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21 استخدم
اِسْتَخْدَمَ \ apply: to put sth. on or into use (force, rules, etc.): Apply as much force as is necessary. employ: to give work to: My firm employs 300 men, to use: She employed every trick that she knew in the hope of getting what she wanted. engage: to give a job to: The school has engaged two new teachers. exercise: to make active use of (one’s mind, a power or right): Exercise a little more patience, please. exploit: to develop; make full use of (things that nature provides: forests, oil, coal, etc.): We can make electricity by exploiting the force of the river. take: to use; follow: We took the train to London. You took the wrong road. Don’t go! You should take this chance of a new job. take on: to give employment to: My company has taken on three new clerks. use: to employ (sth.) for a purpose; do sth. with: We use cups for drinking. I had to use force to open the door. utilize: to make use of (sth. that one has): Coal, oil and gas are all utilized as means of power. \ See Also شغل (شَغَّلَ)، وظف (وَظَّفَ)، استثمر (اِسْتَثْمَر) \ اِسْتَخْدَمَ بِبَرَاعة (أداة، سُلْطة، إلخ) \ wield: old use to use or handle effectively (an axe, sword, power, etc.). \ اِسْتَخْدَمَ الآلة بدلاً من الإنسان \ mechanize: to supply with machines; use machines for (instead of using men, horses, etc.): mechanized farming. \ اِسْتَخْدَمَ علامات الفصل والوقف في الكتابة \ punctuate: to put the stops (?;. etc.) into writing. \ اِسْتَخْدَمَ كَـ \ act as: to be useful for; be used as: The fallen tree acted as a bridge across the river. -
22 apply
اِسْتَخْدَمَ \ apply: to put sth. on or into use (force, rules, etc.): Apply as much force as is necessary. employ: to give work to: My firm employs 300 men, to use: She employed every trick that she knew in the hope of getting what she wanted. engage: to give a job to: The school has engaged two new teachers. exercise: to make active use of (one’s mind, a power or right): Exercise a little more patience, please. exploit: to develop; make full use of (things that nature provides: forests, oil, coal, etc.): We can make electricity by exploiting the force of the river. take: to use; follow: We took the train to London. You took the wrong road. Don’t go! You should take this chance of a new job. take on: to give employment to: My company has taken on three new clerks. use: to employ (sth.) for a purpose; do sth. with: We use cups for drinking. I had to use force to open the door. utilize: to make use of (sth. that one has): Coal, oil and gas are all utilized as means of power. \ See Also شغل (شَغَّلَ)، وظف (وَظَّفَ)، استثمر (اِسْتَثْمَر) -
23 employ
اِسْتَخْدَمَ \ apply: to put sth. on or into use (force, rules, etc.): Apply as much force as is necessary. employ: to give work to: My firm employs 300 men, to use: She employed every trick that she knew in the hope of getting what she wanted. engage: to give a job to: The school has engaged two new teachers. exercise: to make active use of (one’s mind, a power or right): Exercise a little more patience, please. exploit: to develop; make full use of (things that nature provides: forests, oil, coal, etc.): We can make electricity by exploiting the force of the river. take: to use; follow: We took the train to London. You took the wrong road. Don’t go! You should take this chance of a new job. take on: to give employment to: My company has taken on three new clerks. use: to employ (sth.) for a purpose; do sth. with: We use cups for drinking. I had to use force to open the door. utilize: to make use of (sth. that one has): Coal, oil and gas are all utilized as means of power. \ See Also شغل (شَغَّلَ)، وظف (وَظَّفَ)، استثمر (اِسْتَثْمَر) -
24 engage
