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1 lose one's bearings
(to become uncertain of one's position: He's confused me so much that I've lost my bearings completely.) disorientarsi; perdere la bussola -
2 bearing
['beərɪŋ] 1.1) (posture) portamento m.2) (relevance)3) mar. rilevamento m.4) tecn. cuscinetto m., supporto m.2.to get o find o take one's bearings orientarsi; to lose one's bearings — perdere l'orientamento o la bussola (anche fig.)
2) aut. mecc. cuscinetto m., supporto m.* * *1) (manner, way of standing etc: a military bearing.) comportamento; portamento2) ((usually in plural: sometimes short for ball-bearings) a part of a machine that has another part moving in or on it.) cuscinetto* * *['beərɪŋ] 1.1) (posture) portamento m.2) (relevance)3) mar. rilevamento m.4) tecn. cuscinetto m., supporto m.2.to get o find o take one's bearings orientarsi; to lose one's bearings — perdere l'orientamento o la bussola (anche fig.)
2) aut. mecc. cuscinetto m., supporto m. -
3 bearing *** bear·ing n
['bɛərɪŋ]1) (of person) portamento2)bearing (on) — attinenza (con)3) Techball bearings npl — cuscinetti mpl a sfere
4)to take a compass bearing — effettuare un rilevamento con la bussolato get or find one's bearings fig — orientarsi
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4 ♦ bearing
♦ bearing (1) /ˈbɛərɪŋ/n.1 [u] connessione; relazione; rapporto; attinenza; influenza; portata: This has no bearing on our topic, questo non ha nessuna attinenza con (o non riguarda) il nostro argomento2 (naut., aeron.) rilevamento: to take a compass bearing, fare un rilevamento alla bussola; relative bearing, rilevamento polare; radio bearing, rilevamento radio; radiorilevamento3 (al pl.) – one's bearings, la propria posizione; l'orientamento: to lose one's bearings, perdere l'orientamento; perdersi; (fig.) confondersi, essere disorientato, perdere la bussola; to get one's bearings, orientarsi ( anche fig.)5 [u] portamento6 condotta; comportamento7 [u] capacità di produrre (o generare): This mare is past bearing, questa cavalla è troppo vecchia per figliare; ( di pianta) to be in bearing, dare frutti; essere produttivo; child-bearing ► childbearing8 (mecc.) cuscinetto; supporto: ball bearing, cuscinetto a sfere; bearing cap, testa supporto del cuscinetto10 (arald.) insegna campita.bearing (2) /ˈbɛərɪŋ/a.1 che porta; portante; che sostiene; di sostegno: (mecc.) bearing axle, assale portante; (edil.) bearing pile, palo portante ( di fondazione); (costr.) bearing plate, piastra d'appoggio; (edil., mecc.) bearing surface, superficie portante; (edil.) bearing timber, trave portante2 (nei composti) che produce; -fero (suff.): fruit-bearing, fruttifero; (fin.) interest-bearing, fruttifero; oil-bearing, petrolifero. -
5 bear
I [beə(r)]1) zool. orso m.2) colloq. spreg. (man) orso m., persona f. scorbutica3) econ. speculatore m. (-trice) al ribasso, ribassista m. e f.II 1. [beə(r)]3) (show, have) [ envelope] portare, recare, avere [logo, address]; [person, company] portare, avere [name, title]he still bears the scars — fig. ne porta ancora i segni
to bear witness to — testimoniare o deporre su
4) (keep)to bear sth. in mind — ricordare o ricordarsi di [ suggestion]; (take into account) tener conto di [ factors]
5) (support)to bear the weight of — [structure, platform] reggere, sopportare il peso di [person, object]
6) fig. (endure, tolerate) sopportare, tollerare [thought, suspense, smell, person]7) fig. (accept) accettare [cost, responsibility]8) (stand up to) reggere a, superare [scrutiny, inspection]to bear sb. ill will — avere del malanimo verso qcn.
