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101 business ***** busi·ness
['bɪznɪs]1. n1) (commerce, trading) affari mplshe means business — fa sul serio, non scherza
2) (firm) impresa, azienda3) (task, duty, concern, matter) affare mthat's none of your business — non sono affari tuoi, non ti riguarda
that's my business — (è) affar mio, (sono) affari miei
it's his business to see that... — spetta a lui accertarsi che...
mind your own business — bada ai fatti tuoi, non t'impicciare
4) (fam: affair, matter) storia, faccendait's a nasty business — è una brutta faccenda, è un brutto affare
2. adj(deal, quarter, relationship) d'affari, (studies) commercialeSee: -
102 straight ****
[streɪt]to be (all) straight — (tidy) essere a posto, essere sistemato (-a), (clarified) essere chiaro (-a)
to put straight — (picture) raddrizzare, (hat, tie) aggiustare, (house, room, accounts) mettere in ordine
to put things or matters straight — chiarire le cose
I couldn't keep a straight face; I couldn't keep my face straight — non riuscivo a stare serio
2) (continuous, direct) diritto (-a)straight speaking; straight talking — franchezza
4) (plain, uncomplicated) semplice, (drink) liscio (-a), (Theatre: part, play) serio (-a), (person: conventional) normale, (heterosexual) etero inv2. adv1) (in a straight line: gen) drittoto go straight up/down — andare dritto su/giù
to go straight fig — rigare dritto
2) (directly, without diversion) direttamente, diritto3) (immediately) subito, immediatamentestraight away; straight off — subito
4) (frankly) chiaramente, francamente3. n(on racecourse) dirittura d'arrivo, Rail rettilineo -
103 swing ***
[swɪŋ] swung vb: pt, pp1. n1) (of pendulum, needle) oscillazione f, (distance) arco2) (seat for swinging) altalenait's swings and roundabouts fig — che ci vuoi fare, le cose a volte vanno bene, a volte vanno male
3)(
Pol: in attitudes, opinions, support) there was a swing towards/away from Labour — c'è stato un aumento/una diminuzione di voti per i Laburisti4) Boxing, Golf swing m inv5) (rhythm) ritmo6) (also: swing music) swing m7)2. vt1) (pendulum) far oscillare, (person on swing, in hammock) dondolare, spingere, (arms, legs) dondolare, ciondolare2) (wield: axe, sword) brandire, roteare3) (influence: opinion, decision) influenzareshe managed to swing it so that we could all go fam — è riuscita a fare in modo che ci potessimo andare tutti
what swung it for me was... — ciò che mi ha fatto decidere è stato...
3. vidondolare, oscillare, (on swing, hammock) dondolarsi, (arms, legs) ciondolareto swing to the right fig Pol — svoltare a destra
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104 discourage
[dɪ'skʌrɪdʒ]1) (dishearten) scoraggiare2) (deter) scoraggiare, dissuadere* * *1) (to take away the confidence, hope etc of: His lack of success discouraged him.) scoraggiare2) (to try to prevent (by showing disapproval etc): She discouraged all his attempts to get to know her.) scoraggiare3) ((with from) to persuade against: The rain discouraged him from going camping.) scoraggiare, dissuadere•* * *[dɪ'skʌrɪdʒ]1) (dishearten) scoraggiare2) (deter) scoraggiare, dissuadere
См. также в других словарях:
get away with — (something) to avoid blame, punishment, or criticism for doing something bad. She cheated on the test and thought she could get away with it … New idioms dictionary
get away with — ► get away with escape blame or punishment for. Main Entry: ↑get … English terms dictionary
get away with — phrasal verb [transitive] Word forms get away with : present tense I/you/we/they get away with he/she/it gets away with present participle getting away with past tense got away with past participle got away with 1) get away with something to… … English dictionary
get away with — PHRASAL VERB If you get away with doing something wrong or risky, you do not suffer any punishment or other bad consequences because of it. [V P P n/ ing] The criminals know how to play the system and get away with it... [V P P n/ ing] This is… … English dictionary
get away with — phr verb Get away with is used with these nouns as the subject: ↑robber, ↑thief Get away with is used with these nouns as the object: ↑haul, ↑murder … Collocations dictionary
get away with — verb a) To do something which is prohibited, forbidden or generally not allowed, and not be punished for the action Do you think we could get away with taking Dad’s car? b) To avoid doing something, or to avoid the consequences of not doing… … Wiktionary
get away with — ESCAPE BLAME FOR, escape punishment for. → get * * * escape blame, punishment, or undesirable consequences for (an act that is wrong or mistaken) you ll never get away with this … Useful english dictionary
get away with murder — {v. phr.}, {informal} To do something very bad without being caught or punished. * /John is scolded if he is late with his homework, but Robert gets away with murder./ * /Mrs. Smith lets her children get away with murder./ … Dictionary of American idioms
get away with murder — {v. phr.}, {informal} To do something very bad without being caught or punished. * /John is scolded if he is late with his homework, but Robert gets away with murder./ * /Mrs. Smith lets her children get away with murder./ … Dictionary of American idioms
get away with murder — To do as one pleases yet escape punishment or censure • • • Main Entry: ↑murder * * * get away with murder informal phrase to do whatever you want without being stopped or punished They get away with murder in that job. Thesaurus: to escape or… … Useful english dictionary
get away with murder — If you get away with murder, you do something bad and don t get caught or punished.( Get away with blue murder is also used.) … The small dictionary of idiomes