اِسْتَخْدَمَ \ apply: to put sth. on or into use (force, rules, etc.): Apply as much force as is necessary. employ: to give work to: My firm employs 300 men, to use: She employed every trick that she knew in the hope of getting what she wanted. engage: to give a job to: The school has engaged two new teachers. exercise: to make active use of (one’s mind, a power or right): Exercise a little more patience, please. exploit: to develop; make full use of (things that nature provides: forests, oil, coal, etc.): We can make electricity by exploiting the force of the river. take: to use; follow: We took the train to London. You took the wrong road. Don’t go! You should take this chance of a new job. take on: to give employment to: My company has taken on three new clerks. use: to employ (sth.) for a purpose; do sth. with: We use cups for drinking. I had to use force to open the door. utilize: to make use of (sth. that one has): Coal, oil and gas are all utilized as means of power. \ See Also شغل (شَغَّلَ)، وظف (وَظَّفَ)، استثمر (اِسْتَثْمَر) -
25 exercise
اِسْتَخْدَمَ \ apply: to put sth. on or into use (force, rules, etc.): Apply as much force as is necessary. employ: to give work to: My firm employs 300 men, to use: She employed every trick that she knew in the hope of getting what she wanted. engage: to give a job to: The school has engaged two new teachers. exercise: to make active use of (one’s mind, a power or right): Exercise a little more patience, please. exploit: to develop; make full use of (things that nature provides: forests, oil, coal, etc.): We can make electricity by exploiting the force of the river. take: to use; follow: We took the train to London. You took the wrong road. Don’t go! You should take this chance of a new job. take on: to give employment to: My company has taken on three new clerks. use: to employ (sth.) for a purpose; do sth. with: We use cups for drinking. I had to use force to open the door. utilize: to make use of (sth. that one has): Coal, oil and gas are all utilized as means of power. \ See Also شغل (شَغَّلَ)، وظف (وَظَّفَ)، استثمر (اِسْتَثْمَر) -
26 exploit
اِسْتَخْدَمَ \ apply: to put sth. on or into use (force, rules, etc.): Apply as much force as is necessary. employ: to give work to: My firm employs 300 men, to use: She employed every trick that she knew in the hope of getting what she wanted. engage: to give a job to: The school has engaged two new teachers. exercise: to make active use of (one’s mind, a power or right): Exercise a little more patience, please. exploit: to develop; make full use of (things that nature provides: forests, oil, coal, etc.): We can make electricity by exploiting the force of the river. take: to use; follow: We took the train to London. You took the wrong road. Don’t go! You should take this chance of a new job. take on: to give employment to: My company has taken on three new clerks. use: to employ (sth.) for a purpose; do sth. with: We use cups for drinking. I had to use force to open the door. utilize: to make use of (sth. that one has): Coal, oil and gas are all utilized as means of power. \ See Also شغل (شَغَّلَ)، وظف (وَظَّفَ)، استثمر (اِسْتَثْمَر) -
27 take
اِسْتَخْدَمَ \ apply: to put sth. on or into use (force, rules, etc.): Apply as much force as is necessary. employ: to give work to: My firm employs 300 men, to use: She employed every trick that she knew in the hope of getting what she wanted. engage: to give a job to: The school has engaged two new teachers. exercise: to make active use of (one’s mind, a power or right): Exercise a little more patience, please. exploit: to develop; make full use of (things that nature provides: forests, oil, coal, etc.): We can make electricity by exploiting the force of the river. take: to use; follow: We took the train to London. You took the wrong road. Don’t go! You should take this chance of a new job. take on: to give employment to: My company has taken on three new clerks. use: to employ (sth.) for a purpose; do sth. with: We use cups for drinking. I had to use force to open the door. utilize: to make use of (sth. that one has): Coal, oil and gas are all utilized as means of power. \ See Also شغل (شَغَّلَ)، وظف (وَظَّفَ)، استثمر (اِسْتَثْمَر) -
28 take on
