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1 extort
اِنْتَزَعَ \ extort: to obtain sth. (a promise, money, etc.) by force, or fear of force. extract: to take out (a tooth from sb.’s mouth, oil from a seed, useful parts from a book, etc.). grab: to seize quickly. snatch: to take (or try to take) violently: He snatched the bag from her hand. He snatched at the ball but missed it. It is rude to snatch when you are offered something. tear: (with down, off, out) to move by pulling or tearing: Someone has torn the notice down. tear sb. away: to cause sb. to leave sth. very interesting: I could hardly tear myself away from the party, but I had to go home. \ See Also ابتز (ابْتَزَّ)، اختطف (اِخْتَطَفَ)، مزق (مَزَّقَ) -
2 iemand geld afpersen
iemand geld afpersen————————iemand geld afpersenVan Dale Handwoordenboek Nederlands-Engels > iemand geld afpersen
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3 geld
♦voorbeelden:1 je geld of je leven • your money or your life!baar geld • (hard) cashgroot geld • notes, Abillshet grote geld • (the) big money, Amegabucksklein geld • (small) changepapieren/gemunt geld • paper money, notes, Abills; 〈 gemunt〉 coin(s), specievals geld • counterfeit (money)in/met vreemd geld betalen • pay in foreign currencyzwart geld • undisclosed income, money received under the counterbulken van/zwemmen in het geld • be loaded, be rolling in money/itgeld drukken • print moneyhet geld laten rollen • spend money freelygeld moet rollen • you must keep money movingsmijten met geld • 〈 figuurlijk〉 throw one's money about/aroundgeld in iets steken • put money into somethinggeld wisselen • change moneyde waarde is niet in geld uit te drukken • you can't put a price on itwaar voor zijn geld krijgen • get value for moneygeld als water verdienen • earn big money/a packet〈 spreekwoord〉 het geld dat stom is, maakt recht wat krom is • a golden handshake is better than ten witnesses2 een smak/hoop/berg geld • bags/stacks of moneyhet is weggegooid geld! • that's a (sheer) waste of moneyiemand geld afpersen • extort money from someonegeld hebben • be well-offgeen geld hebben • be brokezij heeft geld van zichzelf • she has money of her owngelden misbruiken • misappropriate/misapply fundsdat zal zijn geld wel opbrengen • that will pay (for itself)iemand die veel geld uitgeeft • a big spendergoed in zijn geld zitten • be well offmet zijn geld geen raad weten • have money to burnmensen met geld • moneyed peoplezonder geld zitten • be out of pocket, be brokekinderen betalen half geld • children half-priceik zal het geld er gauw weer uit hebben • it will soon pay for itselfniet goed? geld terug • money refunded/back if not satisfactory, money-back guaranteehet is echt niet duur voor dat geld • its a good buyvoor geen geld ter wereld • not for love or money(dat is) geen geld! • that's a bargain! -
4 afpersen
1 extort/wring/force/wrest (from)♦voorbeelden: -
5 saigner
I.v. trans.1. To 'stick', to stab to death. Il se vantait d'avoir saigné un malfrat dans un bouge: He was boasting how he'd chivved a heavy in some down-town caf'.2. ( fig): To 'bleed dry', to extort money from someone.II.v. intrans. Ça va saigner!a It'll be an all-out battle! (literally, blood will flow!).b It's going to be one hell of a slanging match! -
6 вымогать деньги
1) General subject: blackmail, bleed, dun somebody out of his money, fleece, (у кого-л.) get money out of, gouge money out of (у кого-л.), gouge out of money (у кого-л.), make somebody squeal, trim, (у кого-л.) put through the wringer, squeeze money, squeeze money from (у кого-л.)2) Law: pinch3) Jargon: put (someone) on the shake, put the shake on ( someone), rip-off, ripoff, shake4) Banking: extort money5) Makarov: squeeze from (smb.) (у кого-л.), squeeze money from (smb.) (у кого-л.), squeeze money out of (smb.) (у кого-л.), squeeze out of (smb.) (у кого-л.), dun out of his money, extort money from (у кого-л.) -
7 갉아먹다
v. gnaw, nibble; extort money, illegally obtain money from someone by force or intimidation -
8 انتزع
اِنْتَزَعَ \ extort: to obtain sth. (a promise, money, etc.) by force, or fear of force. extract: to take out (a tooth from sb.’s mouth, oil from a seed, useful parts from a book, etc.). grab: to seize quickly. snatch: to take (or try to take) violently: He snatched the bag from her hand. He snatched at the ball but missed it. It is rude to snatch when you are offered something. tear: (with down, off, out) to move by pulling or tearing: Someone has torn the notice down. tear sb. away: to cause sb. to leave sth. very interesting: I could hardly tear myself away from the party, but I had to go home. \ See Also ابتز (ابْتَزَّ)، اختطف (اِخْتَطَفَ)، مزق (مَزَّقَ) -
9 extract
اِنْتَزَعَ \ extort: to obtain sth. (a promise, money, etc.) by force, or fear of force. extract: to take out (a tooth from sb.’s mouth, oil from a seed, useful parts from a book, etc.). grab: to seize quickly. snatch: to take (or try to take) violently: He snatched the bag from her hand. He snatched at the ball but missed it. It is rude to snatch when you are offered something. tear: (with down, off, out) to move by pulling or tearing: Someone has torn the notice down. tear sb. away: to cause sb. to leave sth. very interesting: I could hardly tear myself away from the party, but I had to go home. \ See Also ابتز (ابْتَزَّ)، اختطف (اِخْتَطَفَ)، مزق (مَزَّقَ) -
