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1 Outbreak
subs.Outbreak of disease, etc.: P. and V. προσβολή, ἡ; see Visitation.Immediately on the outbreak of hostilities: P. (τοῦ πολέμου) εὐθὺς καθισταμένου (Thuc. 1. 1).Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Outbreak
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2 outbreak
(a sudden beginning (usually of something unpleasant): the outbreak of war.) έκρηξη,ξέσπασμα -
3 outbreak
1) εκδήλωση2) έκρηξη3) ξέσπασμα -
4 epidemic
[epi'demik](an outbreak of a disease that spreads rapidly and attacks very many people: an epidemic of measles/influenza.) επιδημία -
5 kill
[kil] 1. verb(to cause the death of: He killed the rats with poison; The outbreak of typhoid killed many people; The flat tyre killed our hopes of getting home before midnight.) σκοτώνω2. noun(an act of killing: The hunter was determined to make a kill before returning to the camp.) θανάτωση, σκότωμα- killer- kill off
- kill time -
6 storm
[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.) καταιγίδα,θύελλα2) (a violent outbreak of feeling etc: A storm of anger greeted his speech; a storm of applause.) ξέσπασμα2. verb1) (to shout very loudly and angrily: He stormed at her.) ξεσπώ σε φωνές,ωρύομαι2) (to move or stride in an angry manner: He stormed out of the room.) πηγαίνω αγανακτισμένος3) ((of soldiers etc) to attack with great force, and capture (a building etc): They stormed the castle.) κάνω έφοδο,καταλαμβάνω με έφοδο•- stormy- stormily
- storminess
- stormbound
- stormtrooper
- a storm in a teacup
- take by storm -
7 uproar
((an outbreak of) noise, shouting etc: The whole town was in (an) uproar after the football team's victory.) αναστάτωση, σάλος- uproariously -
8 Outburst
Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Outburst
См. также в других словарях:
Outbreak — Título Estallido (España) Epidemia (Hispanoamérica) Ficha técnica Dirección Wolfgang Petersen Producción Gail Katz Arnold Kopelson … Wikipedia Español
outbreak — out break , n. 1. A bursting forth; eruption; insurrection; mutiny; revolt. Mobs and outbreaks. J. H. Newman. [1913 Webster] The flash and outbreak of a fiery mind. Shak. [1913 Webster] 2. A sudden beginning of a violent event; as, the outbreak… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
outbreak — (n.) eruption (of disease, hostilities, etc.), c.1600, from OUT (Cf. out) + BREAK (Cf. break) (v.). Outbreak was a verb in Middle English (c.1300) … Etymology dictionary
outbreak — I noun affray, aggression, agitation, assault, attack, bloodshed, blow up, brawl, breach, breach of the peace, burst, cataclysm, commotion, conflict, convulsion, declaration of war, disruption, disturbance, ebullition, eruption, explosion,… … Law dictionary
outbreak — [n] sudden happening beginning, blowup, brawl, break, breaking, burst, bursting, commencement, commotion, convulsion, crack, crash, dawn, detonation, discharge, disorder, disruption, ebullition, effervescence, epidemic, eruption, explosion, fit,… … New thesaurus
outbreak — ► NOUN ▪ a sudden or violent occurrence of war, disease, etc … English terms dictionary
outbreak — [out′brāk΄] n. 1. a breaking out; sudden occurrence, as of disease or war 2. an insurrection or riot … English World dictionary
Outbreak — For other uses, see Outbreak (disambiguation). Outbreak is a term used in epidemiology to describe an occurrence of disease greater than would otherwise be expected at a particular time and place. It may affect a small and localized group or… … Wikipedia
outbreak — 01. With tensions mounting between the different ethnic groups, the U.N. fears the [outbreak] of a civil war. 02. Decreased tourist revenues are believed to be the result of the SARS [outbreak] in Canada. 03. The Queen s visit has been postponed… … Grammatical examples in English
Outbreak — Filmdaten Deutscher Titel Outbreak – Lautlose Killer Originaltitel Outbreak … Deutsch Wikipedia
outbreak — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ large, major, serious, severe ▪ fresh (esp. BrE), further (esp. BrE), new ▪ recent … Collocations dictionary