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elate

  • 1 učiniti ponosnim

    • elate

    Serbian-English dictionary > učiniti ponosnim

  • 2 ushititi

    • elate; ravish

    Serbian-English dictionary > ushititi

  • 3 nadmen

    • assuming; assumptive; big; bloated; bumptious; consequential; domineerig; elate; flatulent; fustian; grandiose; inflated; proud; puffed out; pursy; soaring; sonorous; stilted; stuck up; supercilious; supercillious; swelling; swollen; tall; truculent; tumid; turgescent; turgid; vaing

    Serbian-English dictionary > nadmen

  • 4 oduševiti

    • animate; elate; electrify; elevate; enrapture; entrance; exalt; heighten; inspire; inspirit; kindle; quicken

    Serbian-English dictionary > oduševiti

  • 5 oduševljen

    • crazy; dithyrambic; elate; elated; enthusiastic; fiery; in raptures; jubilant; raptured; red-hod; zealous

    Serbian-English dictionary > oduševljen

  • 6 ohol

    • arrogant; assumptive; conceited; contemptuous; disdainful; domineerig; domineering; elate; haughty; high-handed; hoity-toity; imperious; insolent; loft; lofty; lord like; lord-like; lordly; masterful; overbearing; pridefull; proud; stuck-up; supercilious; supercillious; truculent

    Serbian-English dictionary > ohol

  • 7 potstaći

    • abet; agitate; arouse; be piqued at; brisk up; clap spurs to; coax; edge; elate; encourage; energize; enkindle; fan; fillip; give spurs to; incite; jog; key up; motive; move; prick forth; prick off; prick on; prod; prompt; provoke; put; put spurs to; quicken; raise; set forward; set on

    Serbian-English dictionary > potstaći

  • 8 razdragan

    • ebullient; elate; hilarious; in high glee; jocund; jubilant; mirthful; rollicking; sprightly

    Serbian-English dictionary > razdragan

  • 9 vezivati

    • articulate; conjugate; elate; lace; relate; spen; tiedown

    Serbian-English dictionary > vezivati

См. также в других словарях:

  • Elate — E*late , a. [L. elatus elevated, fig., elated, proud (the figure, perh., being borrowed from a prancing horse); e out + latus (used as p. p. of ferre to bear), for tlatus, and akin to E. tolerate. See {Tolerate}, and cf. {Extol}.] [1913 Webster]… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • élaté — ⇒ÉLATÉ, subst. masc. BOTANIQUE A. Palmier des Indes, proche du dattier. Rem. Attesté ds Ac. Compl. 1842, BESCH. 1845, BOUILLET 1859, Lar. 19e, BAILLON t. 2 1886, GUÉRIN 1892, Nouv. Lar. ill. B. Gaine qui enveloppe les grappes de fleurs femelles… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • elate — elate·ment; elate; …   English syllables

  • Elate — E*late , v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Elated}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Elating}.] 1. To raise; to exalt. [R.] [1913 Webster] By the potent sun elated high. Thomson. [1913 Webster] 2. To exalt the spirit of; to fill with confidence or exultation; to elevate or… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Elăte — (E Ait.), Pflanzengattung aus der Familie der Palmae Coryphinae Phoenicinae, 22. Kl. 6. Ordn. L., von And. zu Phönix gezählt; Art: E. sylvestris, aus Indien. Die Kernewerden wie die der Arekannß zum Kauen benutzt, liefert Palmkohl u. etwas Sago …   Pierer's Universal-Lexikon

  • elate — (v.) 1570s, literal, to raise, elevate, probably from L. elatus uplifted, exalted, pp. of effere (see ELATION (Cf. elation)), or else a back formation from elation. Figurative use from 1610s. Related: Elated; elating …   Etymology dictionary

  • elate — [ē lāt′, ilāt′] vt. elated, elating [< L elatus, pp. of efferre, to bring out, lift up < ex , out + ferre, BEAR1] to raise the spirits of; make very proud, happy, or joyful adj. Old Poet. filled with elation elatedly adv. elatedness n …   English World dictionary

  • elate — [16] Elate means literally ‘lift up’, and that is how it was originally used in English: ‘Placus doth elate his shady forehead’, George Chapman, Iliad 1611. The word comes from ēlātus, the past participle of Latin efferre. This was a compound… …   The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins

  • elate — [16] Elate means literally ‘lift up’, and that is how it was originally used in English: ‘Placus doth elate his shady forehead’, George Chapman, Iliad 1611. The word comes from ēlātus, the past participle of Latin efferre. This was a compound… …   Word origins

  • elate — I. transitive verb (elated; elating) Etymology: Latin elatus (past participle of efferre to carry out, elevate), from e + latus, past participle of ferre to carry more at tolerate, bear Date: circa 1619 to fill with joy or pride II. adjective… …   New Collegiate Dictionary

  • elate — /i layt /, v., elated, elating, adj. v.t. 1. to make very happy or proud: news to elate the hearer. adj. 2. elated. [1350 1400; ME elat proud, exalted < L elatus carried away, lifted up (ptp. of efferre), equiv. to e E + la carry, lift (see… …   Universalium

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