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1 back
إلى الخَلْف \ back: away from the front: Stand back from the fire. backward(s): towards the back: He fell over backwards. -
2 draw back
تَرَاجَعَ \ beat a retreat: to retreat: The thief beat a hasty retreat when he saw my fierce dog. draw back: to move away, usu. quickly: He drew back in fear. fall: to become lower or weaker: The price of bread has fallen. His spirits fell. recoil: to jump back; draw back quickly: She recoiled with shock. stand, (stood): (with aside, away, back forward, etc.) to move: He stood aside to let me pass. subside: (of land) to sink; (of storms or excitement) to become calm; (of a swollen river, etc.) to sink to the usual level: At last the noise subsided. His fever is slowly subsiding. withdraw: to move back: When the enemy attacked, we withdrew to the fort. \ See Also اِرْتَدَّ إلى الوراء -
3 lie back
اِسْتَلقَى على ظَهره \ lie back: (from a sitting position) to let one’s body fall back: He lay back in the armchair and fell asleep. -
4 FALLA
* * *(fell; féll, féllum; fallinn), v.1) to fall;eigi fellr tré við fyrsta högg, a tree falls not with the first stroke;falla af baki, to fall from horse back;falla á kné, to fall on one’s knees;falla áfram (á bak aptr), to fall forwards (backwards);falla flatr, to fall prostrate;falla til jarðar, to fall to the ground;refl., láta fallast (= sik falla), to let oneself fall (þá lét Loki falla í kné Skaða);2) to drop down dead, be killed, fall (in battle);3) to die of plague (féllu fátœkir menn um alit land);4) to flow, run (of water, stream, tide);særinn fell út frá landi, ebbed;féll sjór fyrir hellismunnann, the sea rose higher than the cave-mouth;síðan féll sjór at, the tide rose;þeir sá þá ós mikinn falla í sjóinn, fall into the sea;á fél (a river flowed) við skála Ásólfs;var skipit svá hlaðit, at inn féll um söxin, that the sea rushed in at the prow;5) of clothes, hair, to fall, hang down;hárit féll á herðar honum aptr, the hair fell back on his shoulders;létu kvennváðir um kné falla, they let women’s dress fall about hi s knees;6) to fall, calm down (of the wind);féll veðrit (the storm fell) ok gerði logn;7) to fail, be foiled;sá eiðr fellr honum til útlegðar, if he fails in taking the oath, he shall be liable to outlawry;falla á verkum sínum, to have been caught red-handed, to be justly slain;falla or fallast at máli, sókn, to fail in one’s suit;falla frá máli, to give it up;fallinn at frændum, bereft of kinsmen;dœmi ek fyrir dráp hans fallnar yðrar eignir, I sentence your estates to be forfieited for his slaughter;refl., ef gerðarmenn láta fallast, if the umpires fail to do their duty;þá fallust öllum Ásum orðtök ok svá hendr, then voice and hands alike failed the Gods;féllust þeim allar kvéðjur, their greetings died on their lips;vill sá eigi falust láta andsvör, he will not fail or falter in replying;mér féll svá gæfusamliga (it befell me so quickly), at;stundum kann svá at falla, at, sometimes it may so happen that;9) to be had or produced (þat járn fellr í firði þeim; þar fellr hveiti ok vín);10) with adv., e-m fellr e-t þungt, létt, a thing falls heavily, lightly upon one (þetta mun ðr þungt falla);féll þá keisaranum þyngra bardaginn, the battle turned against the emperor;e-m fellr e-t nær, it falls nigh to one, touches one nearly;henni féll meinit svá nær, at, the illness fell on her so sore, that;mér fellr eigi firr en honum, it touches me no less than him;hörmuliga fellr oss nú, at, it falls out sadly for us, that;11) to please, suit;kvað sér, þat vel falla til attekta, said that it suited him well for drawing revenue from;honum féll vel í eyru lofsorð konungs, the king’s praise was pleasant in his ears;jarli féllst þat vel í eyru, the earl was well pleased to hear it;mun mér illa falla, ef, it will displease me, if;féll vel á með þeim, they were on good terms;refl., honum féllst þat vel í skap, it suited his mind well, he was pleased with it;féllst hvárt öðru vel í geð, they loved each other;12) with preps. and advs.,falla af, to fall, abate (féll af vindr, byrr);falla á e-n, to befall one;þær féllu lyktir í, at, the end was, that;falla í e-t, to fall into;falla í brot, to fall in a fit;falla í óvit, to faint, swoon;falla í villu, to fall into heresy;falla í vald e-s, to fall into one’s power;féll veðrit í logn, the storm calmed down;falla niðr, to fall, drop;mitt kvæði mun skjótt niðr falla, my poem will soon be forgotten;féll svá niðr þeirra tal, their conversation dropped, they left off talking;falla saman, to fill in with, agree;þó at eigi félli alit saman með þeim, though they, did not agree in everything;falla til, to occur, happen, fall out;ef auðna fellr til, if luck will have it so;litlu síðar féll til fagrt leiði, fair wind came on;öll þingviti, er til falla, all the fines that may fall in, be due;nema þörf falli til, unless need be;sem sakir falla til, as the case falls;falla undir e-n, to fall to one’s lot (of inheritance, obligation);arfr fellr undir e-n, devolves upon one;falla út, to recede, of the tide (þá er út féll sjórinn);falla við árar, to fall to at the oars.* * *pret. féll, 2nd pers. féllt, mod. féllst, pl. féllu; pres. fell, pl. föllum; part. fallinn; reflex. féllsk, fallisk, etc., with the neg. suffix fellr-at, féll-at, féllsk-at, Am. 6, vide Lex. Poët. [Common to all Teut. languages except Goth. (Ulf. renders πίπτειν by drjûsan); A. S. feallan; Engl. fall; Germ. fallen; Dan. falde; Swed. falla.]A. to fall; as in Engl. so in Icel. falla is the general word, used in the broadest sense; in the N. T. it is therefore used much in the same passages as in the Engl. V., e. g. Matth. v. 14, vii. 25, 27, x. 29, xii. 11, xiii. 4, xxi. 44, Luke xiv. 5, John xii. 24, Rom. xi. 11, xiv. 4, 1 Cor. x. 12, 1 Tim. vi. 9, Rev. viii. 10: blómstrið fellr, James i. 11: again, the verbs hrynja and hrapa denote ruin or sudden fall, detta a light fall, hrasa stumbling; thus in the N. T. hrynja is used, Luke xxiii. 30, Rev. vi. 16; hrapa, Luke x. 18, xi. 17, xiii. 4, Matth. xxiv. 29; hrasa, Luke x. 30; detta, xvi. 21: the proverb, eigi fellr tré við hit fyrsta högg, a tree falls not by the first stroke, Nj. 163, 224; hann féll fall mikit, Bs. i. 343; hón féll geigvænliga, id.; falla af baki, to fall from horseback, 344; f. áfram, to fall forwards, Nj. 165; f. á bak aptr, to fall on the back, 9; f. um háls e-m, to fall on one’s neck, Luke xv. 20; f. til jarðar, to fall to the ground, fall prostrate, Fms. vii. 13, Pass. 5. 4: to fall on one’s face, Stj. 422. Ruth ii. 10; f. fram, to fall down, Matth. iv. 9; f. dauðr ofan, to fall down dead, Fær. 31; ok jafnsnart féll á hann dimma og myrkr, Acts xiii. 11; hlutr fellr, the lot fell (vide hlut-fall), i. 26.2. to fall dead, fall in battle, Lat. cadere, Nj. 31, Eg. 7, 495, Dropl. 