-
1 invade
[ɪn'veɪd] transitive verbPoland was invaded by the Germans — die Deutschen marschierten in Polen (Akk.) ein
2) (swarm into) [Touristen, Kinder:] überschwemmen3) (fig.) [unangenehmes Gefühl, Krankheit, Schwäche:] befallen; [Krankheit, Seuche, Unwetter:] heimsuchen* * *[in'veid]((of an enemy) to enter (a country etc) with an army: Britain was twice invaded by the Romans.) angreifen- academic.ru/39094/invader">invader- invasion* * *in·vade[ɪnˈveɪd]I. vt1. (occupy)to \invade a country in ein Land einmarschierenthe squatters \invaded the house die Hausbesetzer drangen in das Gebäude eininvading bacteria MED eindringende Bakteriento \invade the peace den Frieden verletzento \invade sb's privacy jds Privatsphäre verletzenII. vi einfallen, einmarschieren* * *[In'veɪd]vt(MIL)einmarschieren in (+acc); (fig) überfallen, heimsuchen; privacy eindringen in (+acc), stören; (MED) cell etc befallen* * *invade [ınˈveıd]A v/t2. sich ausbreiten über (akk) oder in (dat), erfüllen:fear invaded all alle wurden von Furcht ergriffen4. fig überlaufen, -schwemmen:invading troops Invasionstruppen* * *[ɪn'veɪd] transitive verb1) einfallen in (+ Akk.) [Gebiet, Staat]2) (swarm into) [Touristen, Kinder:] überschwemmen3) (fig.) [unangenehmes Gefühl, Krankheit, Schwäche:] befallen; [Krankheit, Seuche, Unwetter:] heimsuchen4) (encroach upon) stören [Ruhe, Frieden]; eindringen in (+ Akk.) [Bereich, Privatsphäre]* * *v.eindringen v. -
2 privacy
['prɪvəsɪ], ['praɪvəsɪ] noun1) Privatsphäre, die; (being undisturbed) Ungestörtheit, diein the privacy of one's [own] home — in den eigenen vier Wänden (ugs.)
invasion of privacy/somebody's privacy — Eindringen in die/jmds. Privatsphäre
2) (confidentiality)* * *noun (the state of being away from other people's sight or interest: in the privacy of your own home.) die Zurückgezogenheit* * *pri·va·cy[ˈprɪvəsi, AM ˈpraɪ-]n no plin the \privacy of one's home in den eigenen vier Wänden famright to \privacy Recht nt auf [Achtung der] Privatsphäreto have no \privacy keine Privatsphäre [o kein Privatleben] habento disturb sb's \privacy jdn in seiner Privatsphäre störento invade sb's \privacy in jds Privatsphäre eindringento give sb \privacy jdn alleine lassen▪ in \privacy unter Geheimhaltungin strict \privacy streng vertraulich* * *['prIvəsI, 'praIvəsɪ]nPrivatleben ntthere is no privacy in these flats — in diesen Wohnungen kann man kein Privatleben führen
in an open-plan office one has no privacy — in einem Großraumbüro hat man keinen privaten Bereich
in the privacy of one's own home — im eigenen Heim
* * *1. Zurückgezogenheit f, Ungestörtheit f, Abgeschiedenheit f, Einsamkeit f:disturb sb’s privacy jemanden stören;he lived in absolute privacy er lebte völlig zurückgezogen2. a) Privatleben nb) JUR Intim-, Privatsphäre f:invasion of privacy Eingriff m in die Privatsphäre;right of privacy Persönlichkeitsrecht n3. Heimlichkeit f, Geheimhaltung f:talk to sb in privacy mit jemandem unter vier Augen sprechen;in strict privacy streng vertraulich* * *['prɪvəsɪ], ['praɪvəsɪ] noun1) Privatsphäre, die; (being undisturbed) Ungestörtheit, diein the privacy of one's [own] home — in den eigenen vier Wänden (ugs.)