اِسْتَخْدَمَ \ apply: to put sth. on or into use (force, rules, etc.): Apply as much force as is necessary. employ: to give work to: My firm employs 300 men, to use: She employed every trick that she knew in the hope of getting what she wanted. engage: to give a job to: The school has engaged two new teachers. exercise: to make active use of (one’s mind, a power or right): Exercise a little more patience, please. exploit: to develop; make full use of (things that nature provides: forests, oil, coal, etc.): We can make electricity by exploiting the force of the river. take: to use; follow: We took the train to London. You took the wrong road. Don’t go! You should take this chance of a new job. take on: to give employment to: My company has taken on three new clerks. use: to employ (sth.) for a purpose; do sth. with: We use cups for drinking. I had to use force to open the door. utilize: to make use of (sth. that one has): Coal, oil and gas are all utilized as means of power. \ See Also شغل (شَغَّلَ)، وظف (وَظَّفَ)، استثمر (اِسْتَثْمَر) -
29 use
اِسْتَخْدَمَ \ apply: to put sth. on or into use (force, rules, etc.): Apply as much force as is necessary. employ: to give work to: My firm employs 300 men, to use: She employed every trick that she knew in the hope of getting what she wanted. engage: to give a job to: The school has engaged two new teachers. exercise: to make active use of (one’s mind, a power or right): Exercise a little more patience, please. exploit: to develop; make full use of (things that nature provides: forests, oil, coal, etc.): We can make electricity by exploiting the force of the river. take: to use; follow: We took the train to London. You took the wrong road. Don’t go! You should take this chance of a new job. take on: to give employment to: My company has taken on three new clerks. use: to employ (sth.) for a purpose; do sth. with: We use cups for drinking. I had to use force to open the door. utilize: to make use of (sth. that one has): Coal, oil and gas are all utilized as means of power. \ See Also شغل (شَغَّلَ)، وظف (وَظَّفَ)، استثمر (اِسْتَثْمَر) -
30 utilize
اِسْتَخْدَمَ \ apply: to put sth. on or into use (force, rules, etc.): Apply as much force as is necessary. employ: to give work to: My firm employs 300 men, to use: She employed every trick that she knew in the hope of getting what she wanted. engage: to give a job to: The school has engaged two new teachers. exercise: to make active use of (one’s mind, a power or right): Exercise a little more patience, please. exploit: to develop; make full use of (things that nature provides: forests, oil, coal, etc.): We can make electricity by exploiting the force of the river. take: to use; follow: We took the train to London. You took the wrong road. Don’t go! You should take this chance of a new job. take on: to give employment to: My company has taken on three new clerks. use: to employ (sth.) for a purpose; do sth. with: We use cups for drinking. I had to use force to open the door. utilize: to make use of (sth. that one has): Coal, oil and gas are all utilized as means of power. \ See Also شغل (شَغَّلَ)، وظف (وَظَّفَ)، استثمر (اِسْتَثْمَر) -
31 compensate
عَوَّضَ عَن \ compensate: to make a suitable payment for some loss or bad effect: Many companies compensate their workers if they are hurt at work. compensate for: to provide sth. good that makes a loss or bad effect seem less: Nothing can compensate (me) for the loss of my husband. make up for: to do sth. to put right (a wrong, a loss, etc.): You must make up for lost time by working late today. -
32 compensate for
عَوَّضَ عَن \ compensate: to make a suitable payment for some loss or bad effect: Many companies compensate their workers if they are hurt at work. compensate for: to provide sth. good that makes a loss or bad effect seem less: Nothing can compensate (me) for the loss of my husband. make up for: to do sth. to put right (a wrong, a loss, etc.): You must make up for lost time by working late today. -
33 ضمني
ضِمْنِيّ \ implicit: understood but not expressed: He did not answer my written offer of a job; this was an implicit refusal. tacit: understood but not spoken: a tacit agreement. \ ضَمِير \ conscience: the feeling that tells us whether we are doing right or wrong: If we do wrong, we have a guilty conscience. person: one of the three classes of pronoun: the first person (I, we); the second person (you); the third person (he, she, it, they). pronoun: a word (such as you, him, mine) that stands in place of a noun. \ ضَمِير الغائبة المتّصل \ her: the possessive adjective for a female: A mother loves her children, the object form of the personal pronoun she My wife wants you to help her. Tell him but don’t tell her. \ ضَمِير المُتَكلِّم الجَمْع في حالة