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1 hurl
[hɜːl] 1.1) scagliare (at contro)2) fig.2.to hurl insults at sb. — lanciare insulti a qcn
to hurl oneself — precipitarsi; fig. gettarsi ( into in)
* * *[hə:l](to throw violently: He hurled himself to the ground; They hurled rocks/insults at their attackers.) lanciare* * *hurl /hɜ:l/n.(to) hurl /hɜ:l/v. t.lanciare; scagliare; vibrare: to hurl stones, scagliare pietre; to hurl threats insults [threat reproaches] at sb., lanciare insulti [minacce, rimbrotti] a q.● to hurl oneself at (o upon, against), avventarsi, lanciarsi; scagliarsi; precipitarsi: They hurled themselves at ( o upon, against) the invaders, si sono avventati sugli invasori.* * *[hɜːl] 1.1) scagliare (at contro)2) fig.2.to hurl insults at sb. — lanciare insulti a qcn
to hurl oneself — precipitarsi; fig. gettarsi ( into in)
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2 hurl vt
[hɜːl](throw) scagliare, scaraventareto hurl o.s. at sb/sth — scagliarsi su qn/qc
to hurl abuse or insults at sb — scagliare or lanciare (degli) insulti a qn
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3 hurling hurl·ing n
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4 precipitate
I 1. 2.nome [prɪ'sɪpɪteɪt] chim. precipitato m.II 1. [prɪ'sɪpɪteɪt]1) chim. precipitare2) (hurl) (fare) precipitare3) (hasten) precipitare, accelerare2.verbo intransitivo chim. precipitare* * *[pri'sipiteit](the substance that settles at the bottom of a liquid.) precipitato* * *precipitate (1) /prɪˈsɪpɪteɪt/n. [cu](chim.) precipitato.precipitate (2) /prɪˈsɪpɪtət/a.precipitoso; avventato: a precipitate flight, una fuga precipitosaprecipitatelyavv.1 precipitosamente; avventatamente; a precipizioprecipitatenessn. [u]precipitazione; avventatezza.(to) precipitate /prɪˈsɪpɪteɪt/A v. i.2 (chim.) precipitareB v. t.1 precipitare ( anche fig.); far precipitare; far esplodere; accelerare, affrettare troppo: to precipitate the country into war, far precipitare il paese nella guerra; The killing precipitated a political crisis, l'assassinio fece esplodere una crisi politica2 (chim.) precipitare● to precipitate the showdown, andare alla resa dei conti troppo in fretta.* * *I 1. 2.nome [prɪ'sɪpɪteɪt] chim. precipitato m.II 1. [prɪ'sɪpɪteɪt]1) chim. precipitare2) (hurl) (fare) precipitare3) (hasten) precipitare, accelerare2.verbo intransitivo chim. precipitare -
5 -abuse o misuse?-
Nota d'usoAbuse e misuse indicano entrambi un trattamento scorretto o cattivo, ma hanno sfumature molto diverse e non devono essere confusi. Abuse è il termine dal significato più forte, perché si riferisce anche a un trattamento deliberatamente violento, crudele o improprio oppure a insulti: to abuse a child, abusare di un bambino; to hurl abuse at someone, gridare insulti a qualcuno. Misuse, invece, significa “usare in maniera scorretta o per uno scopo non appropriato”: to misuse public funds, fare cattivo uso di fondi pubblici, commettere un peculato. -
6 insult
I ['ɪnsʌlt]nome insulto m., offesa f.II [ɪn'sʌlt]and to add insult to injury... — e come se non bastasse
verbo transitivo insultare, offendere* * *1. verb(to treat (a person) rudely or contemptuously: He insulted her by telling her she was not only ugly but stupid too.) insultare2. noun((a) comment or action that insults: She took it as an insult that he did not shake hands with her.) insulto* * *insult /ˈɪnsʌlt/n.insulto ( anche med.); affronto; ingiuria; offesa; oltraggio: to hurl insults at sb., lanciare minacce a q.; to ignore one's insults, far finta di non udire gli insulti di q.(to) insult /ɪnˈsʌlt/v. t.insultare; ingiuriare; insolentire; oltraggiare.* * *I ['ɪnsʌlt]nome insulto m., offesa f.II [ɪn'sʌlt]and to add insult to injury... — e come se non bastasse
verbo transitivo insultare, offendere -
7 throw
I [θrəʊ]1) sport gioc. (in football) lancio m., tiro m.; (of javelin, discus etc.) lancio m.; (in judo, wrestling etc.) atterramento m.; (of dice) lancio m.2) colloq. (each)3) AE (blanket) telo m.4) AE (rug) tappetino m.II 1. [θrəʊ]1) (project) (with careful aim) lanciare (at a); (downwards) gettare; (with violence) scagliare, buttareto throw a six — (in dice) fare sei
2) fig. (direct) dare [punch, glance, look] (at a); fare [ question] (at a); mandare [ kiss]; proiettare [image, light] (on su); fare [ shadow] (on su); destinare [ money] (at a, per)to throw suspicion on sb., sth. — fare nascere dei sospetti su qcn., qcs
3) fig. (disconcert) sconcertareto throw [sth., sb.] into confusion o disarray — mettere confusione in [meeting, group]; confondere [ people]
4) tecn. (activate) azionare [switch, lever]5) colloq. (indulge in)to throw a fit — fig. uscire dai gangheri, andare in collera
7) (in pottery) modellare [ pot]2. 3.to throw oneself — gettarsi ( onto su)
- throw in- throw on- throw up••it's throwing it down! — BE colloq. sta piovendo a dirotto!
