-
1 surrender
sə'rendə
1. verb1) (to yield: The general refused to surrender to the enemy; We shall never surrender!) rendirse2) (to give up or abandon: He surrendered his claim to the throne; You must surrender your old passport when applying for a new one.) renunciar (a); devolver
2. noun((an) act of surrendering: The garrison was forced into surrender.) rendiciónsurrender vb rendirsetr[sə'rendəSMALLr/SMALL]1 (capitulation) rendición nombre femenino; (submission) sumisión nombre femenino, claudicación nombre femenino2 (giving up - of arms) entrega; (- of rights) renuncia1 SMALLMILITARY/SMALL (weapons, town) rendir, entregar1 rendirse, entregarse\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto surrender oneself to something dejarse vencer por algosurrender [sə'rɛndər] vt1) : entregar, rendir2)to surrender oneself : entregarsesurrender vi: rendirse: rendición m (de una ciudad, etc.), entrega f (de posesiones)n.• entrega s.f.• rendición s.f.• renuncia s.f.• sujeción s.f.v.• ceder v.• entregar v.• rendir v.• rendirse v.• renunciar a v.
I
1. sə'rendər, sə'rendə(r)a) ( Mil) \<\<arms/town\>\> rendir*, entregar*b) ( hand over) (frml) \<\<document/ticket\>\> entregar*c) ( relinquish) \<\<right/claim\>\> renunciar a
2.
vi \<\<soldier/army\>\> rendirse*to surrender TO somebody — entregarse* a alguien
3.
v reflto surrender oneself TO something — \<\<to indulgence/idleness\>\> dejarse vencer por algo
II
a) u c ( capitulation) rendición f, capitulación fb) ( submission) (no pl) claudicación fc) (frml) (no pl) (handing over - of passport, document) entrega f; (- of rights) renuncia f[sǝ'rendǝ(r)]1. N1) (=capitulation) (Mil) rendición f ; (fig) claudicación fno surrender! — ¡no nos rendimos nunca!
2) (=handover) [of weapons] entrega f3) (Jur) [of lease, property] cesión f4) (Insurance) [of policy] rescate m (previo al vencimiento)2.VI (Mil) rendirseI surrender! — ¡me rindo!
to surrender to despair — abandonarse or entregarse a la desesperación
3. VT1) (Mil) [+ weapons] rendir, entregar; [+ territory, city] entregarto surrender o.s. — (Mil) rendirse; (to police) entregarse
to surrender o.s. to despair — abandonarse or entregarse a la desesperación
I surrendered myself to his charms — me rendí a or ante sus encantos
2) (=renounce, give up) [+ claim, right] renunciar a; [+ lease, ownership] ceder; liter [+ hope] abandonar4) (=redeem) [+ insurance policy] rescatar (antes del vencimiento)4.CPDsurrender value N — valor m de rescate
* * *
I
1. [sə'rendər, sə'rendə(r)]a) ( Mil) \<\<arms/town\>\> rendir*, entregar*b) ( hand over) (frml) \<\<document/ticket\>\> entregar*c) ( relinquish) \<\<right/claim\>\> renunciar a
2.
vi \<\<soldier/army\>\> rendirse*to surrender TO somebody — entregarse* a alguien
3.
v reflto surrender oneself TO something — \<\<to indulgence/idleness\>\> dejarse vencer por algo
II
a) u c ( capitulation) rendición f, capitulación fb) ( submission) (no pl) claudicación fc) (frml) (no pl) (handing over - of passport, document) entrega f; (- of rights) renuncia f -
2 deliver
di'livə1) (to give or hand over (something) to the person for whom it is intended: The postman delivers letters.) entregar, dar, repartir2) (to give: He delivered a long speech.) pronunciar3) (to assist (a woman) at the birth of (a child): The doctor delivered the twins safely.) asistir en el parto de, atender en el parto de•- deliverydeliver vb1. repartir / entregar2. asistir a un parto / atender en el partotr[dɪ'lɪvəSMALLr/SMALL]1 (take, give, hand over - goods etc) entregar; (- message) dar, entregar; (distribute) repartir (a domicilio)2 (hit, kick, push) dar; (blow, punch) propinar, atestar; (shot, fast ball) lanzar3 (say - speech, sermon, verdict) pronunciar; (lecture, sermon, ultimatum) dar; (warning) hacer; (judgement) dictar, pronunciar, emitir4 (produce, provide, fulfil) cumplir5 SMALLMEDICINE/SMALL (baby) asistir en el parto de, atender en el parto de6 formal use (free, save) liberar1 (goods, groceries, etc) hacer repartos a domicilio2 (fulfil promise etc) cumplirdeliver [di'lɪvər] vt1) free: liberar, librar2) distribute, hand: entregar, repartir3) : asistir en el parto de (un niño)4) : pronunciarto deliver a speech: pronunciar un discurso5) project: despachar, lanzarhe delivered a fast ball: lanzó un pelota rápida6) deal: propinar, asestarto deliver a blow: asestar un golpeexpr.• alumbrar v.• dar a luz expr.• dar nacimiento a expr.• parir v.v.• comunicar v.• dar v.(§pres: doy, das...) subj: dé-pret: di-•)• distribuir v.• entregar v.• partear v.dɪ'lɪvər, dɪ'lɪvə(r)
1.
