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et+s'il+refuse++

  • 21 disown

    [dis'oun]
    (to refuse to acknowledge as belonging to oneself: to disown one's son.) repudiar
    * * *
    dis.own
    [dis'oun] vt 1 desconhecer, recusar reconhecer por seu, não admitir, negar. 2 repudiar, rejeitar, renegar, renunciar.

    English-Portuguese dictionary > disown

  • 22 dissociate

    [di'səusieit]
    1) (to separate, especially in thought.) dissociar
    2) (to refuse to connect (oneself) (any longer) with: I'm dissociating myself completely from their actions.) dissociar(-se)
    * * *
    dis.so.ci.a.te
    [dis'ouʃieit] vt+vi 1 dissociar, separar(-se), desunir. 2 desagregar, dissolver. 3 Chem decompor.

    English-Portuguese dictionary > dissociate

  • 23 flout

    (to refuse to respect or obey: He flouted the headmaster's authority.) desrespeitar
    * * *
    [flaut] n escárnio, motejo, insulto, chasco, zombaria, mofa. • vt+vi 1 escarnecer, zombar de, fazer escárnio de, mofar de. 2 desconsiderar, insultar, desfeitear, desprezar, mofar.

    English-Portuguese dictionary > flout

  • 24 henceforth

    adverb (from now on: Henceforth I shall refuse to work with him.) de hoje em diante
    * * *
    hence.forth
    [hensf'ɔ:θ] adv daqui em diante, doravante.

    English-Portuguese dictionary > henceforth

  • 25 inhospitable

    [inhə'spitəbl]
    (not welcoming guests; not friendly towards strangers: She could not refuse to invite them in without seeming inhospitable.) inóspito
    * * *
    in.hos.pi.ta.ble
    [inh'ɔspitəbəl] adj inóspito, inospitaleiro.

    English-Portuguese dictionary > inhospitable

  • 26 invitation

    [invi'teiʃən]
    1) (a (written) request to come or go somewhere: Have you received an invitation to their party?; We had to refuse the invitation to the wedding.) convite
    2) (the act of inviting: He attended the committee meeting on the invitation of the chairman.) convite
    * * *
    in.vi.ta.tion
    [invit'eiʃən] n 1 convite. 2 atração, sedução.

    English-Portuguese dictionary > invitation

  • 27 mutiny

    ['mju:tini] 1. plural - mutinies; noun
    ((a) refusal to obey one's senior officers in the navy or other armed services: There has been a mutiny on HMS Tigress; The sailors were found guilty of mutiny.) motim
    2. verb
    ((of sailors etc) to refuse to obey commands from those in authority: The sailors mutinied because they did not have enough food.) amotinar-se
    - mutinous
    * * *
    mu.ti.ny
    [mj'u:tini] n amotinação, motim, revolta, rebelião, sedição. • vi amotinar-se, revoltar-se.

    English-Portuguese dictionary > mutiny

  • 28 once and for all

    (once and finally: Once and for all, I refuse!) de uma vez por todas
    * * *
    once and for all
    de uma vez para sempre, definitivamente.

    English-Portuguese dictionary > once and for all

  • 29 ostracise

    (to refuse to accept (someone) in society or a group: His former friends ostracized him because of his rudeness.) rejeitar
    * * *
    os.tra.cise
    ['ɔstrəsaiz] vt = link=ostracize ostracize.

    English-Portuguese dictionary > ostracise

  • 30 ostracize

    (to refuse to accept (someone) in society or a group: His former friends ostracized him because of his rudeness.) rejeitar
    * * *
    os.tra.cize
    ['ɔstrəsaiz] vt condenar ao ostracismo, banir.

    English-Portuguese dictionary > ostracize

  • 31 rebuff

    1. noun
    (an unkind or unfriendly refusal or rejection.) recusa
    2. verb
    (to reject or refuse in an unkind of unfriendly way: He rebuffed all the attempts of his friends to help him.) recusar
    * * *
    re.buff
    [rib'∧f] n 1 repulsa, recusa, mau acolhimento. 2 malogro, denegação. • vt repelir, rebater, recusar, rejeitar, repulsar.

    English-Portuguese dictionary > rebuff

  • 32 reject

    1. [rə'‹ekt] verb
    (to refuse to accept: She rejected his offer of help; He asked her to marry him, but she rejected him.) rejeitar
    2. ['ri:‹ekt] noun
    (something that is rejected because it is faulty etc.) refugo
    * * *
    re.ject
    [ridʒ'ekt] n refugo, rebotalho, rejeito. • vt 1 rejeitar, recusar, repelir, desprezar. 2 expelir, vomitar.

