Перевод: с английского на греческий

с греческого на английский

predict

  • 1 Predict

    v. trans.
    Ar. and P. προαγορεύειν, προειπεῖν, P. and V. προλέγειν, V. προσημαίνειν, προφαίνειν, προφωνεῖν.
    Predict by oracles: P. and V. μαντεύεσθαι, P. ἀπομαντεύεσθαι, Ar. and P. χρησμῳδεῖν, V. προμαντεύεσθαι (Eur., frag.), θεσπίζειν, προθεσπίζειν, φημίζειν, Ar. and V. θεσπιῳδεῖν; see Prophesy.

    Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Predict

  • 2 predict

    [pri'dikt]
    (to say in advance; to foretell: He predicted a change in the weather.) προλέγω,προβλέπω
    - prediction

    English-Greek dictionary > predict

  • 3 predict

    1) προβλέπω
    2) προλέγω

    English-Greek new dictionary > predict

  • 4 Forecast

    v. trans.
    Guess: P. and V. εἰκάζειν, συμβάλλειν, στοχάζεσθαι (gen.). τεκμαίρεσθαι, δοξάζειν, τοπάζειν, V. ἐπεικάζειν; see Conjecture.
    Predict: P. and V. προλέγειν, μαντεύεσθαι, P. ἀπομαντεύεσθαι.
    ——————
    subs.
    Guess, conjecture: P. and V. δόξα, ἡ, δόκησις, ἡ, P. δόξασμα, τό.
    Prediction: P. and V. μαντεία, ἡ.

    Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Forecast

  • 5 Prophesy

    v. trans.
    Predict: Ar. and P. προαγορεύειν, προειπεῖν, P. and V. προλέγειν, V. προσημαίνειν, προφαίνειν, προφωνεῖν.
    Prophesy by oracles: P. and V. μαντεύεσθαι, P. ἀπομαντεύεσθαι, Ar. and P. χρησμῳδεῖν, V. προμαντεύεσθαι, (Eur., frag.), θεσπίζειν, προθεσπίζειν, φημίζειν, Ar. and V. θεσπιῳδεῖν.
    It was prophesied to me: V. ἐμοὶ... ἦν πρόφαντον (Soph., Tr. 1158).
    Prophesying truly, adj.: V. ληθόμαντις.
    Prophesying falsely: V. ψευδόμαντις.

    Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Prophesy

См. также в других словарях:

  • predict — pre‧dict [prɪˈdɪkt] verb [transitive] to say what you think will happen: • Wall Street had been predicting a quarterly profit of 5 cents per share. predict that • Economists are predicting that growth will slow. • Unemployment is predicted to… …   Financial and business terms

  • Predict — Pre*dict , v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Predicted}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Predicting}.] [L. praedictus, p. p. of praedicere to predict; prae before + dicere to say, tell. See {Diction}, and cf. {Preach}.] To tell or declare beforehand; to foretell; to… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Predict — Pre*dict , n. A prediction. [Obs.] Shak. [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • predict — I verb adumbrate, advise, announce in advance, anticipate, augur, auspicate, betoken, bode, divine, envision, forebode, forecast, foreknow, foresee, foreshadow, foreshow, forespeak, foretell, foretoken, forewarn, give notice, herald, indicate,… …   Law dictionary

  • predict — (v.) 1620s, foretell, prophesy, from L. praedicatus, pp. of praedicere foretell, advise, give notice, from prae before (see PRE (Cf. pre )) + dicere to say (see DICTION (Cf. diction)). Scientific sense of to have as a deducible consequence is… …   Etymology dictionary

  • predict — *foretell, forecast, prophesy, prognosticate, augur, presage, portend, forebode Analogous words: *foresee, foreknow, divine: *warn, forewarn, caution: surmise, Conjecture, guess …   New Dictionary of Synonyms

  • predict — [v] express an outcome in advance adumbrate, anticipate, augur, be afraid, call, call it, conclude, conjecture, croak, crystal ball* divine, envision, figure, figure out, forebode, forecast, foresee, forespeak, foretell, gather, guess, have a… …   New thesaurus

  • predict — ► VERB ▪ state that (a specified event) will happen in the future. DERIVATIVES predictive adjective predictor noun. ORIGIN Latin praedicere make known beforehand, declare …   English terms dictionary

  • predict — [prē dikt′, pridikt′] vt., vi. [< L praedictus, pp. of praedicere < prae , before (see PRE ) + dicere, to tell: see DICTION] to say in advance (what one believes will happen); foretell (a future event or events) predictability n.… …   English World dictionary

  • predict — verb ADVERB ▪ correctly, reliably, successfully ▪ incorrectly, wrongly ▪ accurately, exactly, precisely, with accura …   Collocations dictionary

  • predict — predictable, adj. predictability, n. predictably, adv. /pri dikt /, v.t. 1. to declare or tell in advance; prophesy; foretell: to predict the weather; to predict the fall of a civilization. v.i. 2. to foretell the future; make a prediction. [1540 …   Universalium

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