot] essere incontrollabile; [ fire] non essere più controllabile, essere ingovernabile; to lose control of sth. perdere il controllo di qcs.; the situation is out of o beyond control la situazione è sfuggita di mano; due to circumstances beyond our control — per circostanze al di là del nostro controllo o indipendenti dalla nostra volontà
2) U (restraint) (of self, emotion, urge) controllo m., dominio m., freno m.to have control over sth. controllare o dominare qcs.; to keep control of oneself o to be in control of oneself controllarsi, dominarsi; to lose control (of oneself) — perdere il controllo
3) U (physical mastery) (of vehicle, machine, ball, body) controllo m.to keep, lose control of a car — mantenere, perdere il controllo di un'automobile
to take control — (of car) mettersi al o prendere il volante; (of plane) prendere i comandi
4) spesso pl. (lever, switch) (on vehicle, equipment) comando m., controllo m.brightness, volume control — telev. regolatore della luminosità, del volume
to be at the controls — essere ai comandi; fig. avere il comando
5) amm. econ. (regulation) controllo m., regolamentazione f. (on di)6) (in experiment) controllo m., verifica f.2.modificatore [button, switch] di comandoII 1. [kən'trəʊl]1) (dominate) controllare, tenere sotto controllo [situation, market, territory]; controllare, dirigere [traffic, project]2) (discipline) tenere sotto controllo [person, animal, temper, riot]; controllare, circoscrivere [ fire]; contenere [pain, inflation]; arginare [disease, epidemic]; controllare, dominare [emotion, impulse]; trattenere, frenare [laughter, tears]3) (operate) controllare, manovrare [machine, system]; azionare [lever, process]; manovrare [boat, vehicle]; pilotare [ plane]; controllare [ ball]4) (regulate) regolare [speed, volume, temperature]; regolamentare, controllare [immigration, prices]2.* * *[kən'trəul] 1. noun1) (the right of directing or of giving orders; power or authority: She has control over all the decisions in that department; She has no control over that dog.) controllo, autorità2) (the act of holding back or restraining: control of prices; I know you're angry but you must not lose control (of yourself).) controllo3) ((often in plural) a lever, button etc which operates (a machine etc): The clutch and accelerator are foot controls in a car.) dispositivo di comando4) (a point or place at which an inspection takes place: passport control.) controllo2. verb1) (to direct or guide; to have power or authority over: The captain controls the whole ship; Control your dog!) controllare, tenere sotto il proprio controllo2) (to hold back; to restrain (oneself or one's emotions etc): Control yourself!) controllarsi3) (to keep to a fixed standard: The government is controlling prices.) controllare•- control-tower
- in control of
- in control
- out of control
- under control* * *I 1. [kən'trəʊl]1) U (domination) controllo m. (of di); (of operation, project) controllo m., direzione f. (of di); (of life, fate) dominio m. (of, over su); (of disease, social problem) lotta f. (of contro), contenimento m. (of di)to be in control of — controllare [ territory]; controllare, dirigere [operation, organization]; avere padronanza di, avere sotto controllo [ problem]
to have control over — controllare [ territory]; avere autorità su [ person]; essere padrone o arbitro di [fate, life]
to take control of — assumere il controllo di [territory, operation]; prendere in mano [ situation]
to be under sb.'s control — [ person] essere sotto il controllo o in balia di qcn.; [organization, party] essere sotto il controllo di qcn.