to throw in one's lot with sb. — condividere la sorte di qcn
* * *[Ɵrəu] 1. past tense - threw; verb1) (to send through the air with force; to hurl or fling: He threw the ball to her / threw her the ball.) gettare, lanciare2) ((of a horse) to make its rider fall off: My horse threw me.) disarcionare3) (to puzzle or confuse: He was completely thrown by her question.) sconcertare4) ((in wrestling, judo etc) to wrestle (one's opponent) to the ground.) atterrare2. noun(an act of throwing: That was a good throw!) getto, lancio- throw doubt on
- throw in
- throw light on
- throw oneself into
- throw off
- throw open
- throw out
- throw a party
- throw up
- throw one's voice
- throwaway* * *throw /ɵrəʊ/n.2 (mil.) gittata3 (geol.) rigetto verticale5 (mecc.) corsa massima; alzata; raggio● ( rugby) throw-forward, lancio in avanti; in-avanti ( è fallo) □ throw-in, ( baseball) lancio ( di un esterno) verso il diamante; ( basket, netball) rimessa laterale; ( calcio) rimessa in gioco con le mani, rimessa laterale; ( polo) lancio ( della palla) tra le due file di giocatori allineati ( all'inizio del gioco); ( rugby) introduzione; rimessa in campo ( dalla linea laterale) □ throw-off, partenza ( in una corsa di cavalli); inizio ( d'una caccia); (mecc.) dispositivo di arresto □ throw-out, scarto ( persona, cosa scartata); (comm.) articolo di scarto; (mecc.) (dispositivo di) disinnesto □ (ai dadi, ecc.) It's your throw, sta a te; tocca a te tirare.♦ (to) throw /ɵrəʊ/1 buttare; gettare; lanciare; scagliare; fare un lancio: to throw hand grenades, gettare bombe a mano; ( sport) to throw the discus, lanciare il disco; Throw me the rope, buttami la corda!; Don't throw stones at the birds, non scagliar sassi agli uccelli!; He threw himself at the thief, si è gettato sul ladro; She threw me a kiss, mi lanciò un bacio2 gettare a terra; atterrare; proiettare: ( di un lottatore) He threw the other wrestler, atterrò l'avversario● (fig.: di un giudice, un poliziotto) to throw the book at sb., incriminare q. sotto tutti i possibili capi d'accusa □ to throw a card, gettare (o giocare) una carta ( al gioco) □ to throw a fit, avere una crisi di nervi □ (fig.) to throw good money after bad, buttar altro denaro per tentare di recuperare quello già perduto □ (mil.) to throw a grenade clear, lanciare (o rilanciare) una bomba a mano prima che scoppi □ to throw mud at sb., gettare fango su q. ( anche fig.) □ to throw oneself, scagliarsi; avventarsi; buttarsi; gettarsi; lanciarsi: (fig.) to throw oneself heart and soul into st., buttarsi anima e corpo in qc. ( un'impresa, ecc.); (fig.) to throw oneself on sb. 's generosity, affidarsi alla generosità di q.; to throw oneself to the floor (o to the ground), gettarsi sul pavimento (o per terra, a terra); to throw oneself under a train, gettarsi sotto un treno □ to throw st. on (o over) one's shoulders, gettarsi qc. sulle spalle □ to throw open, spalancare; aprire ( al pubblico): Throw open all the windows, spalanca le finestre! □ (fig.) to throw open the door to, lasciar adito a ( abusi, interferenze, ecc.) □ ( baseball) to throw a pitch, effettuare un lancio □ (fig.) to throw stones, scagliare la prima pietra; accusare, muovere accuse □ ( baseball) to throw a strike, fare uno strike □ (fig., fam.) to throw one's toys out of the pram, fare le bizze; fare i capricci □ to throw sb. to the ground, buttare giù q.; ( rugby, ecc.) atterrare q. con un placcaggio.* * *I [θrəʊ]1) sport gioc. (in football) lancio m., tiro m.; (of javelin, discus etc.) lancio m.; (in judo, wrestling etc.) atterramento m.; (of dice) lancio m.2) colloq. (each)3) AE (blanket) telo m.4) AE (rug) tappetino m.II 1. [θrəʊ]1) (project) (with careful aim) lanciare (at a); (downwards) gettare; (with violence) scagliare, buttareto throw a six — (in dice) fare sei