25, 36, Hm. 159, Fms. i. 8, 11, 24, 38, 95, 173, 177, 178, ii. 318, 324, 329, iii. 5, iv. 14, v. 55, 59, 78, 85, vi. 406–421, vii–xi, passim.3. of cattle, to die of plague or famine, Ann. 1341.4. medic., falla í brot, to fall in a fit, Bs. i. 335; f. í óvit, to swoon, Nj. 210: the phrase, f. frá, to fall, die (frá-fall, death), Grág. i. 139, 401, Fms. iv. 230, vii. 275; f. í svefn, to fall asleep, Acts xx. 9.II. to flow, run, of water, stream, tide, etc.: of the tide, særinn féll út frá landi, ebbed, Clem. 47; féll þar sær fyrir hellismunnann, the sea rose higher than the cave’s mouth, Orkn. 428; síðan féll sjór at, the tide rose, Ld. 58; ok þá er út féll sjórinn, Þorf. Karl. 420; sjórinn féll svá skjótt á land, at skipin vóru öll á floti, Fms. iv. 65: also used of snow, rain, dew, Vsp. 19; snjó-fall, a fall of snow: of the ashes of a volcano, cp. ösku-fall, s. v. aska: of a breaker, to dash, menn undruðusk er boði féll í logni, þar sem engi maðr vissi ván til at fyrri hefði fallit, Orkn. 164: of a river, nema þar falli á sú er eigi gengr fé yfir, Grág. ii. 256; vötn þau er ór jöklum höfðu fallit, Eg. 133; á féll ( flowed) við skála Ásólfs, Landn. 50, A. A. 285; þeir sá þá ós (fors, Hb.) mikinn falla í sjóinn, Landn. 29, v. l., cp. Fms. i. 236; Markar-fljót féll í millum höfuð-ísa, Nj. 142; á fellr austan, Vsp. 42; falla forsar, 58; læk er féll meðal landa þeirra, Landn. 145: of sea water, sjár kolblár fellr at þeim, the ship took in water, Ld. 118, Mar. 98; svá at inn féll um söxin, that the tea rushed in at the stern, Sturl. iii. 66.2. to stream, of hair; hárit silki-bleikt er féll ( streamed) á herðar honum aptr, Fms. vii. 155.β. of clothes, drapery, Edda (Ht. 2) 121.III. to fall, of the wind; féll veðrit ok görði logn, the wind fell, Eg. 372; þá féll byrrinn, Eb. 8; ok fellr veðrit er þeir koma út at eyjum, Ld. 116; hón kvaðsk mundu ráða at veðrit félli eigi, Gullþ. 30; í því bili fellr andviðrit, Fbr. 67; þá féll af byrrinn, Fms. vi. 17.2. falla niðr, to fall, drop; mitt kvæði mun skjótt niðr f., my poem will soon be forgotten, Fms. vi. 198; mun þat (in the poem) aldri niðr f. meðan Norðrlönd eru bygð, 372; féll svá þeirra tal, their speech dropped, they left off talking, Fas. iii. 579; as a law term, to let a thing drop, lát niðr f., Fs. 182; féllu hálfar bætr niðr fyrir sakastaði þá er hann þótti á eiga, Nj. 166, 250, Band. 18; þat eitt fellr niðr, Grág. i. 398, Fms. vii. 137; falla í verði, to fall in price, etc.IV. to fail, be foiled, a law term; sá (viz. eiðr) fellr honum til útlegðar, i. e. if he fails in taking the oath he shall be liable to outlawry, N. G. L. i. 84 (eið-fall); en ef eiðr fellr, þá fari hann útlægr, K. Á. 214; fellr aldri sekt handa á milli, the fine is never cancelled, N. G. L. i. 345; f. á verkum sínum, to have been caught red-handed, to be justly slain, Eg. 736; vera fallinn at sókn, to fail in one’s suit, N. G. L. i. 166; hence metaph. fallin at frændum, failing, bereft of friends, Hðm. 5; fallinn frá minu máli, having given my case up, Sks. 554, 747; því dæmi ek fyrir dráp hans fallnar eignir ykkar, I sentence your estates to lie forfeited for his slaughter, Fs. 122; f. í konungs garð, to forfeit to the king’s treasury. Fms. iv. 227; reflex., ef honum fellsk þessor brigð, if his right of reclamation fails, Gþl. 300; ef menn fallask at því, if men fail in that, N. G. L. ii. 345; ef gerð fellsk, if the reparation comes to naught, id.; ef gerðar-menn láta fallask, if they fail to do their duty, id., cp. i. 133, 415; to fail, falter, in the phrase, e-m fallask hendr, the hands fail one; bliknaði hann ok féllusk honum hendr, Ó. H. 70; þá féllusk öllum Ásum orðtök ok svá hendr, their voice and hands alike failed them, Edda 37; en bóndum féllusk hendr, því á þeir höfðu þá engan foringja, Fms. vi. 281; féllusk þeim allar kveðjur er fyrir vóru, their greeting faltered, i. e. the greeting died on their lips, Nj. 140; vill sá eigi fallask fáta andsvör, he would not fail or falter in replying, Hkr. i. 260; féllskat saðr sviðri, her judgment did not fail, Am. 6.V. metaph., falla í villu, to fall into heresy, Ver. 47; f. í hórdóm, to fall into whoredom, Sks. 588; f. í vald e-s. to fall into one’s power, Ld. 166; f. í fullsælu, to drop ( come suddenly) into great wealth, Band. 31; f. í fullting við e-n, to fall a-helping one, to take one’s part, Grág. i. 24; lyktir falla á e-t, to come to a close, issue, Fms. ix. 292. xi. 326; f. á, to fall on, of misfortune, vide á-fall.2. falla undir e-n, to full to one’s lot, of inheritance, obligation; arfr fellr undir e-n. devolves upon one, Gþl. 215; f. frjáls á jörð to be free born, N. G. L. i. 32; f. ánanðigr á jörð, to be born a bondsman, Grág. ii. 192.3. falla við árar, to fall to at the oars, Fms. xi. 73, 103; Þorgeirr féll þá svá fast á árar (pulled, so bard), at af gengu báðir háirnir, Grett. 125 A; f. fram við árar, id., Fas. ii. 495 (in a verse).VI. to fall out, befall; ef auðna fellr til, if it so falls out by luck, Fms. iv. 148; ef auðna vildi til f. með þeim, xi. 267; litlu siðar fellr til fagrt leiði, a fair wind befell them, 426; alla hluti þá er til kunni f., Nj. 224; öll þingvíti er til f., all the fines that may fall in, be due, Gþl. 21; nema þörf falli til, unless a mishap befalls him, i. e. unless he be in a strait, 76; mér féll svá gæfusamliga, it befell me so luckily, Barl. 114; verðuliga er fallit á mik þetta tilfelli, this accident has justly befallen me, 115; sem sakir f. til, as the case falls, Eg. 89.2. to fall, be produced; þat (the iron) fellr í firði þeim er Ger heitir, Fas. iii. 240; þar fellr hveiti ok vín, 360.VII. impers. in the phrases, e-m fellr e-t þungt, létt, etc., a thing falls lightly, heavily upon, esp. of feeling; þetta mun yðr þungt f., it will fall heavily on you, Band. 18; felir þá keisaranum þyngra bardaginn, the battle fell out ill to ( turned against) the emperor, Fms. xi. 32; at oss mundi þungt f. þessi mál, Nj. 191.2. the phrases, e-m fellr e-t nær, it falls nigh to one, touches one nearly; svá fellr mér þetta nær um trega, Nj. 170; sjá einn var svá hlutr, at Njáli féll svá nær, at hana mátti aldri óklökvandi um tala, this one thing touched Njal so nearly, that he could never speak of it without tears, 171; mér fellr eigi firr en honum, it touches me no less than him, Blas. 41; henni féll meinit svá, nær, at …, the illness fell on her so sore, that …, Bs. i. 178; féll henni nær allt saman, she was much vexed by it all (of illness), 351; e-t fellr bágliga, hörmuliga etc. fyrir e-m, things fall out sadly for one. Vígl. 30, El. 15.B. Metaph. to fall in with, agree, fit, suit, Germ. gefallen:I. to please, suit; kvað sér þat vel falla til aftekta, said that it suited him well for drawing taxes from, Fb. ii. 122: en allt þat, er hann heyrði frá himnaguði, féll honum harla vel, pleased him very well, Fms. i. 133; honum féll vel í eyru lofsorð konungs, the king’s praise suited his ears well, tickled, pleased his fancy, Bret. 16: reflex., þat lof fellsk honum í eyru, 4; jarli fellsk þat vel í eyru, the earl was well pleased to hear it, Bjarn. 