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1 effect
effectuitwerkingwerking -
2 effect
n. effect; uitwerking, resultaat, gevolg--------v. effectereneffect1[ iffekt]♦voorbeelden:1 of no effect • vruchteloos, tevergeefsjust for effect • alleen maar om indruk te maken¶ in effect • in feite, eigenlijk♦voorbeelden:a message to the effect that • een berichtje (dat erop neerkomt) datcome into effect, take effect • van kracht worden♦voorbeelden:————————effect2〈 werkwoord〉1 bewerkstelligen ⇒ teweegbrengen, veroorzaken♦voorbeelden:effect one's purpose • zijn doel verwezenlijken -
3 effect a cure for someone
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4 effect an entrance
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5 effect one's purpose
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6 effect payment
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7 effect of majorating
majoreereffect -
8 effect of temperature
temperatuurverloop -
9 Josephson effect
effect van Josephson -
10 Wien effect
effect van Wien -
11 domino effect
domino-effect, kettingreactie, een gebeurtenis veroorzaakt een reeks op elkaar volgende vergelijkbare gebeurtenissendomino effect〈 politiek〉 -
12 Doppler effect
Doppler effect,het Doppler verschijnsel[ doplə iffekt] 〈 natuurkunde〉 -
13 every effect supposes a cause
elk effect vooronderstelt/heeft een oorzaak -
14 take effect
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15 immediate effect
direct effect, rechtstreeks effect -
16 photoelectric effect
foto-effectfoto-elektrisch effect -
17 a message to the effect that
a message to the effect that -
18 a regulating effect
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19 be in effect
be in effect -
20 bring/carry/put plans into effect
bring/carry/put plans into effectEnglish-Dutch dictionary > bring/carry/put plans into effect
См. также в других словарях:
Effect — Ef*fect , n. [L. effectus, fr. efficere, effectum, to effect; ex + facere to make: cf. F. effet, formerly also spelled effect. See {Fact}.] 1. Execution; performance; realization; operation; as, the law goes into effect in May. [1913 Webster]… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
effect — ef·fect 1 n 1: something that is produced by an agent or cause 2 pl: personal property (1) at property: goods … Law dictionary
effect — n 1 Effect, result, consequence, upshot, aftereffect, aftermath, sequel, issue, outcome, event are comparable in signifying something, usually a condition, situation, or occurrence, ascribable to a cause or combination of causes. Effect is the… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
effect — [e fekt′, ifekt′; ] often [ ēfekt′, əfekt′] n. [ME < OFr (& L) < L effectus, orig., pp. of efficere, to bring to pass, accomplish < ex , out + facere, DO1] 1. anything brought about by a cause or agent; result 2. the power or ability to… … English World dictionary
effect — que l art fait, Effectio artis. Effect et pouvoir, Effectus. Homme de peu d effect, Parum efficax homo. Tout l effect d amitié git en mesme vouloir, Vis amicitiae est in animorum consensione. Laquelle signification approcha si trespres de l… … Thresor de la langue françoyse
effect — ► NOUN 1) a change which is a result or consequence of an action or other cause. 2) the state of being or becoming operative. 3) the extent to which something succeeds or is operative: wind power can be used to great effect. 4) (effects) personal … English terms dictionary
Effect — Effect, Wirkung, Erfolg, wird besonders von einer erhöhten, einer überraschenden Wirkung gebraucht. In der Kunst darf der Künstler wohl den Effect anbringen, jedoch ohne die Harmonie der einzelnen Theile unter einander zu stören; er darf nicht… … Damen Conversations Lexikon
Effect — Effect, from Latin effectus performance, accomplishment can be used in various meanings: * Any result of another action or circumstance (see pragma , phenomenon, list of effects); * Cause and effect are the relata of causality; * In movies and… … Wikipedia
effect — [n1] result aftereffect, aftermath, backlash, backwash, can of worms*, causatum, chain reaction*, conclusion, consequence, corollary, denouement, development, end, end product, event, eventuality, fallout, flak*, follow through, follow up, fruit … New thesaurus
Effect — Ef*fect , v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Effected}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Effecting}.] 1. To produce, as a cause or agent; to cause to be. [1913 Webster] So great a body such exploits to effect. Daniel. [1913 Webster] 2. To bring to pass; to execute; to… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
effect — (n.) late 14c., a result, from O.Fr. efet (13c., Mod.Fr. effet) result, execution, completion, ending, from L. effectus accomplishment, performance, from pp. stem of efficere work out, accomplish, from ex out (see EX (Cf. ex )) + facere to do… … Etymology dictionary