الإضافة \ our: belonging to us: We make our own bread. \ ضَمِير المُتَكلِّم الجَمْع في حالتي النصب والجرّ \ us: the object form of we: She bought us a drink. \ ضَمِير المُتَكلِّم المُفْرَد \ I: object form me and pl.. we, also possessive forms mine and my pron. the pronoun that one uses in regard to oneself. \ ضَمِير المُتَكلِّم المُفْرَد في حالة الإضافة \ my: belonging to me: my house. \ ضَمِير المُتَكلِّم المُفْرَد في حالتي النَّصب والجَرّ \ me: the object form of the pronoun I: He hit me. he gave me a present. She gave a present to me. \ ضَمِير المخاطَب في حالة الإضافة \ your: belonging to you: This is your dinner; I’ve eaten mine. Have you cut your finger?. \ ضَمِير المذكّر الغائب المتصل المنصوب أو المجرور \ him: strong him/ pron. the object form of the pronoun he: Follow that man - stop him and give him this letter. -
34 أصلح
أَصْلَحَ \ fix: (esp AmE) to repair: I must get the radio fixed - it’s broken. mend: to repair (sth. broken or worn out or torn): My watch needs mending. patch: (mostly with up) to repair (sth. worn or damaged): Please patch up those holes in the road. reform: to change and improve: After leaving prison he decided to reform (his character or behaviour). remedy: to put right (sth. that is wrong): Most faults can be remedied. repair: put (sth. that is damaged or heavily worn) into good condition again: My watch needs repairing. Please repair these holes in my shirts. restore: to repair (a ruined building, a damaged work of art, etc.). \ See Also عَالَجَ، رمم (رَمَّمَ) \ أَصْلَحَ شيئًا بغير مَهارَة \ tinker: (with with) to make unskilful repairs: He’s always tinkering with his old radio set. \ أَصْلَحَ بين \ reconcile: to cause people to be friends again after they have quarrelled, cause people to be friends again after they have quarrelled. \ See Also صالح (صَالَح)، أَصْلَح ذاتَ البَيْن \ أَصْلَحَ النار \ make up a fire: to put more wood or coal on a fire. -
35 عمل (يعمل)
عَمِلَ (يَعْمَلُ) \ do: to perform (one’s duty, one’s best, right, wrong, etc.): I have a lot to do, (used generally instead of a particular verb of action) to attend to; deal with; set in order Have you done (or written) that report yet? Has the cook done (or prepared) the vegetables for dinner? Have you done (or cleaned) your teeth?. go: to work: This clock goes by electricity. make: to form; build; cause (a rule, a mistake, a difference, trouble, etc.) to be or happen: She made some bread. They made a new road. They made a noise. operate: (of machines, plans, etc.) to be effective. perform: to do (a duty, an action, etc.). work: not to rest or play: He’s working in the garden. My boy works hard at school, have a paid job She works in an office. \ عَمِلَ \ work: to move slowly or with much effort: Did you work this screw loose, or did it work loose by itself? I worked through the accounts till I found the mistake. \ See Also تحرك (تَحرّك)، حَرّك ببطء وجهد \ عَمِلَ \ average: amount to as an average; be or do commonly: I average 20 miles a day in my car. \ See Also كان بمُعَدّل...، \ عَمِلَ بِـ (وَقود) \ burn (burnt, burned): to use for making heat or light: Lamps burn oil. \ عَمِلَ بجدٍّ (لإنجاز عملٍ) \ put one’s back into sth: to work hard at it. \ See Also بذَلَ جُهْده \ عَمِلَ دُون إتْقَان \ bungle: to do sth. badly through lack of skill. \ عَمِلَ بشكلٍ عادي \ average: to amount to as an average; be or do commonly: I average 20 miles a day in my car. \ عَمِلَ بنجاح \ work: (of a machine, an idea, etc.) to do what it is meant to do; be effective: This watch won’t work, as its spring is broken. Our plans worked smoothly. \ عَمِلَ ثانيةً \ redo: to do again: This bad work must be redone. \ عَمِلَ على غِرار \ model: to make like a particular example: Her dress was modelled on her mother’s. \ عَمِلَ في الحكومة \ serve: to work for (an employer, one’s country, etc.); work (as a member of a service): I’ve served this company for forty years. My son is serving in the Navy. \ عَمِلَ كَـ \ act as: be useful for; be used as: The fallen tree acted as a bridge across the river. \ عَمِلَ مُدَّة.. \ put: we put in an hour’s work. \ عَمِلَ مَلاّحًا \ crew: to work on a ship, boat or aeroplane. -
36 place
[pleɪs]1. noun1) a particular spot or area:مَكانI spent my holiday in various different places.
