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1 folly
['fɒlɪ]1) (madness, foolish act) follia f., pazzia f.2) arch. = costruzione stravagante* * *['foli]plural - follies; noun(foolishness: the follies of youth.) follia* * *folly /ˈfɒlɪ/n.1 [uc] follia; pazzia; assurdità; sconsideratezza; idiozia: He realized the folly of it all, si rese conto dell'assurdità della cosa; It was (an act of) sheer folly, è stata una vera pazzia; youthful follies, follie di gioventù3 (al pl.) (teatr.) rivista con ballerine e attrici affascinanti.* * *['fɒlɪ]1) (madness, foolish act) follia f., pazzia f.2) arch. = costruzione stravagante -
2 folly fol·ly n
['fɒlɪ]follia, pazzia -
3 stupendous
[stjuː'pendəs] [AE stuː-]aggettivo [idea, film, building, view] stupendo, meraviglioso; [ size] enorme; [loss, folly] incredibile, immenso* * *[stju'pendəs](astonishing or tremendous.) stupendo; enorme* * *stupendous /stju:ˈpɛndəs/, ( USA) /stu:ˈpɛndəs/a.1 stupefacente; sorprendente; enorme; immenso: stupendous costs, costi enormi; stupendous efforts, sforzi tremendistupendously avv. stupendousness n. [u]* * *[stjuː'pendəs] [AE stuː-] -
4 egregious
egregious /ɪˈgri:dʒəs/a.(spreg.) enorme; madornale; che passa il segno: an egregious blunder, un errore madornale; egregious folly, follia che passa il segnoegregiously avv. egregiousness n. [u] FALSI AMICI: egregious non significa egregio. -
5 sheer
I 1. [ʃɪə(r)]1) (pure) [boredom, hypocrisy, stupidity] puro2) (utter)2.avverbio [rise, fall] a piccoII [ʃɪə(r)]verbo intransitivo virare, invertire la rotta (anche fig.)* * *I 1. [ʃiə] adjective1) (absolute: Her singing was a sheer delight; It all happened by sheer chance.)2) (very steep: a sheer drop to the sea.)3) ((of cloth) very thin: sheer silk.)2. adverb(verticaly: The land rises sheer out of the sea.)II [ʃiə]* * *I [ʃɪə(r)]the sheer impossibility of... — l'assoluta impossibilità di...
by sheer chance; by a sheer accident — per puro caso or pura combinazione
2) (transparent) trasparente3) (precipitous) a picco2. adva picco, a perpendicoloII [ʃɪə(r)] vi* * *sheer (1) /ʃɪə(r)/A a.1 allo stato puro; puro e semplice; vero e proprio; bell'e buono; mero (lett.): sheer selfishness, egoismo puro e semplice; It's sheer folly, è una vera follia; sheer nonsense, una sciocchezza bell'e buona; I made it by sheer luck, ce l'ho fatta proprio per un pelo (o solo per fortuna); sheer impossibility, assoluta impossibilità2 perpendicolare; a picco: a sheer cliff, una scogliera a picco; una falesia; a sheer drop, uno strapiombo; a sheer rock face, una parete a strapiombo3 ( di tessuto o capo di vestiario) sottile; diafano; trasparente: sheer stockings, calze da donna sottilissimeB avv.1 completamente; affatto2 propriosheer (2) /ʃɪə(r)/n.6 (pl.) ► sheerlegs.sheer (3) /ʃɪə(r)/n. [u](to) sheer /ʃɪə(r)/A v. i.1 (naut.) cambiare rotta; invertire la rotta; virare2 (naut.) straorzare; abbattersi: The ship suddenly sheered towards the sandbank, all'improvviso la nave si abbatté al traverso della seccaB v. t.3 ( per estens.) guidare, portare ( un veicolo): I sheered my car around the larger potholes, ho guidato (la macchina) in modo da scansare le buche più grandi● to sheer away (o to sheer off), (naut.) allontanarsi, scostarsi, largare; (fig.) girare alla larga, svicolare ( anche fig.): The boat sheered off to avoid a collision, il battello si è scostato per evitare una collisione; He sheered off so as not to meet me, girò alla larga per non incontrarmi □ to sheer off from sb. [a subject], evitare, scansare q. [un argomento].* * *I 1. [ʃɪə(r)]1) (pure) [boredom, hypocrisy, stupidity] puro2) (utter)2.avverbio [rise, fall] a piccoII [ʃɪə(r)]verbo intransitivo virare, invertire la rotta (anche fig.) -
6 act *****
[ækt]1. vi1) (take action) agire2)(function: thing, person)
to act as — fungere da, fare da, (drug) agireacting in my capacity as chairman, I... — in qualità di presidente, io...