10 grab
اِنْتَزَعَ \ extort: to obtain sth. (a promise, money, etc.) by force, or fear of force. extract: to take out (a tooth from sb.’s mouth, oil from a seed, useful parts from a book, etc.). grab: to seize quickly. snatch: to take (or try to take) violently: He snatched the bag from her hand. He snatched at the ball but missed it. It is rude to snatch when you are offered something. tear: (with down, off, out) to move by pulling or tearing: Someone has torn the notice down. tear sb. away: to cause sb. to leave sth. very interesting: I could hardly tear myself away from the party, but I had to go home. \ See Also ابتز (ابْتَزَّ)، اختطف (اِخْتَطَفَ)، مزق (مَزَّقَ) -
11 snatch
اِنْتَزَعَ \ extort: to obtain sth. (a promise, money, etc.) by force, or fear of force. extract: to take out (a tooth from sb.’s mouth, oil from a seed, useful parts from a book, etc.). grab: to seize quickly. snatch: to take (or try to take) violently: He snatched the bag from her hand. He snatched at the ball but missed it. It is rude to snatch when you are offered something. tear: (with down, off, out) to move by pulling or tearing: Someone has torn the notice down. tear sb. away: to cause sb. to leave sth. very interesting: I could hardly tear myself away from the party, but I had to go home. \ See Also ابتز (ابْتَزَّ)، اختطف (اِخْتَطَفَ)، مزق (مَزَّقَ) -
12 tear
اِنْتَزَعَ \ extort: to obtain sth. (a promise, money, etc.) by force, or fear of force. extract: to take out (a tooth from sb.’s mouth, oil from a seed, useful parts from a book, etc.). grab: to seize quickly. snatch: to take (or try to take) violently: He snatched the bag from her hand. He snatched at the ball but missed it. It is rude to snatch when you are offered something. tear: (with down, off, out) to move by pulling or tearing: Someone has torn the notice down. tear sb. away: to cause sb. to leave sth. very interesting: I could hardly tear myself away from the party, but I had to go home. \ See Also ابتز (ابْتَزَّ)، اختطف (اِخْتَطَفَ)، مزق (مَزَّقَ) -
13 tear sb. away
اِنْتَزَعَ \ extort: to obtain sth. (a promise, money, etc.) by force, or fear of force. extract: to take out (a tooth from sb.’s mouth, oil from a seed, useful parts from a book, etc.). grab: to seize quickly. snatch: to take (or try to take) violently: He snatched the bag from her hand. He snatched at the ball but missed it. It is rude to snatch when you are offered something. tear: (with down, off, out) to move by pulling or tearing: Someone has torn the notice down. tear sb. away: to cause sb. to leave sth. very interesting: I could hardly tear myself away from the party, but I had to go home. \ See Also ابتز (ابْتَزَّ)، اختطف (اِخْتَطَفَ)، مزق (مَزَّقَ)
См. также в других словарях:
squeeze money from a person — extort money from someone, force someone to give money … English contemporary dictionary
extort money — illegally obtain money from someone by force or intimidation, blackmail, wring … English contemporary dictionary
extort — ex‧tort [ɪkˈstɔːt ǁ ɔːrt] verb [transitive] LAW to illegally force someone to give you money by threatening them: extort money from/out of somebody • Smith was arrested on suspicion of having extorted property and money from at least 18 clients … Financial and business terms
extort — verb (T) to illegally force someone to give you money by threatening them: extort money from/out of sb: Landlords tried to cover their losses by extorting high rents from tenants. extortion noun (U): Confessions were obtained by extortion.… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
extort — ex·tort /ik stȯrt/ vt [Latin extortus, past participle of extorquere to remove by twisting, obtain by force, from ex out + torquere to twist]: to obtain (as money) from a person by force, intimidation, or undue or unlawful use of authority or… … Law dictionary
bleed someone white — AND bleed someone dry tv. to take all of someone’s money; to extort money from someone. (See also bleed.) □ The creeps tried to bleed me white. □ Frank got some picture of Fred and Paul together and tried to bleed both of them dry … Dictionary of American slang and colloquial expressions
extort — [ek stôrt′, ikstôrt′] vt. [< L extortus, pp. of extorquere, to twist or turn out < ex , out + torquere, to twist: see TORT] to get (money, etc.) from someone by violence, threats, misuse of authority, etc.; exact or wrest (from) SYN.… … English World dictionary
shake someone down N. Amer. — shake someone down N. Amer. informal extort money from someone. → shake … English new terms dictionary
shake someone down — informal extort money from someone … Useful english dictionary
extort — [[t]ɪkstɔ͟ː(r)t[/t]] extorts, extorting, extorted 1) VERB If someone extorts money from you, they get it from you using force, threats, or other unfair or illegal means. [V n from n] Corrupt government officials were extorting money from him...… … English dictionary
extort — UK [ɪkˈstɔː(r)t] / US [ɪkˈstɔrt] verb [transitive] Word forms extort : present tense I/you/we/they extort he/she/it extorts present participle extorting past tense extorted past participle extorted to illegally get money or information from… … English dictionary