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1 pating
a. 헐떡거리는, 가슴이 두근거리는 -
2 pating machine
English-Russian dictionary of leather and footwear industry > pating machine
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3 non expedit (A late 19th- and early 20th-century policy of the Roman Catholic church that prohibited its Italian members from partici-pating in politics)
Религия: политика папского запретаУниверсальный англо-русский словарь > non expedit (A late 19th- and early 20th-century policy of the Roman Catholic church that prohibited its Italian members from partici-pating in politics)
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4 dogfish
patíng -
5 shark
patíng -
6 dogfish
patíng -
7 shark
patíng -
8 non expedit
Религия: (A late 19th- and early 20th-century policy of the Roman Catholic church that prohibited its Italian members from partici-pating in politics) политика папского запрета -
9 anticipate
æn'tisəpeit1) (to expect (something): I'm not anticipating any trouble.) esperar, contar con2) (to see what is going to be wanted, required etc in the future and do what is necessary: A businessman must try to anticipate what his customers will want.) prever•tr[æn'tɪsɪpeɪt]1 (expect) esperar2 (get ahead of) adelantarse a■ we wanted to be first, but the others anticipated us quisimos ser los primeros, pero los otros se nos adelantaron3 (forsee) anticiparse a, prever■ you should try to anticipate your opponent's next move debes intentar anticiparte al movimiento de tu oponente1) foresee: anticipar, prever2) expect: esperar, contar conv.• adelantar v.• anticipar v.• impedir v.• prever v.(§pres: preveo, preves...) imp. preve-•)æn'tɪsəpeɪt, æn'tɪsɪpeɪt1)a) ( expect) \<\<consequences\>\> prever*it was more difficult than anticipated — resultó más difícil de lo que se había previsto or de lo que se esperaba
to anticipate -ing — tener* previsto + inf
b) ( look forward to) esperar2)a) ( foresee and act accordingly) \<\<movements/objections/needs\>\> prever*I anticipated the blow — vi venir* el golpe
b) ( preempt) anticiparse a, adelantarse a[æn'tɪsɪpeɪt]1. VT1) (=expect) [+ trouble, pleasure] esperar, contar conthe police anticipated trouble — la policía esperaba disturbios, la policía contaba con que hubiera disturbios
I anticipate seeing him tomorrow — espero or cuento con verlo mañana
as anticipated — según se esperaba, como esperábamos
the anticipated audience did not materialize — no apareció el público que se esperaba or con que se había contado
to anticipate that... — prever que..., calcular que...
do you anticipate that this will be easy? — ¿crees que esto va a resultar fácil?
we anticipate that he will come in spite of everything — contamos con que or esperamos que venga a pesar de todo
2) (=foresee) [+ event] prever; [+ question, objection, wishes] anticiparanticipated cost — (Comm) coste m previsto
anticipated profit — beneficios mpl previstos
3) (=forestall) [+ person] anticiparse a, adelantarse a; [+ event] anticiparse a, preveniryou have anticipated my wishes — usted se ha anticipado or adelantado a mis deseos
you have anticipated my orders — (wrongly) usted ha actuado sin esperar mis órdenes
2.VI (=act too soon) anticiparse* * *[æn'tɪsəpeɪt, æn'tɪsɪpeɪt]1)a) ( expect) \<\<consequences\>\> prever*it was more difficult than anticipated — resultó más difícil de lo que se había previsto or de lo que se esperaba
to anticipate -ing — tener* previsto + inf
b) ( look forward to) esperar2)a) ( foresee and act accordingly) \<\<movements/objections/needs\>\> prever*I anticipated the blow — vi venir* el golpe
b) ( preempt) anticiparse a, adelantarse a -
10 constipate
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11 dissipate
tr['dɪsɪpeɪt]2 (dispel - fears, anxiety) disipar, (hacer) desvanecer3 (squander, waste - fortune, wealth) derrochar, disipar, dilapidar; (energies, efforts) desperdiciar1 (mist, fog) disiparse; (crowd) dispersarse; (enthusiasm, anger, doubts, fears) disiparse, desvanecerse1) disperse: disipar, dispersar2) squander: malgastar, desperdiciar, derrochar, disiparv.• desparramar v.• despilfarrar v.• disipar v.'dɪsəpeɪt, 'dɪsɪpeɪt
1.
transitive verb (frml)a) ( squander) \<\<inheritance\>\> disipar, dilapidar; \<\<energy/talents\>\> desperdiciarb) ( dispel) \<\<anxiety\>\> disipar, hacer* desvanecer
2.
vi (frml) \<\<anger/doubts\>\> disiparse, desvanecerse*['dɪsɪpeɪt]1. VT1) (=dispel) [+ fear, doubt etc] disipar2) (=waste) [+ efforts, fortune] derrochar2.VI disiparse* * *['dɪsəpeɪt, 'dɪsɪpeɪt]
1.
