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81 sell
I [sel]nome colloq. (deception) fregatura f., bidone m.II 1. [sel]1) vendereto sell sth. to sb., to sell sb. sth. vendere qcs. a qcn.; to sell sth. at o for Ј 5 vendere qcs. a 5 sterline; "stamps sold here" "si vendono francobolli"; the novel has sold millions (of copies) il romanzo ha venduto milioni di copie; to sell sth. back — rivendere qcs
2) (promote sale of) [ scandal] fare vendere [ newspaper]3) [person, government] (put across) trasmettere, comunicare; (make attractive) fare accettare [idea, image, policy]4) colloq. (cause to appear true)2.to sell sb. sth., to sell sth. to sb. — fare credere [qcs.] a qcn. [story, excuse]
1) [person, shop] vendere2) [product, house, book] vendersi3.to sell oneself — (prostitute oneself) vendersi; (put oneself across) valorizzarsi
- sell off- sell out- sell up••to be sold on — essere entusiasta di [idea, person]
* * *[sel]past tense, past participle - sold; verb1) (to give something in exchange for money: He sold her a car; I've got some books to sell.) vendere2) (to have for sale: The farmer sells milk and eggs.) vendere3) (to be sold: His book sold well.) vendersi4) (to cause to be sold: Packaging sells a product.) far vendere•- sell-out- be sold on
- be sold out
- sell down the river
- sell off
- sell out
- sell up* * *sell /sɛl/n.2 (fam.) imbroglio; turlupinatura; bidone, fregatura, fregata (pop.)● ( di un prodotto preconfezionato) sell-by date, data di scadenza: to be past one's sell-by date, ( di un prodotto) essere scaduto; (fig.: di una persona) essere passé (franc.), non essere più tanto giovane □ ( Borsa) sell order, ordine di vendita.♦ (to) sell /sɛl/(pass. e p. p. sold)A v. t.1 vendere ( anche fig.); smerciare; spacciare; (leg.) alienare, cedere; (fig.) tradire: Do you sell pet food?, vendete alimenti per animali?; to sell one's country, vendersi al nemico; tradire la patria; to sell an estate, alienare una proprietà; ( di merce) to be sold by weight, essere venduta (o andare) a peso; to sell one's life dearly, vender cara la vita (fam.: la pelle)3 (fam.) ingannare; imbrogliare; fregare (pop.)B v. i.2 (fam.) essere accettato (o accolto bene); incontrare: Do you think the idea will sell?, pensi che l'idea incontrerà?● to sell at any price, vendere (tanto) per vendere □ (fin., comm.) to sell at best, vendere al meglio □ to sell at a loss, vendere in perdita □ to sell below cost, vendere sottocosto □ to sell by auction, vendere all'asta (o all'incanto) □ to sell by retail, vendere al dettaglio (o al minuto) □ to sell cash on delivery, vendere contrassegno □ to sell st. cheap [dear], vendere qc. a basso [a caro] prezzo □ (fam.) to sell sb. down the river, tradire q.; vendere q. (fig.) □ to sell for cash, vendere per contanti □ ( Borsa) to sell for a fall, speculare al ribasso □ ( Borsa, comm.) to sell for forward (o future) delivery, vendere per consegna futura (o differita) □ ( Borsa) to sell forward, vendere a termine □ to sell st. house-to-house, vendere qc. porta a porta □ to sell insurance, stipulare contratti di assicurazione; vendere polizze □ to sell like hot cakes, andare a ruba □ to sell oneself, vendersi; prostituirsi ( anche fig.); (fam.) saper vendere la propria merce ( anche fig.) □ (fig.) to sell the pass, tradire la causa □ ( slang antiq.) to sell sb. a pup, rifilare un bidone (o una patacca) a q. □ to sell retail, vendere al dettaglio □ ( Borsa) to sell short, vendere allo scoperto ( titoli o merci) □ (fig.) to sell sb. [st.] short, presentare q. [qc.] in cattiva luce; sminuire, sottovalutare q. [qc.] □ to sell one's soul to the devil, vendere l'anima al diavolo □ to sell wholesale, vendere all'ingrosso □ (fam.) Sold again!, me (o te) l'han fatta di nuovo!; ci sono (o ci sei) cascato di nuovo □ «to be sold» ( avviso o cartello), «da vendere; in vendita».* * *I [sel]nome colloq. (deception) fregatura f., bidone m.II 1. [sel]1) vendereto sell sth. to sb., to sell sb. sth. vendere qcs. a qcn.; to sell sth. at o for Ј 5 vendere qcs. a 5 sterline; "stamps sold here" "si vendono francobolli"; the novel has sold millions (of copies) il romanzo ha venduto milioni di copie; to sell sth. back — rivendere qcs