    English-Portuguese dictionary > reject

  • 33 repulse

    1. verb
    1) (to repel (an enemy).) repelir
    2) (to refuse to accept eg help from, or be friendly to.) recusar
    2. noun
    ((an) act of repulsing.) rejeição
    - repulsive
    - repulsively
    - repulsiveness
    * * *
    re.pulse
    [rip'∧ls] n 1 repulsa, recusa. 2 rejeição. • vt 1 repulsar, repelir. 2 recusar, rejeitar. to meet with a repulse ser repulsado ou repelido.

    English-Portuguese dictionary > repulse

  • 34 rightly

    1) (justly, justifiably; it is right, good or just that (something is the case): He was punished for his stupidity and rightly: Rightly or wrongly she refused to speak to him.) com razão
    2) (correctly; accurately: They rightly assumed that he would refuse to help.) com razão
    * * *
    right.ly
    [r'aitli] adv 1 justamente, corretamente. 2 acertadamente, perfeitamente. 3 honestamente. 4 razoavelmente. 5 com certeza.

    English-Portuguese dictionary > rightly

  • 35 submit

    [səb'mit]
    past tense, past participle - submitted; verb
    1) (to yield to control or to a particular kind of treatment by another person etc: I refuse to submit to his control; The rebels were ordered to submit.) entregar-se
    2) (to offer (a plan, suggestion, proposal, entry etc): Competitors for the painting competition must submit their entries by Friday.) apresentar
    - submissive
    - submissively
    - submissiveness
    * * *
    sub.mit
    [səbm'it] vt 1 ceder, submeter-se, sujeitar-se, entregar-se. 2 apresentar, submeter, oferecer (a exame ou apreciação). the document was submitted for signature / o documento foi apresentado para assinatura. 3 deixar a critério de. 4 sugerir. 5 alegar. to submit to treatment submeter-se a tratamento.

    English-Portuguese dictionary > submit

  • 36 tip

    I 1. [tip] noun
    (the small or thin end, point or top of something: the tips of my fingers.) ponta
    2. verb
    (to put, or form, a tip on: The spear was tipped with an iron point.) guarnecer com ponta
    - tip-top
    - be on the tip of one's tongue
    II 1. [tip] past tense, past participle - tipped; verb
    1) (to (make something) slant: The boat tipped to one side.) virar
    2) (to empty (something) from a container, or remove (something) from a surface, with this kind of motion: He tipped the water out of the bucket.) verter
    3) (to dump (rubbish): People have been tipping their rubbish in this field.) despejar
    2. noun
    (a place where rubbish is thrown: a refuse/rubbish tip.) lixeira
    III 1. [tip] noun
    (a gift of money given to a waiter etc, for personal service: I gave him a generous tip.) gorjeta
    2. verb
    (to give such a gift to.) dar gorjeta
    IV [tip] noun
    (a piece of useful information; a hint: He gave me some good tips on/about gardening.) sugestão
    * * *
    tip1
    [tip] n 1 ponta (dos dedos), extremidade. 2 cume, pico, parte mais alta. 3 parte final. 4 ponta, ponteira. 5 declive, ladeira. • vt 1 colocar ponta, formar ponta. 2 inclinar, tombar, derrubar. give a tip to this! / tombe isto! 3 virar, bascular. 4 inclinar-se, saudar, tirar o chapéu. on the tip of the tongue na ponta da língua. tip of the iceberg a ponta do iceberg. tip-up seat assento de dobrar. to have something at the tip of the fingers ter qualquer coisa na ponta dos dedos. to tip all nine (boliche) derrubar todos os pinos. to tip in Typogr intercalar gravura. to tip off, to tip out despejar, virar, derramar. to tip one’s hat tirar o chapéu, tocar a aba do chapéu em cumprimento. to tip over tombar, virar. to tip the scale pesar na balança, ser um fator decisivo num resultado. to tip the trees podar as árvores. to tip up levantar, pôr de canto.
    ————————
    tip2
    [tip] n 1 gorjeta, gratificação. 2 palpite, aviso, informação secreta. 3 sugestão, conselho, dica. he took my tip / ele seguiu meu conselho. 4 pancada leve. • vt 1 dar gorjeta. 2 dar palpite. they tipped me the wink / deram-me um palpite. 3 aconselhar, indicar, sugerir. 4 bater. hot tip palpite bom. straight tip palpite acertado. to tip someone off prevenir alguém. to tip a dolar dar um dólar de gorjeta. to tip the wink 1 insinuar. 2 informar furtivamente.