7.β. falla saman, to fall in with, comply, agree; en þó at eigi félli allt saman með þeim, though they did not agree in all, Bs. i. 723.γ. féllsk vel á með þeim, they loved one another, Fas. i. 49; féll vel á með þeim Styrkári, i. e. he and S. were on good terms, Fms. iii. 120.δ. honum féllsk þat vel í skap, it suited his mind well, pleased him, Fas. i. 364; féllsk hvárt öðru vel í geð, they agreed well, liked one another well, Band. 9; fallask á e-t, to like a thing; brátt kvartar að mér fellst ei á, Bb. 3. 23.2. to beseem, befit; heldr fellr þeim ( it befits them), at sýna öðrum með góðvilja, Str. 2.3. falla at e-u, to apply to, refer to; þetta eitt orð er at fellr eiðstafnum, Band. MS. 15 (Ed. 18 wrongly eiðrinn instead of eiðnum).4. the phrase ‘falla við’ in Luke vi. 36 (bótin af því hinu nýja fellr eigi við hið gamla) means to agree with; hence also viðfeldinn, agreeable:—but in the two passages to be cited falla við seems to be intended for falda við, to enfold; hvergi nema þar sem falli við akr eða eng, unless field or meadow be increased or improved, N. G. L. ii. 116; ekki má falla (qs. falda) við hamingju-leysi mitt, ‘tis impossible to add a fold to my bad luck, it cannot be worse than it is, Al. 110.II. part. fallinn; svá f., such-like, so framed; eitt lítið dýr er svá fallið, at …, a small animal is so framed, that …, Stj. 77; hví man hinn sami maðr svá fallinn, how can the same man be so framed? Fms. xi. 429:—in law phrases, such-like, as follows, svá fallinn vitnisburð, testimony as follows, Vm. 47; svo fallinn órskurð, dóm, etc., a decision, sentence … as follows, a standing phrase; þá leið fallinn, such, such-like (Germ. beschaffen), Stj. 154.2. fallinn vel, illa, etc., well, ill-disposed; hann var vænn maðr ok vel fallinn, Fms. xi. 422; þau vóru tröll bæði ok at öllu illa fallin, Bárð. 165; fitted, worthy, bezt til konungs fallinn, Fms. i. 58; ok er hann bezt til þess f. af þessum þremr, vi. 386; at hann væri betr til fallinn at deyja fyrir þá sök en faðir hans, that he more deserved to die than his father did, x. 3; Ólafr er betr til yfirmanns f. enn mínir synir, Ld. 84; margir eru betr til fallnir fararinnar, Ísl. ii. 327; Hallgerðr kvað hann sér vel fallinn til verkstjóra, Nj. 57; sá er til þess er f., Sks. 299; ‘worthy,’ 1 Cor. vi. 2.3. neut. fit; ok hætti þá er honum þótti fallit, when he thought fit, Fms. vi. 364; slík reip sem f. þykir, as seems needful, Sks. 420; væri þat vel fallit, at …, it would do well, to …, Fms. ii. 115; þat mun nú vel fallit, that will be right, that will do well, Nj. 145; kallaði vel til fallit, said it was quite right, Fms. xi. 321.4. of a thing, with dat. suited to one; eigi þyki mér þér sú ferð vel fallin, i. e. this journey will not do for thee, will not do thee good, Fms. vi. 200; cp. ó-fallit, unfit. -
5 ricadere
fallcadere di nuovo fall backfig relapse* * *ricadere v. intr.1 ( cadere di nuovo) to fall* (down) again; ( cadere giù) to fall* back (anche fig.): fece uno sforzo per sollevarsi, ma ricadde sul cuscino, she made an effort to raise herself, but fell back on to the pillow; il territorio è ricaduto in potere del nemico, the territory has fallen into the enemy's hands again; ricadere nella povertà, to become poor again; ricadere ammalato, to fall ill again; ricadere in errore, to relapse into error; ricadere in uno stato di depressione, to fall back into a state of depression2 ( scendere) to fall* down, to hang* (down): i capelli le ricadevano sulla fronte, her hair fell down (o hung) over her forehead3 ( tornare a terra) to fall*, to drop: la palla ricadde dall'altro lato della rete, the ball fell on the other side of the net4 (fig.) ( gravare) to fall*, to rest: la responsabilità della famiglia ricade su di me, the responsibility for the family falls on me; tutte le colpe ricadono su di lui, all the blame falls on him5 (dir.) to pass (to s.o., sthg.); to go* (to s.o., sthg.); le terre che possedeva ricaddero sui cugini di parte materna, the land he owned passed (o went) to his cousins on his mother's side.* * *[rika'dere]1) (cadere di nuovo) to fall* againricadere nel peccato, nell'errore — fig. to fall back into evil ways
2) (cadere a terra) to fall*ricadere sulle zampe — [ gatto] to land on one's feet
3) (pendere) to hang*, to fall*4) (gravare)ricadere su qcn. — [responsabilità, fastidi] to fall on sb
5) med. (riammalarsi) to relapse* * *ricadere/rika'dere/ [26](aus. essere)1 (cadere di nuovo) to fall* again; ricadere nel peccato, nell'errore fig. to fall back into evil ways3 (pendere) to hang*, to fall*; i capelli gli ricadevano sulle spalle his hair fell over his shoulders4 (gravare) ricadere su qcn. [responsabilità, fastidi] to fall on sb.5 med. (riammalarsi) to relapse. -
6 recaer
v.1 to have a relapse (enfermo).2 to relapse, to fall back.3 to fall back on.Me recayó la ofensa The offense fell back on me.* * *1 (volver a caer) to fall again2 (enfermedad) to relapse, have a relapse3 (vicios etc) to relapse, backslide4 (corresponder) to fall ( sobre, on)* * *VI1) (Med) to suffer a relapse, relapse2) [criminal etc] to fall back, relapse (en into)3)recaer en o sobre — [elección] to fall on, fall to; [premio] to go to; [legado] to pass to; [deber] to devolve upon
4) (Arquit)recaer a — to look out on, look over
* * *verbo intransitivo1) enfermo to have o suffer a relapse2)a) sospechas/responsabilidadb) premio/nombramiento* * *= slip back into, relapse (into).Ex. 'He's slipping back into a churlish mood', the director said averting his eyes.Ex. In these circumstances it is easy to relapse into 'scientism' and mistake means for ends = En estas circunstancias es fácil recaer en el "cientifismo" y confundir los medios por los fines.----* hacer recaer la responsabilidad sobre = put + the onus on, put + the burden on.* maldición + recaer = curse + descend upon.* recaer en = devolve on/upon, slide back to.* responsabilidad + recaer en = responsibility + rest with.* responsabilidad + recaer sobre + espaldas = responsibility + rest on + shoulders.* * *verbo intransitivo1) enfermo to have o suffer a relapse2)a) sospechas/responsabilidadb) premio/nombramiento* * *= slip back into, relapse (into).Ex: 'He's slipping back into a churlish mood', the director said averting his eyes.
