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1 entrust
(to give into the care of another; to trust (somebody with something): I entrusted this secret to her; I entrusted her with the duty of locking up.) betroverb \/ɪnˈtrʌst\/, \/enˈtrʌst\/overgi, betro, overlateentrust something to someone betro noe til noen, overlate noe i noens varetektentrust someone with something betro noen noe, betro noe til noen, overlate noe i noens varetekt
См. также в других словарях:
entrust — en‧trust [ɪnˈtrʌst] or intrust verb [transitive] to make someone responsible for doing something or dealing with something: entrust somebody with something • The presidentially appointed panel is entrusted with keeping the stock markets fair and… … Financial and business terms
entrust — ► VERB 1) (entrust with) assign a responsibility to. 2) (entrust to) put (something) into someone s care … English terms dictionary
entrust — [[t]ɪntrʌ̱st[/t]] entrusts, entrusting, entrusted VERB If you entrust something important to someone or entrust them with it, you make them responsible for looking after it or dealing with it. [V n to n] If parents wanted to entrust their prized… … English dictionary
entrust — en·trust also in·trust vt 1: to deliver something to (a person) under a charge or duty 2: to give (something) over to the care of another; specif: to deliver to a merchant who may transfer ownership to a buyer in the ordinary course of business… … Law dictionary
entrust — en|trust [ınˈtrʌst] v [T] to make someone responsible for doing something important, or for taking care of someone entrust sth/sb to sb ▪ She entrusted her son s education to a private tutor. be entrusted with sth/sb ▪ I was entrusted with the… … Dictionary of contemporary English
entrust — verb (T) to make someone responsible for doing something important: entrust sb with sth: I was entrusted with the task of looking after the money. | entrust sth to sb: The infant Prince was entrusted to an English nurse, Miss Shaw … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
commend someone/thing to — archaic or formal entrust someone or something to. → commend … English new terms dictionary
recommend someone/thing to — archaic commend or entrust someone or something to. → recommend … English new terms dictionary
make something over to someone — TRANSFER, sign over, turn over, hand over/on/down, give, leave, bequeath, bestow, pass on, assign, consign, entrust; Law devolve, convey. → make … Useful english dictionary
demand — [13] Latin dēmandāre meant ‘entrust something to someone’. It was a compound verb formed from the intensive prefix dē and mandāre ‘entrust, commit’ (source of English mandate). As it passed via Old French demander into English, its meaning… … The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins
demand — [13] Latin dēmandāre meant ‘entrust something to someone’. It was a compound verb formed from the intensive prefix dē and mandāre ‘entrust, commit’ (source of English mandate). As it passed via Old French demander into English, its meaning… … Word origins