2) an empty space:مَكان فارِغThere's a place for your books on this shelf.
3) an area or building with a particular purpose:مَكان لهَدَفٍ خاصa market-place.
4) a seat (in a theatre, train, at a table etc):مَقْعَدHe went to his place and sat down.
5) a position in an order, series, queue etc:مَرْتَبَهI lost my place in the queue.
مَرْكِزYou must keep your secretary in her place.
نُقْطَه، مَقْطَعThe wind was blowing the pages of my book and I kept losing my place.
8) duty or right:واجِب، حَقIt's not my place to tell him he's wrong.
9) a job or position in a team, organization etc:مَكانَهHe's hoping for a place on the staff.
10) house; home:بَيْت، مَنْزِلCome over to my place.
11) ( often abbreviated to Pl. when written) a word used in the names of certain roads, streets or squares.مَحَل12) a number or one of a series of numbers following a decimal point:مَنْزِلَهMake the answer correct to four decimal places.
2. verb1) to put:يَضَعHe was placed in command of the army.
2) to remember who a person is:يَتَذَكَّرI know I've seen her before, but I can't quite place her.
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37 ضيق
ضَيِّق \ cramped: pressed into a small space: Poor families often live in cramped conditions. narrow: not wide; measuring little from side to side: a narrow road; a narrow doorway, limited narrow political opinions. poky: (of a place) small; lacking space: a poky little room. strict: exact; limited: Poets do not always use a word in its strict sense. tight: firm; fixed so that it cannot move; fitting very close: a tight screw; tight shoes. \ ضَيَّقَ (الملابس) \ take in: (of clothes) to make smaller: If you lose a lot of weight, you’ll have to take all your clothes in. \ ضَيِّق التفكير \ provincial: of a province; (in a bad sense) like the provinces away from the main city; dull, or concerned with small and unimportant matters: She’s a member of the provincial government. Their life has become very provincial. \ ضَيِّق الخُلُق \ peevish: easily annoyed about unimportant things. petulant: childishly bad-tempered in speech or behaviour. \ ضَيِّق الصَّدْر \ impatient: unable to suffer annoyance without complaining: I get impatient with her foolish questions. \ ضَيِّق الفِكْر \ narrow-minded: having fixed opinions (esp. about right and wrong); unable to understand the opinions of others. \ See Also الأُفُق -
38 فرق
فَرْق \ difference: being unlike or changed: What’s the difference between swimming and floating? Have you noticed any difference in England since your last visit?. distinction: a clear difference: the distinction between right and wrong. margin: a space between two amounts (of time, money, etc.; esp. between what one needs and what one has, or between a fixed amount and a possible amount): The government’s won the election by a narrow margin. It’s a two-hour journey, but we’ll leave a margin of half an hour for possible delays. \ أَحْدَثَ فَرْقًا \ make a difference: to matter: It makes no difference whether you agree or not. -
39 فعل
فَعَلَ \ act: to do sth.: When in danger, one must act swiftly. I was acting on her orders. do: to perform (work, one’s duty, one’s best, right, wrong, etc.): I have a lot to do, (used generally instead of a particular verb of action) to attend to; deal with; set in order Have you done (or written) that report yet? Has the cook done (or prepared) the vegatables for dinner? Have you done (or cleaned) your teeth?, to act; behave You must do as I do. Well done!. \ فَعَلَ (يفْعَلُ) \ do ([b]did, done)[/b]. \ فَعَلَ شيئًا بالقوّة \ force: to make or do sth. by using strength: he forced his way through the crowd. \ فَعَلَ فِعْلَهُ (في) \ affect: to have an effect on: Bad food affects our health, have an effect on Bad food affects our health. \ See Also أَثَّرَ في \ فَعَلَ مِثلَ \ follow suit: to copy sb.’s example: My brother walked out of the meeting, and I followed suit. -
40 do
عَمِلَ (يَعْمَلُ) \ do: to perform (one’s duty, one’s best, right, wrong, etc.): I have a lot to do, (used generally instead of a particular verb of action) to attend to; deal with; set in order Have you done (or written) that report yet? Has the cook done (or prepared) the vegetables for dinner? Have you done (or cleaned) your teeth?. go: to work: This clock goes by electricity. make: to form; build; cause (a rule, a mistake, a difference, trouble, etc.) to be or happen: She made some bread. They made a new road. They made a noise. operate: (of machines, plans, etc.) to be effective. perform: to do (a duty, an action, etc.). work: not to rest or play: He’s working in the garden. My boy works hard at school, have a paid job She works in an office.