to be under control — [fire, problem] essere sotto controllo
to bring o get o keep [sth.] under control tenere sotto controllo [animals, riot]; circoscrivere [fire, problem]; to be out of control [crowd, riot] essere incontrollabile; [ fire] non essere più controllabile, essere ingovernabile; to lose control of sth. perdere il controllo di qcs.; the situation is out of o beyond control la situazione è sfuggita di mano; due to circumstances beyond our control — per circostanze al di là del nostro controllo o indipendenti dalla nostra volontà
2) U (restraint) (of self, emotion, urge) controllo m., dominio m., freno m.to have control over sth. controllare o dominare qcs.; to keep control of oneself o to be in control of oneself controllarsi, dominarsi; to lose control (of oneself) — perdere il controllo
3) U (physical mastery) (of vehicle, machine, ball, body) controllo m.to keep, lose control of a car — mantenere, perdere il controllo di un'automobile
to take control — (of car) mettersi al o prendere il volante; (of plane) prendere i comandi
4) spesso pl. (lever, switch) (on vehicle, equipment) comando m., controllo m.brightness, volume control — telev. regolatore della luminosità, del volume
to be at the controls — essere ai comandi; fig. avere il comando
5) amm. econ. (regulation) controllo m., regolamentazione f. (on di)6) (in experiment) controllo m., verifica f.2.modificatore [button, switch] di comandoII 1. [kən'trəʊl]1) (dominate) controllare, tenere sotto controllo [situation, market, territory]; controllare, dirigere [traffic, project]2) (discipline) tenere sotto controllo [person, animal, temper, riot]; controllare, circoscrivere [ fire]; contenere [pain, inflation]; arginare [disease, epidemic]; controllare, dominare [emotion, impulse]; trattenere, frenare [laughter, tears]3) (operate) controllare, manovrare [machine, system]; azionare [lever, process]; manovrare [boat, vehicle]; pilotare [ plane]; controllare [ ball]4) (regulate) regolare [speed, volume, temperature]; regolamentare, controllare [immigration, prices]2. -
4 tower
I ['taʊə(r)]nome torre f.••II ['taʊə(r)]1) (dominate)to tower above o over — torreggiare su, dominare [ village]
2) (outstrip)to tower above — dominare [ rival]
* * *1. noun(a tall, narrow (part of a) building, especially (of) a castle: the Tower of London; a church-tower.) torre2. verb(to rise high: She is so small that he towers above her.) sovrastare- towering- tower-block* * *I ['taʊə(r)]nome torre f.••II ['taʊə(r)]1) (dominate)to tower above o over — torreggiare su, dominare [ village]
2) (outstrip)to tower above — dominare [ rival]
См. также в других словарях:
dominate — ► VERB 1) have a commanding or controlling influence over. 2) (of something tall or high) overlook. DERIVATIVES domination noun dominator noun. ORIGIN Latin dominari rule, govern , from dominus lord, master … English terms dictionary
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dominate — UK US /ˈdɒmɪneɪt/ verb [I or T] ► to be more important, powerful, or successful than other people, companies, etc.: »This is an industry where a few global manufacturers and their brands dominate. »They dominate the market for high speed internet … Financial and business terms
dominate — verb ADVERB ▪ absolutely, completely, entirely, overwhelmingly, thoroughly, totally, utterly ▪ She completely dominated the conversation. ▪ … Collocations dictionary
dominate — I verb administer, carry authority, command, compel, control, dictate, domineer, govern, have power, hold down, influence, keep subjugated, lead, manage, master, oppress, overrule, predominate, preponderate, preside over, prevail, reign over,… … Law dictionary
dominate — verb /ˈdɒməˌneɪt,ˈdɑːməˌneɪt/ a) To govern, rule or control by superior authority or power b) To exert an overwhelming guiding influence … Wiktionary
dominate — verb 1) the Russians dominated Iran in the nineteenth century Syn: control, influence, exercise control over, command, be in command of, be in charge of, rule, govern, direct, have ascendancy over, have mastery over; informal head up, be in the… … Thesaurus of popular words
dominate — verb 1) the Russians dominated Iran in the nineteenth century Syn: control, influence, command, be in charge of, rule, govern, direct 2) the village is dominated by the viaduct Syn: overlook, command, tower above/o … Synonyms and antonyms dictionary
dominate — [[t]dɒ̱mɪneɪt[/t]] ♦♦ dominates, dominating, dominated 1) VERB To dominate a situation means to be the most powerful or important person or thing in it. [V n] The book is expected to dominate the best seller lists. [V n] ...countries where life… … English dictionary
dominate */*/ — UK [ˈdɒmɪneɪt] / US [ˈdɑmɪˌneɪt] verb Word forms dominate : present tense I/you/we/they dominate he/she/it dominates present participle dominating past tense dominated past participle dominated 1) [intransitive/transitive] to control something or … English dictionary
dominate — dom|i|nate [ damı,neıt ] verb ** 1. ) intransitive or transitive to control something or someone, often in a negative way, because you have more power or influence: As a boy, he was dominated by his mother. She tends to dominate the conversation … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English