to bear a grudge against sb. — avercela con qcn., serbare rancore a qcn
10) (yield) [tree, land] dare, produrre [fruit, blossom, crop]; econ. [account, investment] dare, fruttare [ interest]to bear fruit — [ tree] dare frutto; fig. [idea, investment] dare frutti
2.to bear sb. a child — dare un figlio a qcn
1)to bear left, right — girare o prendere a sinistra, destra
to bear east, west — andare a est, ovest
2) (weigh)3.to bear heavily o hardest on sb. [tax, price increase] gravare su qcn.; to bring pressure to bear on — esercitare pressioni su [person, system]
to bear oneself — (behave) comportarsi
- bear off- bear on- bear out- bear up* * *I [beə] past tense - bore; verb1) ((usually with cannot, could not etc) to put up with or endure: I couldn't bear it if he left.)2) (to be able to support: Will the table bear my weight?)3) ((past participle in passive born [bo:n]) to produce (children): She has borne (him) several children; She was born on July 7.)4) (to carry: He was borne shoulder-high after his victory.)5) (to have: The cheque bore his signature.)6) (to turn or fork: The road bears left here.)•- bearable- bearer
- bearing
- bearings
- bear down on
- bear fruit
- bear out
- bear up
- bear with
- find/get one's bearings
- lose one's bearings II [beə] noun(a large heavy animal with thick fur and hooked claws.)- bearskin* * *I [beə(r)]1) zool. orso m.2) colloq. spreg. (man) orso m., persona f. scorbutica3) econ. speculatore m. (-trice) al ribasso, ribassista m. e f.II 1. [beə(r)]3) (show, have) [ envelope] portare, recare, avere [logo, address]; [person, company] portare, avere [name, title]he still bears the scars — fig. ne porta ancora i segni
to bear witness to — testimoniare o deporre su
4) (keep)to bear sth. in mind — ricordare o ricordarsi di [ suggestion]; (take into account) tener conto di [ factors]
5) (support)to bear the weight of — [structure, platform] reggere, sopportare il peso di [person, object]
6) fig. (endure, tolerate) sopportare, tollerare [thought, suspense, smell, person]7) fig. (accept) accettare [cost, responsibility]8) (stand up to) reggere a, superare [scrutiny, inspection]to bear sb. ill will — avere del malanimo verso qcn.
to bear a grudge against sb. — avercela con qcn., serbare rancore a qcn
10) (yield) [tree, land] dare, produrre [fruit, blossom, crop]; econ. [account, investment] dare, fruttare [ interest]to bear fruit — [ tree] dare frutto; fig. [idea, investment] dare frutti
2.to bear sb. a child — dare un figlio a qcn
1)to bear left, right — girare o prendere a sinistra, destra
to bear east, west — andare a est, ovest
2) (weigh)3.to bear heavily o hardest on sb. [tax, price increase] gravare su qcn.; to bring pressure to bear on — esercitare pressioni su [person, system]
to bear oneself — (behave) comportarsi
- bear off- bear on- bear out- bear up
См. также в других словарях:
To lose one's bearings — Bearing Bear ing (b[^a]r [i^]ng), n. 1. The manner in which one bears or conducts one s self; mien; behavior; carriage. [1913 Webster] I know him by his bearing. Shak. [1913 Webster] 2. Patient endurance; suffering without complaint. [1913… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
lose one's bearings — become disoriented; get lost … English contemporary dictionary
loose one's bearings — lose one s way, get lost; lose track of one s thoughts … English contemporary dictionary
lose one's marbles — vb to become deranged or feeble minded, go crazy. Marbles, when referring to male faculties, usually refers to testicles, but in this case one s wits or intelligence are in question. The origin of this phrase is uncertain, in spite of many… … Contemporary slang
bearings — n. orientation 1) to get one s bearings 2) to lose one s bearings * * * under (to bearings under pressure) [ orientation ] to get one s bearings to lose one s bearings bear up > . (D: intr.) to bearings against … Combinatory dictionary
lose — v. (past and past part. lost) 1 tr. be deprived of or cease to have, esp. by negligence or misadventure. 2 tr. a be deprived of (a person, esp. a close relative) by death. b suffer the loss of (a baby) in childbirth. 3 tr. become unable to find;… … Useful english dictionary
lose — /loohz/, v., lost, losing. v.t. 1. to come to be without (something in one s possession or care), through accident, theft, etc., so that there is little or no prospect of recovery: I m sure I ve merely misplaced my hat, not lost it. 2. to fail… … Universalium
lose — W1S1 [lu:z] v past tense and past participle lost [lɔst US lo:st] ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(stop having attitude/quality etc)¦ 2¦(not win)¦ 3¦(cannot find something)¦ 4¦(stop having something)¦ 5¦(death)¦ 6¦(money)¦ 7 have nothing to lose 8¦(time)¦ … Dictionary of contemporary English
lose — verb (lost; losing) Etymology: Middle English, from Old English losian to perish, lose, from los destruction; akin to Old English lēosan to lose; akin to Old Norse losa to loosen, Latin luere to atone for, Greek lyein to loosen, dissolve, destroy … New Collegiate Dictionary
Ball bearings — Bearing Bear ing (b[^a]r [i^]ng), n. 1. The manner in which one bears or conducts one s self; mien; behavior; carriage. [1913 Webster] I know him by his bearing. Shak. [1913 Webster] 2. Patient endurance; suffering without complaint. [1913… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
To bring one to his bearings — Bearing Bear ing (b[^a]r [i^]ng), n. 1. The manner in which one bears or conducts one s self; mien; behavior; carriage. [1913 Webster] I know him by his bearing. Shak. [1913 Webster] 2. Patient endurance; suffering without complaint. [1913… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English