2) fig. (direct) dare [punch, glance, look] (at a); fare [ question] (at a); mandare [ kiss]; proiettare [image, light] (on su); fare [ shadow] (on su); destinare [ money] (at a, per)to throw suspicion on sb., sth. — fare nascere dei sospetti su qcn., qcs
3) fig. (disconcert) sconcertareto throw [sth., sb.] into confusion o disarray — mettere confusione in [meeting, group]; confondere [ people]
4) tecn. (activate) azionare [switch, lever]5) colloq. (indulge in)to throw a fit — fig. uscire dai gangheri, andare in collera
7) (in pottery) modellare [ pot]2. 3.to throw oneself — gettarsi ( onto su)
- throw in- throw on- throw up••it's throwing it down! — BE colloq. sta piovendo a dirotto!
to throw in one's lot with sb. — condividere la sorte di qcn
См. также в других словарях:
Hurl — Hurl, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Hurled}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Hurling}.] [OE. hurlen, hourlen; prob. contracted fr. OE. hurtlen to hurtle, or probably akin to E. whirl. [root]16. See {Hurtle}.] 1. To send whirling or whizzing through the air; to throw… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
hurl — [hə:l US hə:rl] v [Date: 1100 1200; Origin: Probably copying the action] 1.) [T always + adverb/preposition] to throw something with a lot of force, especially because you are angry ▪ Demonstrators were hurling bricks through the windows. ▪ He… … Dictionary of contemporary English
hurl|y — hurl|y1 «HUR lee», noun, plural hurl|ies. commotion; hurly burly: »with the hurly, death itself awakes (Shakespeare). ╂[< hurl] hurl|y2 «HUR lee», noun, plural hurl|ie … Useful english dictionary
Hurl — Hurl, v. i. 1. To hurl one s self; to go quickly. [R.] [1913 Webster] 2. To perform the act of hurling something; to throw something (at another). [1913 Webster] God shall hurl at him and not spare. Job xxvii. 22 (Rev. Ver. ). [1913 Webster] 3.… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
hurl — hurl·bar·row; hurl·er; hurl·ey; hurl; … English syllables
hurl´er — hurl «hurl», verb, noun. –v.t. 1. to throw with much force; cast; fling: »The man hurled his spear at one bear, and the dogs hurled themselves at the other. 2. Figurative. to throw forth (words, cries, or shouts) v … Useful english dictionary
Hurl — Hurl, n. 1. The act of hurling or throwing with violence; a cast; a fling. Congreve. [1913 Webster] 2. Tumult; riot; hurly burly. [Obs.] Knolles. [1913 Webster] 3. (Hat Manuf.) A table on which fiber is stirred and mixed by beating with a… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Hurl — may refer to:* Hurley (stick) * Slang for vomiting * Hurl!, a reality show airing on G4 … Wikipedia
hurl — (v.) early 13c., hurlen, to run against (each other), come into collision, later throw forcibly (c.1300); rush violently (late 14c.); perhaps related to Low Ger. hurreln to throw, to dash, and E.Fris. hurreln to roar, to bluster. OED suggests all … Etymology dictionary
hurl — [hʉrl] vt. [ME hurlen, prob. of ON echoic orig. as in Dan hurle, to whir, Norw hurla, to buzz] 1. to throw or fling with force or violence 2. to cast down; overthrow 3. to utter vehemently [to hurl insults ] ☆ 4. Baseball Informal to pitch vi … English World dictionary
hurl|ey — «HUR lee», noun, plural eys. 1. = hurling. (Cf. ↑hurling) 2. the stick or club used in hurling. ╂[< hurl] … Useful english dictionary