Ex: In these circumstances it is easy to relapse into 'scientism' and mistake means for ends = En estas circunstancias es fácil recaer en el "cientifismo" y confundir los medios por los fines.* hacer recaer la responsabilidad sobre = put + the onus on, put + the burden on.* maldición + recaer = curse + descend upon.* recaer en = devolve on/upon, slide back to.* responsabilidad + recaer en = responsibility + rest with.* responsabilidad + recaer sobre + espaldas = responsibility + rest on + shoulders.* * *viA «enfermo» to have o suffer a relapseB1 «sospechas/responsabilidad»: recaer SOBRE algn; to fall ON sbsobre él recae todo el peso de la empresa the entire burden of responsibility for the company falls on his shoulders2 «premio/nombramiento»: recaer EN algn; to go TO sb* * *
recaer ( conjugate recaer) verbo intransitivo
1 [ enfermo] to have o suffer a relapse
2a) [sospechas/responsabilidad] recaer SOBRE algn to fall on sbb) [premio/nombramiento] recaer EN algn to go to sb
recaer verbo intransitivo
1 Med to relapse
2 (en un vicio, hábito) to relapse
3 (culpa, sospechas, responsabilidad) to fall [sobre, on]
4 (premio) to go to
5 (conversación, discusión, etc) to be about
' recaer' also found in these entries:
English:
fall
- lapse
- relapse
- rest
* * *recaer vi1. [enfermo] to (have a) relapseha vuelto a recaer en la bebida he's started drinking again3. [ir a parar] [sospechas] to fall (en o sobre on);la responsabilidad recayó en su hermano mayor the responsibility fell to his older brother;el premio recayó en un escritor uruguayo the prize went to a Uruguayan writer5. [acento] to fall;el acento recae en la última sílaba the accent falls o is on the last syllable* * *v/i2 MED have osuffer a relapse3 JUR reoffend* * *recaer {13} vi1) : to relapse2)recaer en orrecaer sobre : to fall on, to fall to -
7 retomber
retomber [ʀ(ə)tɔ̃be]➭ TABLE 1 intransitive verb━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━a. ( = faire une nouvelle chute) to fall againb. ( = redevenir) retomber amoureux/enceinte/malade to fall in love/get pregnant/fall ill againc. [neige, pluie] to fall againd. (après s'être élevé) [personne] to land ; [chose lancée, liquide] to come down ; [gâteau, soufflé] to collapse ; [abattant, capot] to fall back down ; [fusée] to come back to earth ; [conversation] to fall away ; [intérêt] to fall off ; [vent] to subside• l'inflation est retombée à 4% inflation has fallen to 4%e. [cheveux, rideaux] to fallf. ( = échoir à) la responsabilité retombera sur toi the responsibility will fall on you• ça va me retomber dessus (inf) I'll get the blame (for it) ; [travail] I'll get lumbered with it (inf)h. ► retomber sur• je suis retombé sur lui le lendemain, au même endroit I came across him again the next day in the same place* * *ʀətɔ̃beverbe intransitif1) ( faire une nouvelle chute) [personne, objet] to fall againretomber malade/amoureux — to fall ill/in love again
retomber dans la misère/la facilité — to sink back into poverty/a state of complacency
2) ( retourner au sol après s'être élevé) [personne, chat, projectile] to land; [ballon, capot] to come down; [brouillard] to set in againretomber sur ses pattes — [chat] to land on its feet
retomber sur ses pieds or pattes — (colloq) fig to land on one's feet
ça va te retomber sur le nez — (colloq) fig it'll come down on your head
3) ( s'affaisser) [personne] to fall back; [soufflé] to collapse; fig [intérêt] to wane4) ( diminuer) [monnaie] to fall; [température] to go down, to fall5) ( incomber à)retomber sur quelqu'un — [responsabilité, ennui] to fall on somebody
tu fais des bêtises et c'est sur moi que ça retombe — you behave stupidly, and I'm the one who has to pay for it
faire retomber la responsabilité sur quelqu'un — to pass the buck (colloq) to somebody
* * *ʀ(ə)tɔ̃be vi1) (= tomber, redescendre) to fall back2) (après un saut) to land3)4) (= pendre) to fall, to hang down5) (= échoir)* * *retomber verb table: aimer vi1 ( faire une nouvelle chute) [personne, objet] to fall again; retomber malade/amoureux fig to fall ill/in love again; retomber dans la misère/l'anarchie/la facilité fig to sink back into poverty/anarchy/a state of complacency; retomber dans le péché fig to fall back into evil ways; retomber en enfance fig to regress to childhood; la conversation retombe toujours sur le même sujet fig the conversation always comes back to the same subject;2 ( retourner au sol après s'être élevé) [personne, chat, projectile] to land; [ballon, capot, rideau métallique] to come down; [brouillard] to set in again; elle sauta et retomba sur le ventre she jumped and landed on her stomach; retomber sur ses pattes [chat] to land on its feet; retomber sur ses pieds or pattes○ fig to land on one's feet; les fumées toxiques retombent en pluie acide toxic fumes come down as acid rain; laisser retomber le capot/ses bras to let the bonnet GB ou hood US/one's arms drop; ça va te retomber sur le nez○ fig it'll come down on your head;3 ( s'affaisser) [personne] to fall back; [soufflé] to collapse; fig [colère, exaltation] to subside; [enthousiasme, intérêt] to wane; elle tenta de se redresser et retomba she tried to get up and fell back; sa colère retomba d'elle-même his/her anger subsided; se laisser retomber sur le sable/dans son fauteuil to fall ou flop back onto the sand/into one's chair;4 ( diminuer) [valeur, monnaie] to fall; [température] to go down, to fall; le dollar est retombé à 0,89 euro the dollar has fallen to 0.89 euro;5 ( pendre) sa chevelure retombait sur ses épaules his/her hair fell ou flowed over his/her shoulders; elle écarta la mèche qui lui retombait sur le front she pushed back the hair which was hanging in her eyes; les rideaux retombent en plis gracieux the curtains hang gracefully;6 ( incomber à) retomber sur qn [responsabilité, ennui] to fall on sb; toutes les responsabilités retombent sur moi all the responsibility falls on me; la faute du père retombera sur le fils Bible the sins of the fathers will be visited on the sons; tu fais des bêtises et c'est sur moi que ça retombe you behave stupidly, and I'm the one who has to pay for it; faire retomber la responsabilité sur qn to pass the buck○ to sb;7 ( rencontrer de nouveau) retomber sur to run into [sb] again [personne]; to come across [sth] again [occasion].[rətɔ̃be] verbe intransitif (auxiliaire être)1. [bouteille, balai] to fall over again[mur, livres empilés] to fall down again ou back down[ivrogne, bambin] to fall over ou down againse laisser retomber sur son lit to flop ou to fall back onto one's bed2. [atterrir - chat, sauteur, parachutiste, missile] to land ; [ - balle] to come (back) down[redescendre - couvercle, rideau de fer, clapet] to close ; [ - soufflé, mousse] to collapse3. [devenir moins fort - fièvre, prix] to drop ; [ - agitation] to fall, to tail off, to die away ; [ - enthousiasme] to fall, to wanele dollar est retombé the dollar has fallen ou dropped again4. [dans un état, une habitude] to fall back, to lapse (soutenu)il retombe de la pluie/neige/grêle it's raining/snowing/hailing again6. [pendre - drapé, guirlande, ourlet] to hang7. [redevenir]————————retomber sur verbe plus préposition1. [rejaillir]un de ces jours ça va te retomber sur le nez! (familier) one of these days you'll get your come-uppance ou what's coming to you!2. (familier) [rencontrer à nouveau]retomber sur quelqu'un to bump into ou to come across somebody againje suis retombé sur le même prof/sujet à l'oral (familier) I got the same examiner/question for the oral examen tournant à droite, vous retombez sur l'avenue if you turn right you're back on the avenue again -
8 delicadeza
f.1 care (miramiento) (con cosas).le dio la noticia con delicadeza he broke the news to her tactfully2 delicacy (finura) (de perfume, rostro).3 delicacy.4 kindness, delicacy, tenderness, gentle nature.5 lovely thing, nicety, daintiness, dainty.6 tactfulness, finesse, good manners.7 fine gesture, corteous thing to do, courteous act, courteous action.8 delicious thing to eat, delicacy, delicious thing, tidbit.* * *1 (finura) delicacy, daintiness2 (tacto) thoughtfulness; (refinamiento) refinement3 (de salud) frailty, delicacy\tener la delicadeza de to be kind enough to* * *noun f.1) delicacy2) tact, discretion* * *SF1) (=suavidad) [de tejido, piel] softness; [de tela] fineness; [de color] softness2) (=cuidado) gentleness3) (=amabilidad)tuvo la delicadeza de ayudarme a bajar — he was kind enough to help me down, he did me the kindness of helping me down
4) (=tacto) tact, delicacytuvo mucha delicadeza al presentar su queja — she made the complaint very tactfully o with great tact o with great delicacy
tendrás que presentar la queja con mucha delicadeza — you will have to make the complaint very tactfully o delicately
falta de delicadeza — tactlessness, indelicacy
5) (=dificultad) delicacy, delicate natureno comprendió la delicadeza de la situación — he did not understand the delicacy o delicate nature of the situation
6) (=finura) [de rasgos] delicacydescribió la delicadeza del ambiente de palacio — she described the refined atmosphere at the palace
7) (=sensibilidad excesiva) hypersensitiveness* * *1)a) (cuidado, suavidad) gentlenessb) (finura, gracia)2)a) (tacto, discreción) tactb) ( gesto amable)* * *= finesse, gentleness, delicacy, subtlety.Ex. Having failed apparently with her trump card, she fell back on finesse.Ex. Indeed, the Clarendon Press kept a Napier double platen machine at work until 1950 for the sake of its gentleness with the delicate kerns of Fell italic.Ex. What was new about the iron presses was their capacity for printing large formes with great delicacy.Ex. The difference is only that an indexer is not usually called upon to appreciate the subtleties of the subject to the same extent as an abstractor.----* con delicadeza = delicately, gently.* * *1)a) (cuidado, suavidad) gentlenessb) (finura, gracia)2)a) (tacto, discreción) tactb) ( gesto amable)* * *= finesse, gentleness, delicacy, subtlety.Ex: Having failed apparently with her trump card, she fell back on finesse.