2) (promote sale of) [ scandal] fare vendere [ newspaper]3) [person, government] (put across) trasmettere, comunicare; (make attractive) fare accettare [idea, image, policy]4) colloq. (cause to appear true)2.to sell sb. sth., to sell sth. to sb. — fare credere [qcs.] a qcn. [story, excuse]
1) [person, shop] vendere2) [product, house, book] vendersi3.to sell oneself — (prostitute oneself) vendersi; (put oneself across) valorizzarsi
- sell off- sell out- sell up••to be sold on — essere entusiasta di [idea, person]
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82 copper
I 1. ['kɒpə(r)]1) chim. rame m.2) BE colloq. (coin) monetina f., spicciolo m.3) BE stor. (for washing) tinozza f.4) (colour) (color) rame m.2.modificatore [mine, coin, wire, pan] di rame3. II ['kɒpə(r)]nome colloq. poliziotto m. (-a), piedipiatti m. spreg.* * *I 1. ['kopə] noun1) (an element, a metal of a brownish-red colour: This pipe is made of copper.)2) ((a piece of) money made of copper or a substitute: Have you any coppers in your change?)2. adjective1) (made of copper: a copper pipe.)2) ((also copper-coloured) of the colour of copper.)II ['kopə] noun(a British nickname for a policeman: Run - there's a copper after you!)* * *copper (1) /ˈkɒpə(r)/A n.1 [u] (chim.) rame3 [u] color rame4 (antiq.) recipiente di rame; tinozza di rame5 (al pl.) (fam.) spiccioli: We gave the beggar a few coppers, demmo qualche spicciolo al mendicanteB a.1 di rame; rameico (chim.): (elettr.) copper cable, cavo di rame; (chim.) copper sulphate, solfato di rame (o rameico)2 ramato; color rame● copper alloy, cuprolega □ (archeol.) the Copper Age, l'Età del rame □ (bot.) copper beech ( Fagus sylvatica atropunicea), faggio rosso □ (tecn.) copper bit, saldatoio □ copper-bottomed, (naut., stor.) dalla chiglia rivestita di rame; (fam. GB, anche fin.) sicuro, solido, senza rischi, di ferro □ (miner.) copper glance, calcocite □ copper ore, minerale ramifero □ (metall.) copper plating, ramatura □ (tecn.) copper sheeting, rivestimento di rame; ( anche) lamierino di rame per rivestimenti □ copper vetriol, vetriolo azzurro; solfato di rame.copper (2) /ˈkɒpə(r)/n.(fam. GB) poliziotto; poliziotta; agente; (al pl., collett.) (la) polizia.(to) copper /ˈkɒpə(r)/v. t.( anche metall.) rivestire di rame; ramare.* * *I 1. ['kɒpə(r)]1) chim. rame m.2) BE colloq. (coin) monetina f., spicciolo m.3) BE stor. (for washing) tinozza f.4) (colour) (color) rame m.2.modificatore [mine, coin, wire, pan] di rame3. II ['kɒpə(r)]nome colloq. poliziotto m. (-a), piedipiatti m. spreg. -
83 case *****
I [keɪs] n1) (gen) Med, Gram casoin any case — in ogni caso, comunque
in that case — in quel or questo caso
(just) in case — non si sa mai, per precauzione, per sicurezza
take some money, just in case — prendi un po' di soldi per sicurezza
I think she knows you're coming, but just in case, you'd better phone her — penso che sappia del tuo arrivo, ma per sicurezza faresti meglio a telefonarle
in most cases — nella maggior parte dei casi, in genere
as this was the case, we decided not to go — stando così le cose, decidemmo di non andare
if this or that is the case — quand'è così, se così è
2) Law caso, processo, causa, (argument) motivo, ragione fthe case for the defence/prosecution — le ragioni or argomentazioni della difesa/dell'accusa
