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1 invade
[ɪn'veɪd]verbo transitivo invadere (anche fig.)to invade sb.'s privacy — violare la privacy di qcn
* * *[in'veid]((of an enemy) to enter (a country etc) with an army: Britain was twice invaded by the Romans.) invadere- invader- invasion* * *[ɪn'veɪd]verbo transitivo invadere (anche fig.)to invade sb.'s privacy — violare la privacy di qcn
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2 invade in·vade vt
[ɪn'veɪd]Mil (gen) fig invadere, (privacy, sb's rights) violare -
3 (to) invade
(to) invade /ɪnˈveɪd/v. t.1 invadere ( anche fig.); occupare; pervadere: Crowds of holidaymakers invaded the seaside resorts, folle di turisti invasero le spiagge; Othello's mind was invaded by jealousy, la mente di Otello era pervasa dalla gelosia -
4 (to) invade
(to) invade /ɪnˈveɪd/v. t.1 invadere ( anche fig.); occupare; pervadere: Crowds of holidaymakers invaded the seaside resorts, folle di turisti invasero le spiagge; Othello's mind was invaded by jealousy, la mente di Otello era pervasa dalla gelosia -
5 privacy
['prɪvəsɪ, 'praɪ-]1) (private life) vita f. privata, privacy f.to invade sb.'s privacy — invadere la privacy di qcn
2) (solitude) intimità f., isolamento m.* * *noun (the state of being away from other people's sight or interest: in the privacy of your own home.) intimità* * *privacy /ˈprɪvəsɪ/, ( USA) /ˈpraɪvəsɪ/n. [u]1 vita privata; intimità; isolamento; ritiro; solitudine; privacy: They live in absolute privacy, vivono in completo isolamento; to disturb sb. 's privacy, turbare la vita privata (o la tranquillità) altrui; to invade sb. 's privacy, insinuarsi in casa di q.2 segretezza; riserbo; riservatezza● privacy disclaimer, informazione sul trattamento dei dati personali (o sulla privacy).* * *['prɪvəsɪ, 'praɪ-]1) (private life) vita f. privata, privacy f.to invade sb.'s privacy — invadere la privacy di qcn
2) (solitude) intimità f., isolamento m. -
6 overrun
I ['əʊvərʌn]nome econ. eccedenza f.II 1. [ˌəʊvə'rʌn]1) (invade) invadere [country, site]2) (exceed) eccedere, superare [time, budget]2.* * *present participle - overrunning; verb1) (to fill, occupy or take possession of: The house was overrun with mice.) invadere, infestare2) (to continue longer than intended: The programme overran by five minutes.) eccedere* * *overrun /ˈəʊvərʌn/n.1 l'eccedere; eccedenza3 (tipogr.) copie supplementari; tiratura in eccedenza4 (comput.) sovraccarico di dati; overrun(to) overrun /əʊvəˈrʌn/A v. t.1 invadere; devastare; infestare; ricoprire: territory overrun by the enemy, territorio invaso dal nemico; The garden was overrun with weeds, il giardino era invaso da (o ricoperto di) erbacce3 oltrepassare; superare; eccedere; sforare, splafonare (fam.): Your speech overran the time allowed, il tuo discorso superò il limite di tempo consentitoB v. i.1 straripare; traboccare● (tipogr.: di una riga) to overrun into the margin, superare la giustezza.* * *I ['əʊvərʌn]nome econ. eccedenza f.II 1. [ˌəʊvə'rʌn]1) (invade) invadere [country, site]2) (exceed) eccedere, superare [time, budget]2. -
7 space
I 1. [speɪs]1) U (room) spazio m., posto m.to invade sb.'s (personal) space — invadere lo spazio vitale di qcn.
to give sb. space — fig. dare spazio a qcn
2) С (gap) spazio m.; mus. interlinea f.; tip. (between words) spazio m.; (between lines) interlinea f., spaziatura f.in the space provided — (on form) nell'apposito spazio
3) С (area of land) spazio m.4) (interval of time) intervallo m.in o within the space of a week nello spazio di una settimana; in a short space of time — in un breve lasso di tempo
5) fis. spazio m.2.modificatore [research, programme, rocket, capsule, platform] spaziale; [ exploration] dello spazioII [speɪs]verbo transitivo spaziare* * *[speis] 1. noun1) (a gap; an empty or uncovered place: I couldn't find a space for my car.) spazio, posto2) (room; the absence of objects; the area available for use: Have you enough space to turn round?; Is there space for one more?) spazio3) ((often outer space) the region outside the Earth's atmosphere, in which all stars and other planets etc are situated: travellers through space.) spazio2. verb((also space out) to set (things) apart from one another: He spaced the rows of potatoes half a metre apart.) spaziare distanziare- spacing- spacious
- spaciously
- spaciousness
- space-age
- spacecraft
- spaceship
- spacesuit* * *I 1. [speɪs]1) U (room) spazio m., posto m.to invade sb.'s (personal) space — invadere lo spazio vitale di qcn.