Ex: Indeed, the Clarendon Press kept a Napier double platen machine at work until 1950 for the sake of its gentleness with the delicate kerns of Fell italic.Ex: What was new about the iron presses was their capacity for printing large formes with great delicacy.Ex: The difference is only that an indexer is not usually called upon to appreciate the subtleties of the subject to the same extent as an abstractor.* con delicadeza = delicately, gently.* * *A1 (cuidado, suavidad) gentlenesscon mucha delicadeza very gently2(finura, gracia): la delicadeza de sus manos the daintiness of her handsla delicadeza de su voz the softness of his voicela delicadeza del bordado the delicacy of the embroideryB1 (tacto, discreción) tactme lo pidió con gran delicadeza she asked me with great tact o very tactfullyfue una falta de delicadeza imperdonable it was unforgivably tactless2(gesto amable): tuvo la delicadeza de acompañarme hasta la estación she very kindly went with me to the stationha sido una delicadeza de tu parte traerme it was very good o kind of you to bring meni siquiera tuvo la delicadeza de llamarme he didn't even have the manners o the decency o grace to call me* * *
delicadeza sustantivo femenino
1 (cuidado, suavidad) gentleness;
2
b) ( gesto amable):
ni siquiera tuvo la delicadeza de informarme he didn't even have the courtesy to inform me
delicadeza sustantivo femenino
1 (fragilidad, primor) delicacy, daintiness
2 (atención, cortesía) kindness: fue una delicadeza por su parte, it was very kind of her
3 (tacto) tactfulness
falta de delicadeza, tactlessness
' delicadeza' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
finura
- sensibilidad
- tacto
English:
delicacy
- finesse
- lightness
- sensibility
- squeamishness
- subtlety
- delicately
- gently
- subtly
* * *delicadeza nf1. [cuidado] care;trata al bebé con delicadeza treat the baby very gently2. [cortesía] kindness, attentiveness;tuvo la delicadeza de invitarnos a cenar he very kindly invited us to dinner;¡podías tener la delicadeza de llamar a la puerta! don't you think it would be polite to knock?3. [tacto, discreción] tact;le dio la noticia con delicadeza he broke the news to her tactfully o gently;una falta de delicadeza a lack of tact;¡qué falta de delicadeza! how tactless!;tuvo la delicadeza de no mencionar el tema he was tactful enough not to mention the subject4. [finura] [de aroma, gesto, material, objeto] delicacy;[de persona] sensitivity5. [de asunto, situación] delicacy* * *f1 de movimientos gentleness3 ( tacto) tact;tener la delicadeza de hacer algo be kind enough to do sth* * *delicadeza nf1) : delicacy, fineness2) : gentleness, softness3) : tact, discretion, consideration -
9 recurrir a
v.1 to turn to, to call on, to appeal to, to fall back on.Recurrí a todos mis ahorros I turned to [break into] all my savingsMaría recurrió a Ricardo An turned to Richard.2 to resort to, to turn to.María recurrió a quebrar botellas Mary resorted to breaking bottles.3 to turn to, to fall back upon, to break into.Recurrí a todos mis ahorros I turned to [break into] all my savings* * *1) to resort to2) appeal to, turn to* * *(v.) = fall back on, have + recourse to, call into + playEx. Having failed apparently with her trump card, she fell back on finesse.Ex. The special auxiliaries to which you have recourse in this case are enumerated under 7.0.Ex. Ethical principles are called into play when deliberating about values, particularly when values run into conflict.* * *(v.) = fall back on, have + recourse to, call into + playEx: Having failed apparently with her trump card, she fell back on finesse.
Ex: The special auxiliaries to which you have recourse in this case are enumerated under 7.0.Ex: Ethical principles are called into play when deliberating about values, particularly when values run into conflict. -
10 echar mano de
to make use of* * *to make use of, resort to* * *(v.) = fall back on, call into + playEx. Having failed apparently with her trump card, she fell back on finesse.Ex. Ethical principles are called into play when deliberating about values, particularly when values run into conflict.* * *(v.) = fall back on, call into + playEx: Having failed apparently with her trump card, she fell back on finesse.
Ex: Ethical principles are called into play when deliberating about values, particularly when values run into conflict. -
11 riprendere
take again( prendere indietro) take backlavoro go back tophotography recordriprendere coscienza regain consciousnessriprendere a fare qualcosa start doing something again* * *riprendere v.tr.1 ( prendere di nuovo) to take* again; to retake*; ( riacchiappare) to catch* (again): devo riprendere la medicina?, shall I take my medicine again?; ha ripreso l'abitudine di fumare, he has taken up smoking again; temo di aver ripreso il raffreddore, I am afraid I have caught a cold again (o I have caught another cold); lanciava la palla in aria e la riprendeva, he threw the ball up into the air and caught it; riprendere il proprio posto, to sit down in one's place again; (fig.) to take one's seat again; verrò a riprendere il bambino dopo il lavoro, I'll come to pick up the child after work; riprendere le armi, to take up arms again; riprendere il cammino, to take to the road again; riprese il cammino verso casa, he set out for home again // lo ha ripreso la febbre, he has (had) another bout of fever; lo riprese la malinconia, he fell back in a state of gloom // riprendere moglie, marito, to remarry // riprendere coraggio, to take courage again // riprendere sonno, to get back to sleep // riprendere un punto, ( nel lavoro a maglia) to pick up a stitch // riprendere quota, (aer.) to regain height2 ( riassumere) to resume; ( personale) to re-engage, to re-employ, to hire again: ripresi la segretaria che avevo licenziato, I re-engaged (o took on again) the secretary I had dismissed; riprendere il comando della nave, to resume command of the ship3 ( ricominciare) to start again, to begin* again, to resume: ha ripreso a piovere, it has started raining again; riprendere a scrivere, a lavorare, to begin writing, working again; riprendere il lavoro, la lettura, to resume work, reading4 ( ricatturare, riconquistare) to retake*, to recapture: riprendemmo il prigioniero fuggito, we recaptured the escaped prisoner; riprendere una fortezza, una città, to retake (o to recapture) a fortress, a town // (sport): riprendere il gruppo di testa, to catch up again with the leaders; riprendere il primo posto in classifica, to regain the top position in the table5 ( prendere indietro) to take* back, to get* back; ( ricuperare) to recover: la casa editrice riprese le copie invendute del libro, the publishing house took back the unsold copies of the book; quando posso riprendere i miei libri?, when can I take (o get) back my books?; sono andata a riprendere l'ombrello che avevo dimenticato, I went to collect the umbrella I had left behind; riprendere forza, to recover strength; riprendere conoscenza, i sensi, to recover consciousness, to come to one's senses again; riprendere fiato, to get one's breath back // la malavita sta riprendendo piede nella zona, the underworld is recovering ground in the area6 ( riutilizzare) to draw* on; ( derivare) to take*: questo compositore ha ripreso alcune danze popolari, this composer has drawn on popular dance tunes; alcuni versi sono ripresi da Shakespeare, some verses are taken from Shakespeare7 ( ripetere) to take* up: il tema iniziale viene ripreso nella seconda parte, the opening theme is taken up in the second part8 ( rimproverare) to tell* off, to reprimand, to reprove, to find* fault with (s.o.): la maestra l'ha ripreso perché parlava troppo, the teacher told him off because he talked too much; mi riprende sempre, he always finds fault with me; riprendere severamente qlcu., to reprimand s.o. sharply9 ( sartoria) to take* in: questo vestito deve essere ripreso in vita, this dress must be taken in at the waist10 (teatr.) to revive: questa commedia è stata ripresa dopo venti anni, this play has been revived after twenty years11 (cinem.) to shoot*: riprendere una scena, to shoot a scene; l'hanno ripreso mentre sbadigliava, they caught him (on film) while he was yawning◆ v. intr.1 ( ricominciare) to start again, to begin* again; ( a parlare) to go* on: aveva smesso di fumare, ma poi ha ripreso, he had given up smoking but then he started again; riprendiamo da dove eravamo rimasti, let's begin again from where we were; si riprende fra dieci minuti, we'll start again in ten minutes; le trasmissioni riprenderanno appena possibile, normal service will be resumed as soon as possible; ''Dimmi'', riprese, ''quando sei arrivato?'', ''Tell me'', he went on, ''when did you arrive?'' // la vita riprende, things are looking up again2 ( rinvigorire) to recover; to revive: i fiori riprendono nell'acqua, flowers revive in water; il vecchio riprende lentamente, the old man is slowly recovering.◘ riprendersi v.intr.pron.1 ( da malattia) to recover, to get* over, to rally; ( da turbamento) to collect oneself: dopo la malattia si riprese lentamente, after his illness he recovered slowly; datemi il tempo di riprendermi, give me time to collect myself; dopo la morte di suo padre, non si è più ripreso, after his father's death he was no longer his former self // dopo aver fatto bancarotta, non si riprese più, after he went bankrupt he never got on his legs again; il mercato azionario non si è ripreso dal crollo, the stock market has not recovered from the crash2 ( correggersi) to correct oneself: fece un errore madornale, ma si riprese subito, he made a huge mistake but he corrected himself at once.* * *1. [ri'prɛndere]vb irreg vt1) (prendere di nuovo: gen) to take again, (prigioniero) to recapture, (città) to retake, (impiegato) to take on again, re-employ, (raffreddore) to catch again, (velocità) to pick up again, (quota) to regainriprendere moglie/marito — to get married again
riprendere i sensi — to recover consciousness, come to o round
riprendere sonno — to go back to sleep, get back to sleep
2) (riavere) to get back, (ritirare: oggetto riparato) to collectpasso a riprendere Francesco/l'impermeabile più tardi — I'll call by to pick up Francesco/the raincoat later
puoi riprenderlo, non mi serve più — you can have it back, I don't need it any more
3) (ricominciare: viaggio, lavoro) to resume, start again"dunque", riprese, "dove eravamo?" — "so", he continued, "where were we?"
