-
1 أعطى (الدواء)
أَعْطَى (الدَّواء) \ administer: to control, (esp. business or money affairs). give: give (medicine, punishment, a warning, etc.). give: hand (sth.) to sb. for any purpose: She gave me a tin to open for her, to cause sb. to have (sth.); provide: What gave you that idea? Who gave you that cut on your face? Sheep give us wool, (with a noun that can also be a verb) to make: He gave me his promise (or He promised). grant: to allow (esp. officially); give (sth. asked for or needed): I was granted permission to leave the class. hand sth. over: to pass sth. to sb. else’s control: He handed over the farm to his son. \ أَعْطَى (مثلاً يُحْتذى) \ set: to arrange; provide: Our teacher set us an exam. Parents should set an example to their children. \ See Also قدم (قَدَّم) \ أَعْطَى (سَلَّمَ باليد) \ give in: to hand sth. over; give sth. to the proper person: Give in your books at the end of the lesson. \ أَعْطَى (حَقّ) \ do justice to: to be fair to: To do him justice, I must add that he tried to stop the fight. \ أَعْطَى تَعْليمات \ instruct: to order: The soldiers were instructed not to fire. \ أَعْطَى رُخصة \ license: to permit officially; give a licence to: In Britain, a shop must be licensed to sell alcoholic drink. Is your car licensed?. \ See Also رخص (رَخَّصَ) \ أَعْطَى سعرًا \ quote: (in business) to state a price: The Shop quoted $3 a metre for that kind of cloth (They said that they could supply it for that price). \ أَعْطَى نَكْهَة لِـ \ flavour, flavor: to give (sth.) a special taste: The cake was flavoured with orange.
См. также в других словарях:
licence — li|cence W2S3 BrE license AmE [ˈlaısəns] n ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(document)¦ 2¦(agreement)¦ 3¦(freedom)¦ 4 artistic/poetic licence 5¦(excuse)¦ 6 licence to print money ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1.) ¦(DO … Dictionary of contemporary English
grant — The issuance of an award under a stock plan, such as a stock option or shares of restricted stock. Bloomberg Financial Dictionary * * * ▪ I. grant grant 1 [grɑːnt ǁ grænt] noun [countable] FINANCE a sum of money given to a person or organization… … Financial and business terms
licence — A licence is an agreement that allows the licensee to do an act which would otherwise be the exclusive right of the licensor. Licensing out is commonly engaged in by companies without the resources fully to commercialise their Intellectual… … Law dictionary
Licence to kill (concept) — Licence to kill has at least two known meanings. It can be defined as an official sanction by a government or government agency to a particular operative or employee to initiate the use of deadly force, presumably in furtherance of the government … Wikipedia
licence — A paper or electronic document issued by the competent authority, authorizing and requiring the import or export of the goods specified and/or imposing other special requirements as necessary. HM Customs & Revenue Glossary * * * licence li‧cence… … Financial and business terms
licence — (BrE) (AmE license) noun ADJECTIVE ▪ valid ▪ full ▪ special ▪ compulsory (esp. AmE) ▪ driver s (AmE … Collocations dictionary
grant — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun ADJECTIVE ▪ large, substantial ▪ small ▪ full (esp. BrE) ▪ Full student maintenance grants are a thing of the past. (BrE) … Collocations dictionary
grant — grant1 W2S2 [gra:nt US grænt] v [T] [Date: 1200 1300; : Old French; Origin: creanter, graanter, from Latin credere to believe ] 1.) formal to give someone something or allow them to have something that they have asked for ▪ Britain could grant… … Dictionary of contemporary English
licence — [ laɪs(ə)ns] dog hunting issue a licence marriage receive: renew a licence state (esp. US) licence suspend a licence driving (BE) liquor (esp. AE) … Combinatory dictionary
licence — {{11}}licence (n.) mid 14c., liberty (to do something), leave, from O.Fr. licence freedom, liberty, power, possibility; permission, (12c.), from L. licentia freedom, liberty, license, from licentem (nom. licens). prp. of licere to be allowed, be… … Etymology dictionary
licence — License Li cense (l[imac] sens), n. [Written also {licence}.] [F. licence, L. licentia, fr. licere to be permitted, prob. orig., to be left free to one; akin to linquere to leave. See {Loan}, and cf. {Illicit}, {Leisure}.] 1. Authority or liberty … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English