II [keɪs] nto state one's case — esporre le proprie ragioni, fig perorare la propria causa
1) (suitcase) valigia, (briefcase) valigetta, cartella, (packing case) cassa, (for camera) custodia, (for jewellery) scatolina, astuccio, (for spectacles) custodia, astuccio, (display case) vetrinetta, (of watch) cassa2) Typlower/upper case — (carattere m) minuscolo/maiuscolo
См. также в других словарях:
have — [ weak əv, həv, strong hæv ] (3rd person singular has [ weak əz, həz, strong hæz ] ; past tense and past participle had [ weak əd, həd, strong hæd ] ) verb *** Have can be used in the following ways: as an auxiliary verb in perfect tenses of… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
any, any and all — Any is a useful word with several meanings, one, a, an, some, no matter which, every. Do you have any money? Any is considered informal (colloquial) when it is used as an adverb to mean at all : He did not work any last month. You can substitute… … Dictionary of problem words and expressions
have */*/*/ — strong UK [hæv] / US weak UK [əv] / US UK [həv] / US verb Word forms have : present tense I/you/we/they have he/she/it has strong UK [hæz] / US weak UK [əz] / US UK [həz] / US present participle having past tense had strong UK [hæd] / US weak UK… … English dictionary
have something on you — phrase to be carrying something, for example in a pocket or bag Can you pay, I don’t seem to have any money on me. Have you got your passport on you? Thesaurus: to carry something or someonesynonym Main entry: on … Useful english dictionary
money */*/*/ — UK [ˈmʌnɪ] / US noun [uncountable] Metaphor: Money is like food, which gets eaten or is shared out. The same idea is used to talk about other types of resource. They didn t get a fair share/slice of the cake/pie. ♦ The rent takes a large bite out … English dictionary
have — 1 strong, auxiliary verb past tense had, strong, third person singularpresent tense has; strong, negative short forms: haven t, hadn t, hasn t 1 used with the past participle of another verb to make the perfect tense of that verb: We have… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
money — mon|ey W1S1 [ˈmʌni] n [U] [Date: 1200 1300; : Old French; Origin: moneie, from Latin moneta mint, money , from Moneta, name given to Juno, the goddess in whose temple the ancient Romans produced money] 1.) what you earn by working and can use to… … Dictionary of contemporary English
money — mon|ey [ mʌni ] noun uncount *** what you earn, save, invest and use to pay for things. Money can be kept in a bank, where it can earn interest. If you have a bank account, you can pay for things with a check: No, I can t come, I haven t got any… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
have — have1 W1S1 [v, əv, həv strong hæv] auxiliary v past tense and past participle had [d, əd, həd strong hæd] third person singular has [z, əz, həz strong hæz] [: Old English; Origin: habban] 1.) used with past participles to form ↑perfect tenses ▪… … Dictionary of contemporary English
have */*/*/ — weak [əv] , weak [həv] , strong [hæv] (3rd person singular has weak [əz] ; [həz] ; strong [hæz] ; past tense and past participle had weak [əd] ; [həd] ; strong [hæd] ) verb 1) used for forming perfect tenses [auxiliary verb] used for forming the… … Dictionary for writing and speaking English
money — noun (U) 1 what you earn by working and what you spend in order to buy things: The repairs will cost a lot of money. | earn money: She barely earns enough money to live on. | save money: We re not going on holiday this year we re trying to save… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English