4) Cine, TV to shootquesta foto li riprende in un atteggiamento affettuoso — this photo shows them in an affectionate pose
5) (rimproverare) to reprimand6) (restringere: abito) to take in7) (Sport: raggiungere) to catch up with2. vip (riprendersi)1) (riaversi) to recover, (pianta) to revive2) (correggersi) to correct o.s.* * *[ri'prɛndere] 1.verbo transitivo1) (prendere di nuovo) to regain [controllo, comando]; to recover [ territorio]; to take* back [impiegato, regalo]riprendere sonno — to fall asleep again, to go back to sleep
riprendere marito, moglie — (riposarsi) to marry again, to remarry
2) (ricatturare) to recapture [ prigioniero]4) (ricominciare) to go* back to, to restart, to resume, to return to [lavoro, scuola]; to pick up, to take* up, to resume [conversazione, carriera]; to renew, to restart, to resume [ negoziati]5) (recuperare)riprendere conoscenza — to come round BE o around AE o to life, to regain consciousness
6) cinem. fot. to shoot*; (con videocamera) to video(tape)8) (utilizzare di nuovo) to draw* on [idea, tesi]9) (sgridare) to pick up, to pull up, to tell* off10) mus. to repeat2.1) (ricominciare) [attività, ciclo] to restart, to resume; [discussione, processo, scuola] to reopen, to resume"i programmi riprenderanno il più presto possibile" — "normal service will be resumed as soon as possible"
2) (continuare)3."strano," riprese lui — "strange", he continued
verbo pronominale riprendersi1) (ristabilirsi) to recover, to gather oneself; (riaversi) to collect one's wits, to collect oneself, to perk up, to recollect oneself- rsi da uno shock — to recover from o get over the shock
2) (rinverdire) [ pianta] to perk up, to revive3) econ. [commercio, economia] to recover, to perk up4) (correggersi) to correct oneself* * *riprendere/ri'prεndere/ [10]1 (prendere di nuovo) to regain [controllo, comando]; to recover [ territorio]; to take* back [impiegato, regalo]; riprendere sonno to fall asleep again, to go back to sleep; riprendere marito, moglie (riposarsi) to marry again, to remarry2 (ricatturare) to recapture [ prigioniero]4 (ricominciare) to go* back to, to restart, to resume, to return to [lavoro, scuola]; to pick up, to take* up, to resume [conversazione, carriera]; to renew, to restart, to resume [ negoziati]; riprendere servizio to report back for duty; riprendere la lettura to return to one's book5 (recuperare) riprendere quota to gain height again; riprendere terreno to catch up; riprendere conoscenza to come round BE o around AE o to life, to regain consciousness; riprendere colore to get one's colour back6 cinem. fot. to shoot*; (con videocamera) to video(tape)8 (utilizzare di nuovo) to draw* on [idea, tesi]9 (sgridare) to pick up, to pull up, to tell* off10 mus. to repeat(aus. avere)1 (ricominciare) [attività, ciclo] to restart, to resume; [discussione, processo, scuola] to reopen, to resume; "i programmi riprenderanno il più presto possibile" "normal service will be resumed as soon as possible"2 (continuare) "strano," riprese lui "strange", he continuedIII riprendersi verbo pronominale1 (ristabilirsi) to recover, to gather oneself; (riaversi) to collect one's wits, to collect oneself, to perk up, to recollect oneself; - rsi da uno shock to recover from o get over the shock2 (rinverdire) [ pianta] to perk up, to revive3 econ. [commercio, economia] to recover, to perk up4 (correggersi) to correct oneself. -
12 cof|nąć
pf — cof|ać impf (cofnęła, cofnęli — cofam) Ⅰ vt 1. (przesunąć do tyłu) to move back- cofnąć rękę to withdraw one’s hand- cofnąć samochód to reverse a. back up a car- cofnąć taśmę to rewind a tape- cofnij, nie wiedziałam ostatniej sceny rewind it a bit, I didn’t see the last scene- cofnąć zegarek to put one’s watch back- cofnąć zegarki to put back the clocks- cofnąć czas przen. to turn back the clock a. time2. (zawrócić) to turn back- cofnięto nas z granicy we were turned back at the border3. (odwołać) to reverse [decyzję]; to take back; to retract książk. [obietnicę]; to rescind, to cancel [rozkaz]; to lift [zakaz]; to withdraw [oskarżenie, zgodę, koncesję]; to withdraw, to cut off [stypendium, zasiłek, kredyt]- cofam to, co powiedziałem I take back what I said- tego, co się stało, nie można cofnąć what’s done cannot be undoneⅡ cofnąć się — cofać się 1. (przesunąć się w tył) to move back- cofnąć się o krok to take a step backwards- dziewczyna cofnęła się na jego widok the girl drew back when she saw him- cofnijcie się! stand a. get back!- wojska cofały się przed nieprzyjacielem the army fell back a. retreated before the enemy- samochód cofnął się the car reversed a. backed up- wzbierająca woda cofnęła się the flood waters have receded2. (osłabnąć) [choroba] to recede; [kryzys] to ease- objawy choroby cofnęły się po kilku dniach the symptoms abated after a few days- cofnijmy się w wyobraźni do XVII wieku let’s imagine that we’re back in the seventeenth century- cofnijmy się w narracji o kilka miesięcy let’s go back a couple of months in the narrative- cofnąć się myślą a. pamięcią do czegoś to think back to sth- moda cofnęła się do lat sześćdziesiątych fashions looked back a. went back to the sixties- cofać się w rozwoju to regress4. (powstrzymać się) to shrink; to refrain książk.- nie cofnął się nawet przed krzywoprzysięstwem he was even willing to commit perjury- nie cofać się przed niczym to stop at nothingThe New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > cof|nąć
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13 trække
drag, draw, in flight, migrate, pull, take, thread, tow, wheel, yank* * *vb (trak, trukket)( trække til sig, rykke) pull (i at, fx a rope, the door, his mother's skirt),( kraftigt) tug (i at, fx his sleeve);( med jævn bevægelse) draw ( fx a carriage drawn by four horses), pull( fx the chair away, socks on; the horse was pulling a cart),( langsomt, om noget tungt) haul ( fx a boat on shore),( med besvær: slæbe) drag ( fx a child away from a shop window),T lug;( bugsere) tow ( fx a barge);( dyr i reb) lead;( cykel) wheel;( trække frem) draw ( fx a knife, a gun, one's sword), pull ( fx a knife, a gun);( i automat) draw;( tiltrække, fx kunder) draw, attract;( indsuge) absorb;( tegne) draw;( føre snor, streg etc gennem noget) pass, run;( uden objekt) ( tiltrække publikum) draw, be a draw;(om fugle etc) migrate;( skorsten, cigar etc) draw;(te) draw,F infuse;( i fodbold) move;( om prostitueret) go on the street(s);(i skak etc) move;[ det trækker] there's a draught;[ med sb:][ trække vand](fx om sko) let in (el. soak up) water,(mar) leak;[ med præp & adv:][ trække af](dvs skyde) pull the trigger;[ trække frakken (, støvlerne etc) af] pull off one's coat (, boots, etc);[ trække an](fx møtrik) draw tight,( bremse) pull back;[ trække bort]( fjerne sig) go away, leave,( om fugle) depart, migrate,( om skyer, tåge etc) clear away;[ trække gardinet for] draw the curtain;( gardin) draw back,( fradrage) deduct ( fx 5 per cent from the salary),( subtrahere) subtract, take away;[ trække 2 fra 5] subtract (el. take) 2 from 5;[ trække frem] pull out, draw out,( fremhæve) call attention to, emphasize,[ trække i]( rykke i) pull at,( kraftigt) tug at,( iføre sig) put on, get into;[ trække en i håret] pull somebody's hair;(fig) climb down;[ det trak i hans ansigt] his face twitched;[ tropperne trak igennem byen] the troops marched through the town;[ trække en tråd igennem et nåleøje] pass a thread through the eye of a needle;[ trække ind] draw in, pull in,( om væske) soak in;[ katten trak kløerne ind] the cat retracted its claws;(se også hår);[ blive trukket med ind i noget] be drawn into something, be mixed up in something;[ trække en med sig i faldet] drag somebody down with one;(se også trækkes);[ trække ned] pull down, draw down;( i karakter) penalize ( fx I won't penalize him for that);(fig) drag somebody down;[ trække om] wander about;[ trække om med noget] carry (, drag) something about with one;[ trække op] draw up, pull up,( mekanisme) wind ( fx a watch),( flaske) uncork, open,( prop) draw,( i pris) overcharge ( fx the customers),T rip off;( med blæk) ink in;[ trække skuldrene op] hunch one's shoulders;(omtr) they are changing the guard;[ trække op af vandet] pull out of the water;[ trække op i bukserne] hitch up one's trousers;[ det trækker op til krig (, regn)] it looks like war (, rain);[ det trækker op til uvejr] a storm is gathering (el. brewing);[ trække over]( rive over) tear;( om konto) overdraw ( fx one's bank account by £10);( om uvejr, fare etc) blow over;[ trække en skrue over] strip (el. break) the thread of a screw;[ trække `på](fx strømper, støvler) pull on;[ trækker det på dig?] are you in a draft? is the draught bothering you?[ trække på én for et beløb] draw on somebody for an amount;[ trække på det ene ben] walk with a limp;[ trække perler på en snor] string beads (, pearls);(se også skulder, II. åre);[ trække sammen] draw together, gather,( forkorte) contract, condense;[ skyerne trækker sammen] the clouds are gathering; the sky is clouding over;( tiltrække) attract, draw,(lukke fx dør) pull to,( rykke kraftigt) pull hard,( stramme) tighten ( fx a screw, a knot),( om byld) come to a head;[ trække tilbage] draw (, pull) back ( fx one's chair; pull back troops),(mere F) withdraw ( fx one's hand, troops);(fig) withdraw ( fx an accusation, one's confession),F retract ( fx an accusation);[ trække ud] draw out,( med kraft) pull out ( fx a drawer, a tooth, a nail, hairs, asplinter),F extract;( forlænge) draw out, stretch,( få til at vare længe) draw out,T drag out ( fx the meeting, the debate), spin out ( fx theconversation, a speech, a story);( vare længe) make slow progress, take a long time,T drag on;[ trække tiden ud] draw out the time;[ prøve at trække tiden ud] play for time,F temporize,T drag one's feet;[ for at trække tiden ud] in order to gain time;[ det trækker ud med forhandlingerne] the negotiations are making slow progress;[ med sig:][ trække sig]( ved valg: opgive sin kandidatur) stand down;[ trække sig i lave], se I. lave;(mil.) fall back on ( fx a fortress); withdraw into;[ trække sig ind i sig selv] withdraw (, F: retire) into oneself;(se også I. skal);[ trække sig sammen] contract ( fx his muscles contracted);[ nettet trækker sig sammen om ham] the net is tightening round him;( bevæge sig tilbage) draw (el. fall) back ( fx the crowd drew (el.fell) back), withdraw,F recede ( fx the tide (, the floods) receded);( om enkeltperson) retire ( fx retire to one's room, retire for the night, retire from the world),( flygte) retreat ( fx to one's summer cottage to relax);(fra embede etc) resign ( fx he offered to resign),( gå på pension) retire ( fx from a post),( ved valg: opgive sin kandidatur) stand down;(mil.) fall back ( fx on a fortress),F retire ( fx to prepared positions),T pull out;( under pres) retreat ( fx force the enemy to retreat);[ trække sig ud] withdraw,T pull out,( fortryde) back out ( fx you can't back out now),T cop out;[ trække sig ud af] withdraw from ( fx political life; NATO); back out of( fx the scheme; an undertaking). -
14 отступать
1. break offуходить, отступать — haul off
отступать; выпускать — draw off
тормозить; отступать — back off
отстраняться, отступать — back off
отступал; выпускал; выпущенный — drawn off
2. beat a retreatотступать; отступить — beat a retreat
3. blench4. fell backотступать; отходить — drop back
поддерживать; отступать — back up
уклоняться от; отступать от — back out
5. give grounds6. stand backотходить, отступать — stand out
7. step back; retreat; fall back; recoil; recede; deviate; indent; renounce8. depart9. digress10. recede11. retreatСинонимический ряд:отходить (глаг.) отодвигаться; отходить; пятитьсяАнтонимический ряд: -
15 пушки начали стрелять, и войска откатились назад
Универсальный русско-английский словарь > пушки начали стрелять, и войска откатились назад
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16 пушки начали стрелять, и войска отступили
Универсальный русско-английский словарь > пушки начали стрелять, и войска отступили
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17 astucia
f.1 cunning (trampas).2 astuteness, cunning, canniness, cleverness.* * *1 astuteness, cunning, shrewdness2 (treta) trick, ruse* * *noun f.1) astuteness, shrewdness2) cunning, guile* * *SF1) (=sagacidad) astuteness, cleverness; (=maña) guile, cunningactuar con astucia — to act cunningly, be crafty
2)* * *a) ( cualidad - de sagaz) astuteness, shrewdness; (- de taimado) (pey) craftiness, cunningb) ( ardid) trick, ploy* * *= shrewdness, gamesmanship, cunning, artfulness, sagacity, finessing, finesse.Ex. If the incomplete question is difficult to detect at the initial stage, to recognise those instances where it may be the wrong question that is being asked requires almost a sixth sense, or at least an uncommon shrewdness.Ex. Must she become a master at the art of corporate gamesmanship?.Ex. The dictionary defines policy as 'any governing principle or course of action' and as 'political wisdom or cunning: diplomacy; prudence; artfulness'.Ex. The dictionary defines policy as 'any governing principle or course of action' and as 'political wisdom or cunning: diplomacy; prudence; artfulness'.Ex. In terms of accountability and political sagacity, cooperation is definitely to be valued in today's information age.Ex. He had expected more from his highly-strung dramatic finessing but the author rarely focused on personal influences or special affinities.Ex. Having failed apparently with her trump card, she fell back on finesse.----* con astucia = by cunning, astutely, slyly, shrewdly, cannily.* obrar con astucia = finesse.* * *a) ( cualidad - de sagaz) astuteness, shrewdness; (- de taimado) (pey) craftiness, cunningb) ( ardid) trick, ploy* * *= shrewdness, gamesmanship, cunning, artfulness, sagacity, finessing, finesse.Ex: If the incomplete question is difficult to detect at the initial stage, to recognise those instances where it may be the wrong question that is being asked requires almost a sixth sense, or at least an uncommon shrewdness.