to give sb. space — fig. dare spazio a qcn
2) С (gap) spazio m.; mus. interlinea f.; tip. (between words) spazio m.; (between lines) interlinea f., spaziatura f.in the space provided — (on form) nell'apposito spazio
3) С (area of land) spazio m.4) (interval of time) intervallo m.in o within the space of a week nello spazio di una settimana; in a short space of time — in un breve lasso di tempo
5) fis. spazio m.2.modificatore [research, programme, rocket, capsule, platform] spaziale; [ exploration] dello spazioII [speɪs]verbo transitivo spaziare -
8 storm
I [stɔːm]1) (violent weather) tempesta f.; (thunderstorm) temporale m.; (gale) burrasca f.2) (attack)to take a town by storm — mil. prendere una città d'assalto
she took Broadway by storm — fig. ebbe un successo travolgente a Broadway
3) (outburst) esplosione f., tempesta f.II 1. [stɔːm]a storm of criticism — una pioggia o tempesta di critiche
1) (invade) prendere d'assalto [citadel, prison]2) (roar)2."get out!" he stormed — "esci!" disse in un accesso d'ira
1) [wind, rain] infuriare, scatenarsi* * *[sto:m] 1. noun1) (a violent disturbance in the air causing wind, rain, thunder etc: a rainstorm; a thunderstorm; a storm at sea; The roof was damaged by the storm.) tempesta, bufera2) (a violent outbreak of feeling etc: A storm of anger greeted his speech; a storm of applause.) scroppio; scroscio2. verb1) (to shout very loudly and angrily: He stormed at her.) tempestare, infierire2) (to move or stride in an angry manner: He stormed out of the room.) precipitarsi3) ((of soldiers etc) to attack with great force, and capture (a building etc): They stormed the castle.) espugnare•- stormy- stormily
- storminess
- stormbound
- stormtrooper
- a storm in a teacup
- take by storm* * *I [stɔːm]1) (violent weather) tempesta f.; (thunderstorm) temporale m.; (gale) burrasca f.2) (attack)to take a town by storm — mil. prendere una città d'assalto
she took Broadway by storm — fig. ebbe un successo travolgente a Broadway
3) (outburst) esplosione f., tempesta f.II 1. [stɔːm]a storm of criticism — una pioggia o tempesta di critiche
1) (invade) prendere d'assalto [citadel, prison]2) (roar)2."get out!" he stormed — "esci!" disse in un accesso d'ira
1) [wind, rain] infuriare, scatenarsi -
9 encroach on
(to advance into; invade: to encroach on someone's land/rights.) invadere, usurpare
См. также в других словарях:
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 — In*vade , v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Invaded}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Invading}.] [L. invadere, invasum; pref. in in + vadere to go, akin to E. wade: cf. OF. invader, F. envahir. See {Wade}.] [1913 Webster] 1. To go into or upon; to pass within the confines… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
invade — (v.) late 15c., from M.Fr. invader to invade, and directly from L. invadere to go into, enter upon; assail, assault, attack (see INVASION (Cf. invasion)). Related: invaded; invading … Etymology dictionary
invade — [in vād′] vt. invaded, invading [ME invaden < L invadere < in , in + vadere, to come, go: see WADE] 1. to enter forcibly or hostilely; come into as an enemy 2. to crowd into; throng [tourists invading the beaches] 3. to intrude upon;… … English World dictionary
Invade — In*vade , v. i. To make an invasion. Brougham. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
invade — encroach, *trespass, entrench, infringe Analogous words: intrude, obtrude, butt in, interlope: *enter, penetrate, pierce, probe: *permeate, pervade, impenetrate, interpenetrate … New Dictionary of Synonyms
invade — [v] attack and encroach access, assail, assault, breach, burglarize, burst in, crash, descend upon, entrench, fall on, foray, go in, infect, infest, infringe, inroad, interfere, loot, make inroads*, maraud, meddle, muscle in*, occupy, overrun,… … New thesaurus
invade — ► VERB 1) enter (a country) as or with an army so as to subjugate or occupy it. 2) enter in large numbers, especially intrusively. 3) (of a parasite or disease) attack and spread into (an organism or bodily part). 4) encroach on: his privacy was… … English terms dictionary
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 */ — UK [ɪnˈveɪd] / US verb Word forms invade : present tense I/you/we/they invade he/she/it invades present participle invading past tense invaded past participle invaded 1) [intransitive/transitive] to take or send an army into another country in… … 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