См. также в других словарях:
two wrongs don't make a right — two wrongs don’t make a right phrase used for saying that you should not react to someone’s wrong behaviour by doing something wrong yourself Thesaurus: revengesynonym Main entry: two * * * proverb the fact that someone has done something unjust… … Useful english dictionary
Two wrongs make a right — is a logical fallacy that occurs when it is assumed that if one wrong is committed, another wrong will cancel it out. Like many fallacies, it typically appears as the hidden major premise in an enthymeme mdash;an unstated assumption which must be … Wikipedia
two wrongs don't make a right — ► two wrongs don t make a right proverb the fact that someone has done something unjust or dishonest is no justification for acting in a similar way. Main Entry: ↑wrong … English terms dictionary
right — [adj1] fair, just appropriate, condign, conscientious, deserved, due, equitable, ethical, fitting, good, honest, honorable, justifiable, lawful, legal, legitimate, merited, moral, proper, requisite, righteous, rightful, scrupulous, standup*,… … New thesaurus
wrong — ► ADJECTIVE 1) not correct or true; mistaken or in error. 2) unjust, dishonest, or immoral. 3) in a bad or abnormal condition; amiss. ► ADVERB 1) in a mistaken or undesirable manner or direction. 2) with an incorrect result. ► … English terms dictionary
right — [rīt] adj. [ME < OE riht, straight, direct, right, akin to Ger recht < IE base * reĝ , straight, stretch out, put in order > RICH, RECKON, L regere, to rule, rex, king, regula, a rule] 1. Obs. not curved; straight: now only in… … English World dictionary
two wrongs don't make a right — used for saying that you should not react to someone s wrong behaviour by doing something wrong yourself … English dictionary
wrong — wrong1 W1S1 [rɔŋ US ro:ŋ] adj ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(not correct)¦ 2 be wrong (about somebody/something) 3¦(problems)¦ 4¦(not the right one)¦ 5¦(not morally right)¦ 6¦(not suitable)¦ 7¦(not working)¦ 8 be the wrong way round/around 9 the wrong way up … Dictionary of contemporary English
right — I [[t]ra͟ɪt[/t]] CORRECT, APPROPRIATE, OR ACCEPTABLE ♦ rights, righting, righted (Please look at category 17 to see if the expression you are looking for is shown under another headword.) 1) ADJ If something is right, it is correct and agrees… … English dictionary
wrong — 1 adjective 1 NOT CORRECT saying, believing, or depending on something that is not correct: Your calculations must be wrong. | be wrong to think/say: I m sorry; I was wrong to assume that you wanted to go. | prove sb wrong: I wish you d stop… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
wrong — [[t]rɒ̱ŋ, AM rɔ͟ːŋ[/t]] ♦♦ wrongs, wronging, wronged 1) ADJ GRADED: v link ADJ, oft ADJ with n If you say there is something wrong, you mean there is something unsatisfactory about the situation, person, or thing you are talking about. Pain is… … English dictionary