Ex: Must she become a master at the art of corporate gamesmanship?.Ex: The dictionary defines policy as 'any governing principle or course of action' and as 'political wisdom or cunning: diplomacy; prudence; artfulness'.Ex: The dictionary defines policy as 'any governing principle or course of action' and as 'political wisdom or cunning: diplomacy; prudence; artfulness'.Ex: In terms of accountability and political sagacity, cooperation is definitely to be valued in today's information age.Ex: He had expected more from his highly-strung dramatic finessing but the author rarely focused on personal influences or special affinities.Ex: Having failed apparently with her trump card, she fell back on finesse.* con astucia = by cunning, astutely, slyly, shrewdly, cannily.* obrar con astucia = finesse.* * *la astucia del zorro the slyness of a fox2 (ardid) ruse, trick, ploy* * *
astucia sustantivo femenino
(— de ladino) (pey) craftiness, cunning;
astucia sustantivo femenino shrewdness
(triquiñuela) ruse
' astucia' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
habilidad
- picardía
English:
cunning
- deviousness
- guile
- outsmart
- ruse
* * *astucia nf1. [del ladino, tramposo] cunning2. [del sagaz, listo] astuteness;con astucia astutely3. [trampa] ruse;eso fue una astucia para no pagar that was just a ruse to get out of paying* * *f shrewdness, astuteness* * *astucia nf1) : astuteness, shrewdness2) : cunning, guile* * *astucia n1. (habilidad) shrewdness2. (malicia) cunning3. (treta) trick -
18 baza
f.1 trick.no pude meter baza (en la conversación) I couldn't get a word in edgewayssiempre trata de meter baza (en la conversación) she's always trying to butt in2 advantage.la gran baza del producto es su reducido precio the product's great advantage is its low priceel delantero ruso es la gran baza del equipo the Russian forward is the team's main weapon3 trump card.* * *1 (naipes) trick2 (ventaja) asset, advantage3 (ocasión) chance\meter baza figurado to butt in, stick one's oar inno poder meter baza not to be able to get a word in edgeways* * *SF1) (Naipes) trick•
hacer una baza — to make o win a trick2) [en asunto, negocio] (=recurso) weapon; (=oportunidad) chance•
jugar una baza, si juega bien su baza, conseguirá el trabajo — if he plays his cards right, he'll get the jobAlemania juega una baza muy firme para el Mundial — Germany has a good chance of winning the World Cup
le encanta meter baza aunque no tenga ni idea del tema — she loves butting in even though she has no idea about the subject
cuando habla no deja meter baza a nadie — when he's speaking he doesn't let anybody get a word in edgeways
es de los que siempre sacan baza de todo — he's one of those people who always turns everything to their own advantage
* * *1) ( en naipes) trickhacer or ganar una baza — to win a trick
meter baza — (fam) to butt in (colloq)
Pedro nunca deja meter baza a nadie — Pedro never lets anybody get a word in edgewise (AmE) o (BrE) edgeways
2) (recurso, arma)* * *= trump card, bargaining chip.Ex. Having failed apparently with her trump card, she fell back on finesse.Ex. The only ones 'using' the war dead as a political bargaining chip are the Republicans who have fought to keep the images of these fallen heroes in the dark.----* jugar bien + Posesivo + baza = play + Posesivo + cards right.* * *1) ( en naipes) trickhacer or ganar una baza — to win a trick
meter baza — (fam) to butt in (colloq)
Pedro nunca deja meter baza a nadie — Pedro never lets anybody get a word in edgewise (AmE) o (BrE) edgeways
2) (recurso, arma)* * *= trump card, bargaining chip.Ex: Having failed apparently with her trump card, she fell back on finesse.
Ex: The only ones 'using' the war dead as a political bargaining chip are the Republicans who have fought to keep the images of these fallen heroes in the dark.* jugar bien + Posesivo + baza = play + Posesivo + cards right.* * *A (en naipes) trickhacer or ganar una baza to win a trickB1(recurso, arma): mi experiencia es la baza fundamental que puedo aportar a la empresa my experience is the most important thing I can bring to the companyparece la mejor baza del equipo colombiano he could prove to be the Colombian team's trump card, he seems to be the great hope of the Colombian teamjugaron su última baza they played their last card, they used their ultimate weapontomó la determinación de jugar la baza decisiva she decided to play her trump card2 (logro, adelanto) achievementsu gran baza ha sido la conquista del mercado escandinavo their greatest achievement o success has been their conquest of the Scandinavian marketesto constituyó la primera baza victoriosa de los rebeldes this represented the first taste of victory o first moment of triumph for the rebels3(oportunidad): esta carrera será la última baza para Romero this race will be Romero's last chance* * *
baza sustantivo femenino trick
♦ Locuciones: familiar meter baza, to butt in
' baza' also found in these entries:
English:
trick
- trump
- asset
* * *baza nf1. [en naipes] trick;hacer una baza to make a trick;jugar una baza: jugó bien sus bazas she played her cards right;están jugando su última baza they're playing their last card;Fammeter baza: no pude meter baza (en la conversación) I couldn't get a word in edgeways;siempre trata de meter baza (en la conversación) she's always trying to butt in;intentan meter baza en la gestión de la empresa they are trying to elbow in on the management of the company2. [ventaja] advantage;la gran baza del producto es su reducido precio the product's great advantage is its low price;presentaron como baza electoral la educación they played the education card in the election;el delantero ruso es la gran baza del equipo the Russian forward is the team's main weapon* * *f1 en naipes trick; figtrump card;jugar sus bazas fig play one’s cards right2:meter baza fam interfere;no dejar a alguien meter baza fam not let s.o. get a word in edgewise* * *baza nf1) : trick (in card games)2)meter baza en : to butt in on -
19 diplomacia
f.1 diplomacy (tacto).2 diplomatic service (carrera).* * *1 diplomacy* * *noun f.* * *SF diplomacy* * *2) ( tacto) diplomacy, tactdíselo con diplomacia — be tactful o diplomatic
* * *= diplomacy, finesse, finessing.Ex. It often requires careful diplomacy by acquisitions librarians to balance sharp faculty interests.Ex. Having failed apparently with her trump card, she fell back on finesse.Ex. He had expected more from his highly-strung dramatic finessing but the author rarely focused on personal influences or special affinities.----* con diplomacia = diplomatically.* hablar con diplomacia = say + the right thing.* * *2) ( tacto) diplomacy, tactdíselo con diplomacia — be tactful o diplomatic
* * *= diplomacy, finesse, finessing.Ex: It often requires careful diplomacy by acquisitions librarians to balance sharp faculty interests.
Ex: Having failed apparently with her trump card, she fell back on finesse.Ex: He had expected more from his highly-strung dramatic finessing but the author rarely focused on personal influences or special affinities.* con diplomacia = diplomatically.* hablar con diplomacia = say + the right thing.* * *A ( Pol)1 (carrera) diplomacy2 (cuerpo) diplomatic corpsB (tacto) diplomacy, tactdíselo con diplomacia be diplomaticdiplomacia de cañonera(s) gunboat diplomacy* * *
diplomacia sustantivo femenino
1 (Pol) ( carrera) diplomacy;
( cuerpo) diplomatic corps
2 ( tacto) diplomacy, tact
diplomacia sustantivo femenino diplomacy: creo que sería mejor actuar con diplomacia, we had better proceed tactfully
' diplomacia' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
maestra
- maestro
English:
diplomacy
- finesse
- savoir-faire
* * *diplomacia nf1. [disciplina, carrera] diplomacy2. [cuerpo diplomático] diplomatic service;la diplomacia española en Bruselas Spanish diplomats in Brussels3. [tacto] diplomacy;le informó de la decisión con mucha diplomacia she told him about the decision very tactfullyla diplomacia de los cañones gunboat diplomacy* * *f diplomacy* * *diplomacia nf: diplomacy -
20 fineza
f.1 (fine) quality.2 courtesy.3 finesse, refinement.4 good quality, fineness.5 courteous act, fine gesture, nice thing to say, thoughtful attention.* * *1 delicacy, daintiness2 (cumplido) courtesy, compliment* * *SF1) (=cualidad) fineness, excellence2) [de modales] refinement; (=elegancia) elegance3) (=acto) kindness; (=dádiva) small gift, token4) (=cumplido) compliment* * *a) ( refinamiento) refinementb) ( cortesía) politeness, courtesy* * *= finesse.Ex. Having failed apparently with her trump card, she fell back on finesse.----* actuar con fineza = finesse.* * *a) ( refinamiento) refinementb) ( cortesía) politeness, courtesy* * *= finesse.Ex: Having failed apparently with her trump card, she fell back on finesse.
* actuar con fineza = finesse.* * *1 (refinamiento) refinementla fineza de sus modales her refined manners2 (cortesía) politeness, courtesy* * *fineza nfuna pieza hecha con mucha fineza a very finely crafted piece2. [cortesía] courtesy;siempre va diciendo finezas a las mujeres he is always paying compliments to the ladies* * *f1 cualidad fineness;un jarrón de una fineza excepcional an exceptionally fine vase2 dicho compliment* * *fineza nffinura, refinamiento: refinement
См. также в других словарях:
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