to act for sb — agire in nome or per conto di qn
3) (behave) comportarsito act like a fool — fare lo (-a) stupido (-a), comportarsi come uno (-a) stupido (-a)
4) Theatre Cine recitarehe's only acting — sta solo facendo finta or recitando
2. vtto act the fool fig — fare lo (-a) stupido (-a) or il (la)cretino (-a)
3. n1) (deed) attoan act of folly — una pazzia, una follia
to catch sb in the act — cogliere qn in flagrante or sul fatto
2) (also: act of Parliament) legge f3) (Theatre: of play) atto, (in circus, music-hall) numero, (fig: pretence) scena, messinscenait's only an act — è tutta scena, è solo una messinscena
•- act on- act out- act up -
7 follies
plural; see folly -
8 height
[haɪt] 1.1) (tallness) altezza f.; (of person) altezza f., statura f.to be 1 metre 65 cm in height — [ person] essere alto un metro e 65 cm; [ object] misurare un metro e 65 cm in altezza
2) (distance from the ground) (of mountain, plane) altitudine f., quota f.to gain, lose height — prendere, perdere quota
at a height of 2,000 metres — a una altitudine di 2.000 metri
3) fig. (peak)at the height of the season — nel pieno o al culmine della stagione
at the height of the storm, crisis — al culmine della tempesta, della crisi
to be at the height of one's success, popularity — essere al vertice del successo, della popolarità
4) (utmost)2.the height of — il colmo di [stupidity, cheek]; il massimo di [ luxury]
nome plurale heights (high place) altezze f.to rise to great heights — fig. raggiungere alti livelli, arrivare in alto
* * *[hæit]1) (the distance from the bottom to the top of something: What is the height of this building?; He is 1.75 metres in height.) altezza2) (the highest, greatest, strongest etc point: He is at the height of his career; The storm was at its height.) apice, culmine3) (the peak or extreme: dressed in the height of fashion; His actions were the height of folly.) sommo, culmine4) (a high place: We looked down from the heights at the valley beneath us.) cima, vetta, altura•- heighten* * *[haɪt] 1.1) (tallness) altezza f.; (of person) altezza f., statura f.to be 1 metre 65 cm in height — [ person] essere alto un metro e 65 cm; [ object] misurare un metro e 65 cm in altezza
2) (distance from the ground) (of mountain, plane) altitudine f., quota f.to gain, lose height — prendere, perdere quota
at a height of 2,000 metres — a una altitudine di 2.000 metri
3) fig. (peak)at the height of the season — nel pieno o al culmine della stagione
at the height of the storm, crisis — al culmine della tempesta, della crisi
to be at the height of one's success, popularity — essere al vertice del successo, della popolarità
4) (utmost)2.the height of — il colmo di [stupidity, cheek]; il massimo di [ luxury]
nome plurale heights (high place) altezze f.to rise to great heights — fig. raggiungere alti livelli, arrivare in alto
См. также в других словарях:
Folly — ist der Name von Anne Laure Folly Filmemacherin Geografisches Folly Island Inseln Folly Beach Stadt in den USA Le Folly Berg in Frankreich Filmtitel Dead Man s Folly Mit Folly wird auch eine Gartenstaffage bezeichnet, siehe Folly (Gartenkunst) … Deutsch Wikipedia
Folly — Fol ly, n.; pl. {Follies}. [OE. folie, foli, F. folie, fr. fol, fou, foolish, mad. See {Fool}.] 1. The state of being foolish; want of good sense; levity, weakness, or derangement of mind. [1913 Webster] 2. A foolish act; an inconsiderate or… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
folly — (n.) early 13c., mental weakness; unwise conduct (in M.E. including wickedness, lwedness, madness), from O.Fr. folie (12c.) folly, madness, stupidity, from fol (see FOOL (Cf. fool)). Sense of costly structure considered to have shown folly in the … Etymology dictionary
folly — index abortion (fiasco), inexpedience, lunacy Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
folly — [n] nonsense, ridiculous idea absurdity, craziness, daftness, dottiness, dumb thing to do*, dumb trick*, fatuity, foolishness, idiocy, imbecility, impracticality, imprudence, inadvisability, inanity, indiscretion, irrationality, lunacy, madness,… … New thesaurus
folly — ► NOUN (pl. follies) 1) foolishness. 2) a foolish act or idea. 3) an ornamental building with no practical purpose, especially a tower or mock Gothic ruin. ORIGIN Old French folie madness … English terms dictionary
folly — [fäl′ē] n. pl. follies [ME folie < OFr < fol: see FOOL1] 1. a lack of understanding, sense, or rational conduct; foolishness 2. any foolish action or belief 3. any foolish and useless but expensive undertaking 4 … English World dictionary
Folly — In architecture, a folly is a building constructed strictly as a decoration, having none of the usual purposes of housing or sheltering associated with a conventional structure. They originated as decorative accents in parks and estates. Folly is … Wikipedia
folly — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ pure, sheer ▪ ultimate ▪ youthful ▪ human ▪ economic, political … Collocations dictionary
folly — UK [ˈfɒlɪ] / US [ˈfɑlɪ] noun Word forms folly : singular folly plural follies 1) [countable/uncountable] formal a way of thinking or behaving that is stupid and careless, and likely to have bad results The judge described the incident as an act… … English dictionary
folly — fol|ly [ fali ] noun 1. ) count or uncount a way of thinking or behaving that is stupid and careless, and likely to have bad results: The judge described the incident as an act of folly. it is folly to do something: It is absolute folly to go… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English