1)b) ( distribute) repartir ( a domicilio)2) ( save) (liter) librar3)a) ( administer) \<\<blow/punch\>\> propinar, asestarb) ( issue) \<\<ultimatum/lecture/sermon\>\> dar*; \<\<warning\>\> hacer*; \<\<speech\>\> pronunciar; \<\<judgment\>\> dictar, pronunciar, emitirc) (produce, provide)he promised much, but delivered little — cumplió muy poco de lo mucho que había prometido
d) ( Sport) \<\<ball\>\> lanzar*e) ( in elections) (AmE) \<\<state\>\> ganar4) ( Med)
2.
vi1) ( Busn)2) ( produce the necessary) (colloq) cumplir[dɪ'lɪvǝ(r)]1. VT1) (=hand over) [+ goods] entregar (to a); [+ mail] repartir; [+ message] llevar, comunicarhe delivered me home safely — me acompañó hasta casa, me dejó en casa
he delivered the goods * — (fig) cumplió or hizo lo que se esperaba de él
3) (=give) [+ speech, verdict] pronunciar; [+ lecture] dar4) (=throw) [+ blow, punch] asestar, dar; [+ ball, missile] lanzar5) (=surrender, hand over) (also: deliver up, deliver over) entregar (to a)to deliver a town (up or over) into the hands of the enemy — entregar una ciudad al enemigo
to deliver o.s. up — entregarse (to a)
6) (Med) [+ baby] asistir en el parto deshe was delivered of a child — † frm dio a luz (a) un niño
7)to deliver o.s. of — frm [+ speech] pronunciar; [+ opinion] expresar; [+ remark] hacer (con solemnidad)
2. VI1) (Comm)2) * cumplir lo prometidothe match promised great things but didn't deliver — el partido prometía mucho, pero no estuvo a la altura de lo que se esperaba
* * *[dɪ'lɪvər, dɪ'lɪvə(r)]
1.
1)b) ( distribute) repartir ( a domicilio)2) ( save) (liter) librar3)a) ( administer) \<\<blow/punch\>\> propinar, asestarb) ( issue) \<\<ultimatum/lecture/sermon\>\> dar*; \<\<warning\>\> hacer*; \<\<speech\>\> pronunciar; \<\<judgment\>\> dictar, pronunciar, emitirc) (produce, provide)he promised much, but delivered little — cumplió muy poco de lo mucho que había prometido
d) ( Sport) \<\<ball\>\> lanzar*e) ( in elections) (AmE) \<\<state\>\> ganar4) ( Med)
2.
vi1) ( Busn)2) ( produce the necessary) (colloq) cumplir
См. также в других словарях:
Surrender of Japan — The surrender of Japan in August 1945 brought World War II to a close. On August 10, 1945, after the invasion of Manchuria by the Soviet Union and the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Japan s leaders at the Imperial conference (… … Wikipedia
surrender — sur|ren|der1 [səˈrendə US ər] v [Date: 1400 1500; : Old French; Origin: surrendre, from sur ( SURCHARGE) + rendre to give back, yield ] 1.) [I and T] to say officially that you want to stop fighting or to stop avoiding the police, government etc… … Dictionary of contemporary English
surrender — sur|ren|der1 [ sə rendər ] verb * 1. ) intransitive to say officially that you have been defeated and will stop fighting: Rebel forces have surrendered after three years of fighting. surrender to: The gang leaders finally surrendered to the… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
surrender — I UK [səˈrendə(r)] / US [səˈrendər] verb Word forms surrender : present tense I/you/we/they surrender he/she/it surrenders present participle surrendering past tense surrendered past participle surrendered * 1) a) [intransitive] to say officially … English dictionary
surrender — [[t]səre̱ndə(r)[/t]] ♦♦♦ surrenders, surrendering, surrendered 1) VERB If you surrender, you stop fighting or resisting someone and agree that you have been beaten. General Martin Bonnet called on the rebels to surrender... [V to n] We ll never… … English dictionary
surrender — 1 verb 1 (I) to say officially that you want to stop fighting because you realize that you cannot win: The terrorists were given ten minutes to surrender. | surrender to sb: The unit was forced to surrender to the enemy. 2 surrender to sth to… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
surrender of charter — The dissolution or termination of the existence of a corporation by a formal act on the part of the corporation in yielding its charter to the sovereignty under which the corporation was created and the acceptance of the same by the government.… … Ballentine's law dictionary
surrender to something — surˈrender to sth | surˈrender yourself to sth derived (formal) to stop trying to prevent yourself from having a feeling, habit, etc. and allow it to control what you do • He finally surrendered to his craving for drugs. • She surrendered herself … Useful english dictionary
surrender yourself to something — surˈrender to sth | surˈrender yourself to sth derived (formal) to stop trying to prevent yourself from having a feeling, habit, etc. and allow it to control what you do • He finally surrendered to his craving for drugs. • She surrendered herself … Useful english dictionary
Japanese Instrument of Surrender — The Japanese Instrument of Surrender was the written agreement that established the armistice ending the Pacific War and with it World War II. It was signed by representatives from the Empire of Japan, the United States of America, the Republic… … Wikipedia
Instrument of Surrender (1971) — The Instrument of Surrender was signed at Ramna Race Course in Dhaka at 16.31 IST on December 16, 1971, by Lieutenant General Jagjit Singh Aurora, General Officer Commanding in chief of Eastern Command of the Indian Army and Lieutenant General A … Wikipedia