invasion of privacy/somebody's privacy — Eindringen in die/jmds. Privatsphäre
-
3 privacy
pri·va·cy [ʼprɪvəsi, Am ʼpraɪ-] nin the \privacy of one's home in den eigenen vier Wänden ( fam)right to \privacy Recht nt auf [Achtung der] Privatsphäre;to have no \privacy keine Privatsphäre [o kein Privatleben] haben;to disturb sb's \privacy jdn in seiner Privatsphäre stören;to invade sb's \privacy in jds Privatsphäre eindringento give sb \privacy jdn alleine lassenin \privacy unter Geheimhaltung;in strict \privacy streng vertraulich -
4 invade
in·vade [ɪnʼveɪd] vt1) ( occupy)to \invade a country in ein Land einmarschieren;the squatters \invaded the house die Hausbesetzer drangen in das Gebäude ein;invading bacteria med eindringende Bakterien;to \invade the peace den Frieden verletzen;to \invade sb's privacy jds Privatsphäre verletzen vi einfallen, einmarschieren -
5 invasion
noun1) (of troops, virus, locusts) Invasion, die; (of weeds etc.) massenweise Ausbreitung; (intrusion) [überfallartiges] Eindringen (of in + Akk.)* * *[-ʒən]noun die Invasion* * *in·va·sion[ɪnˈveɪʒən]n\invasion by enemy forces Einmarsch m von feindlichen Truppen\invasion of a territory Einfall m in ein Gebiet\invasion of privacy Eingriff m in die Intimsphäre* * *[In'veIZən] Invasion f; (of privacy etc) Eingriff m (of in +acc)the German invasion of Poland — der Einmarsch or Einfall der Deutschen in Polen
* * *invasion [ınˈveıʒn] sthe German invasion of France HIST der Einmarsch der Deutschen in Frankreich;an invasion of tourists fig eine Touristeninvasion2. METEO Einbruch m:invasion of cold air Kälteeinbruch m* * *noun1) (of troops, virus, locusts) Invasion, die; (of weeds etc.) massenweise Ausbreitung; (intrusion) [überfallartiges] Eindringen (of in + Akk.)* * *(of) n.Einfall -¨e m.Eingriff -e m.Invasion -en f.
См. также в других словарях:
invade — invadable, adj. invader, n. /in vayd /, v., invaded, invading. v.t. 1. to enter forcefully as an enemy; go into with hostile intent: Germany invaded Poland in 1939. 2. to enter like an enemy: Locusts invaded the fields. 3. to enter as if to take… … Universalium
invade — [c]/ɪnˈveɪd / (say in vayd) verb (invaded, invading) –verb (t) 1. to enter as an enemy; go into with hostile intent: Caesar invaded Britain. 2. to enter like an enemy: locusts invaded the fields. 3. (of a disease, etc.) to enter, as to cause… …
privacy — UK US /ˈprɪvəsi/ US /ˈpraɪvəsi/ noun [U] ► the right that someone has to keep their personal life or personal information secret or known only to a small group of people: »Among the three industries studied, concerns about privacy and security… … Financial and business terms
invade — in·vade vt in·vad·ed, in·vad·ing 1: to encroach upon: infringe invading a constitutional right 2: to make payments out of (a fund from which payments are not ordinarily made) authorized the trustee to invade the principal for educationa … Law dictionary
invade — verb 1 (I, T) to enter a country, town, or area using military force, in order to take control of it: Hitler invaded Poland in 1939. 2 (T) to go into a place in large numbers, especially when you are not wanted: Every summer the town is invaded… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
privacy — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ absolute, complete, total ▪ relative ▪ I was able to say goodbye to him in relative privacy. ▪ individual, personal … Collocations dictionary
privacy — pri|va|cy [ praıvəsi ] noun uncount * the freedom to do things without other people watching you or knowing what you are doing: Staff members are entitled to a certain amount of privacy when making personal phone calls. personal privacy in the… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
privacy */ — UK [ˈprɪvəsɪ] / UK [ˈpraɪvəsɪ] / US noun [uncountable] the freedom to do things without other people watching you or knowing what you are doing Staff are entitled to a certain amount of privacy when making personal phone calls. personal privacy… … English dictionary
invade — in•vade [[t]ɪnˈveɪd[/t]] v. vad•ed, vad•ing 1) to enter forcefully as an enemy; go into with hostile intent 2) to enter as if to take possession: to invade a neighbor s home[/ex] 3) to enter and affect injuriously or destructively: viruses that… … From formal English to slang
invade — in|vade [ınˈveıd] v [Date: 1400 1500; : Latin; Origin: invadere, from vadere to go ] 1.) [I and T] to enter a country, town, or area using military force, in order to take control of it ▪ The Romans invaded Britain 2000 years ago. 2.) [T] to go… … Dictionary of contemporary English
The Desperate Hours (film) — Infobox Film name =The Desperate Hours caption = The Desperate Hours (1955) DVD cover director = William Wyler producer = William Wyler writer =Joseph Hayes starring =Humphrey Bogart Fredric March music = Gail Kubik cinematography = editing =… … Wikipedia