    English-Portuguese dictionary > tip

  • 37 to burn up

    to burn up
    destruir, desfazer-se de alguma coisa pelo fogo. he burnt up the refuse/ele queimou o lixo.

    English-Portuguese dictionary > to burn up

  • 38 ungracious

    (rude; impolite: It was rather ungracious of you to refuse his invitation.) indelicado
    * * *
    un.gra.cious
    [∧ngr'eiʃəs] adj 1 não amável, descortês, indelicado, rude, bruto. 2 desagradável, desprezível. 3 não atraente.

    English-Portuguese dictionary > ungracious

  • 39 whether or no

    whether or no
    quer sim quer não, de qualquer forma. whether they agree or they refuse the offer, we will be contented / quer eles concordem quer recusem, ficaremos satisfeitos.

    English-Portuguese dictionary > whether or no

  • 40 whether

    ['weðə]
    (if: I don't know whether it's possible.) se
    * * *
    wheth.er
    [w'eðə] conj se, quer, ou. let us know whether you come or stay / avise-nos se você vem ou fica. we shall go whether it rains or not / nós iremos quer chova quer não. it is doubful whether they play / é duvidoso que joguem. tell him whether you stay / diga-lhe se você fica. whether or no quer sim quer não, de qualquer forma. whether they agree or they refuse the offer, we will be contented / quer eles concordem quer recusem, ficaremos satisfeitos.

    English-Portuguese dictionary > whether

См. также в других словарях:

  • Refuse & Resist! — ( R R! ) was a human rights activist group founded in New York City in 1987 [1] by Emile de Antonio, Dore Ashton, Dennis Brutus, John Gerassi, Abbie Hoffman, William Kunstler, C. Clark Kissinger, Conrad Lynn, Sonia Sanchez, Rev. Fernando… …   Wikipedia

  • refuse — vb *decline, reject, repudiate, spurn Analogous words: *deny, gainsay: balk, baffle, *frustrate, thwart, foil: debar, *exclude, shut out refuse n Refuse, waste, rubbish, trash, debris, garbage, offal can all mean matter that is regarded as… …   New Dictionary of Synonyms

  • Refuse — Re*fuse (r?*f?z ), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Refused} ( f?zd ); p. pr. & vb. n. {Refusing}.] [F. refuser, either from (assumed) LL. refusare to refuse, v. freq. of L. refundere to pour back, give back, restore (see {Refund} to repay), or. fr. L.… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • refuse — UK US /rɪˈfjuːz/ verb [I or T] ► to say that you will not do or accept something: refuse an offer/request/invitation »The government proposes to cut unemployment benefits to those who refuse job offers. refuse sb sth »The company was forced to… …   Financial and business terms

  • refuse — Ⅰ. refuse [1] ► VERB 1) state that one is unwilling to do something. 2) state that one is unwilling to grant or accept (something offered or requested). 3) (of a horse) decline to jump (a fence or other obstacle). DERIVATIVES refusal noun refuser …   English terms dictionary

  • Refuse — Re*fuse , v. i. To deny compliance; not to comply. [1913 Webster] Too proud to ask, too humble to refuse. Garth. [1913 Webster] If ye refuse . . . ye shall be devoured with the sword. Isa. i. 20. [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • refuse — [n] garbage debris, dregs, dross, dump, dust, hogwash*, junk, leavings, litter, muck, offal, rejectamenta*, remains, residue, rubbish, scraps, scum*, sediment, slop*, sweepings, swill, trash, waste, waste matter; concept 260 Ant. assets,… …   New thesaurus

  • Refuse — Ref use (r?f ?s;277), n. [F. refus refusal, also, that which is refused. See {Refuse} to deny.] That which is refused or rejected as useless; waste or worthless matter. [1913 Webster] Syn: Dregs; sediment; scum; recrement; dross. [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Refuse — Ref use, a. Refused; rejected; hence; left as unworthy of acceptance; of no value; worthless. [1913 Webster] Everything that was vile and refuse, that they destroyed utterly. 1. Sam. xv. 9. [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Refuse-derived fuel — (RDF) or solid recovered fuel/ specified recovered fuel (SRF) is a fuel produced by shredding municipal solid waste (MSW) or steam pressure treating in an autoclave. RDF consists largely of organic components of municipal waste such as plastics… …   Wikipedia

  • refuse — I verb abjure, abnegate, abstain, balk, bar, be obstinate, be unwilling, beg to be excused, cast aside, debar, decline, demur, deny, disaccord with, disallow, disapprove, disavow, disclaim, discountenance, discredit, dismiss, disown, dispense… …   Law dictionary

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