transitive verb (frml)a) ( squander) \<\<inheritance\>\> disipar, dilapidar; \<\<energy/talents\>\> desperdiciarb) ( dispel) \<\<anxiety\>\> disipar, hacer* desvanecer
2.
vi (frml) \<\<anger/doubts\>\> disiparse, desvanecerse* -
12 emancipate
i'mænsipeit(to set free from slavery or other strict or unfair control.) emancipartr[ɪ'mænsɪpeɪt]1 emanciparv.• emancipar v.• manumitir v.ɪ'mænsəpeɪt, ɪ'mænsɪpeɪttransitive verb (frml)[ɪ'mænsɪpeɪt]VT [+ women, slaves] emancipar; (fig) liberar* * *[ɪ'mænsəpeɪt, ɪ'mænsɪpeɪt]transitive verb (frml) -
13 exculpate
v.• exculpar v.'ekskʌlpeɪttransitive verb (frml) exculpar (frml)['ekskʌlpeɪt]VT exculpar* * *['ekskʌlpeɪt]transitive verb (frml) exculpar (frml) -
14 extirpate
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15 participate
(to be one of a group of people actively doing something: Did you participate in the discussion?) participar (en)- participant
- participator
participate vb participartr[pɑː'tɪsɪpeɪt]1 participar (in, en)v.• participar v.pər'tɪsəpeɪt, pɑːr-, pɑː'tɪsɪpeɪtto participate (IN something) — participar or tomar parte (en algo)
[pɑː'tɪsɪpeɪt]VI participar, tomar parte (in en)participating countries — países mpl participantes
* * *[pər'tɪsəpeɪt, pɑːr-, pɑː'tɪsɪpeɪt]to participate (IN something) — participar or tomar parte (en algo)
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16 syncopate
'siŋkəpeit(to alter the rhythm of (music) by putting the accent on beats not usually accented.) sincopartr['sɪŋkəpeɪt]1 sincoparv.• sincopar v.['sɪŋkǝpeɪt]VT sincopar -
17 shark
(n) patíng -
18 77 white sharks
pitumput-pitong puting pating -
19 77 white sharks
pitumput-pitong puting pating
См. также в других словарях:
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anticipate — verb ( pated; pating) Etymology: Latin anticipatus, past participle of anticipare, from ante + cipare (from capere to take) more at heave Date: 1532 transitive verb 1. to give advance thought, discussion, or … New Collegiate Dictionary
constipate — transitive verb ( pated; pating) Etymology: Medieval Latin constipatus, past participle of constipare, from Latin, to crowd together, from com + stipare to pack tight more at stiff Date: 1533 1. to cause constipation in 2. to make … New Collegiate Dictionary
dissipate — verb ( pated; pating) Etymology: Latin dissipatus, past participle of dissipare, dissupare, from dis + supare to throw Date: 15th century transitive verb 1. a. to break up and drive off (as a crowd) b. to cause to spread thin or … New Collegiate Dictionary
emancipate — transitive verb ( pated; pating) Etymology: Latin emancipatus, past participle of emancipare, from e + mancipare to transfer ownership of, from mancip , manceps contractor, from manus hand + capere to take more at manual, heave Date: 1613 1. to… … New Collegiate Dictionary
exculpate — transitive verb ( pated; pating) Etymology: Medieval Latin exculpatus, past participle of exculpare, from Latin ex + culpa blame Date: circa 1681 to clear from alleged fault or guilt • exculpation noun Synonyms: exculpate, absolve, exonerate,… … New Collegiate Dictionary
extirpate — transitive verb ( pated; pating) Etymology: Latin exstirpatus, past participle of exstirpare, from ex + stirp , stirps trunk, root Date: 1535 1. a. to destroy completely ; wipe out b. to pull up by the root 2. to cut out by surgery Synonym … New Collegiate Dictionary
inculpate — transitive verb ( pated; pating) Etymology: Late Latin inculpatus, from Latin in + culpatus, past participle of culpare to blame, from culpa guilt Date: 1799 incriminate • inculpation noun • inculpatory adjective … New Collegiate Dictionary
participate — verb ( pated; pating) Etymology: Latin participatus, past participle of participare, from particip , particeps participant, from part , pars part + capere to take more at heave Date: 1531 transitive verb archaic partake intransitive verb … New Collegiate Dictionary
syncopate — transitive verb ( pated; pating) Date: 1605 1. a. to shorten or produce by syncope < syncopate suppose to s pose > b. to cut short ; clip, abbreviate 2. to modify or affect (musical rhythm) by syncopation • syncopator … New Collegiate Dictionary