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21 pose ***
[pəʊz]1. n2. vt1) (person) mettere in posa2) (problem, difficulty) porre, creare, (question) fare3. vito pose as — (pretend to be) atteggiarsi a, posare a, fingere di essere
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22 put on
put on [sth.], put [sth.] on2) (switch on) accendere [light, heating]; mettere [record, tape, music]to put the brakes on — frenare, azionare i freni
3) (gain) mettere su, prendere [weight, kilo]5) (produce) allestire, mettere in scena [ play]; allestire [ exhibition]6) (adopt) assumere [ expression]; prendere [ accent]he's putting it on — fa finta, fa solo scena
7) (offer) aggiungere [ extra train]; offrire [ meal]8) (put forward) mettere avanti [ clock]to put a bet on — fare una scommessa su; put [sb.] on
10) tel. (connect) mettere in comunicazione con, passare11) AE colloq. prendere in giro12) (recommend)to put sb. on to sth. — indicare o consigliare qcs. a qcn.
to put sb. on to — mettere qcn. sulla pista di [criminal, runaway]
* * *1) (to switch on (a light etc): Put the light on!) accendere2) (to dress oneself in: Which shoes are you going to put on?) mettere, indossare3) (to add or increase: The car put on speed; I've put on weight.) aumentare, mettere su4) (to present or produce (a play etc): They're putting on `Hamlet' next week.) allestire5) (to provide (eg transport): They always put on extra buses between 8.00 and 9.00 a.m.) mettere6) (to make a false show of; to pretend: She said she felt ill, but she was just putting it on.) fingere, fare finta7) (to bet (money) on: I've put a pound on that horse to win.) puntare, scommettere* * *vt + adv1) (clothes, lipstick, shoes) mettere, mettersi3) (add, increase: speed, pressure) aumentareto put on weight — aumentare di peso, ingrassare
4) (concert, exhibition) allestire, organizzare, (play) mettere in scena, (extra bus, train) mettere in serviziowe're putting on "Bugsy Malone" — stiamo mettendo in scena "Bugsy Malone"
5)put me on to Mr Strong please — mi passi il signor Strong per favore6) (switch on: light etc) accendere, (kettle, meal) metter su7)(inform, indicate)
to put sb on to sb/sth — indicare qn/qc a qn* * *put on [sth.], put [sth.] on2) (switch on) accendere [light, heating]; mettere [record, tape, music]to put the brakes on — frenare, azionare i freni
3) (gain) mettere su, prendere [weight, kilo]5) (produce) allestire, mettere in scena [ play]; allestire [ exhibition]6) (adopt) assumere [ expression]; prendere [ accent]he's putting it on — fa finta, fa solo scena
7) (offer) aggiungere [ extra train]; offrire [ meal]8) (put forward) mettere avanti [ clock]to put a bet on — fare una scommessa su; put [sb.] on
10) tel. (connect) mettere in comunicazione con, passare11) AE colloq. prendere in giro12) (recommend)to put sb. on to sth. — indicare o consigliare qcs. a qcn.
to put sb. on to — mettere qcn. sulla pista di [criminal, runaway]
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23 democrat
['deməkræt] 1.nome US pol. democratico m. (-a)2.modificatore [ politician] democratico, del Partito Democratico* * *['deməkræt]noun (one who believes in democracy as a principle: She likes to pretend she's a democrat.) democratico* * *['deməkræt] 1.nome US pol. democratico m. (-a)2.modificatore [ politician] democratico, del Partito Democratico -
24 feign
[feɪn]verbo transitivo form. fingere [innocence, surprise]; simulare [ illness]* * *[fein](to pretend to feel: He feigned illness.) fingere, simulare- feigned* * *[feɪn]verbo transitivo form. fingere [innocence, surprise]; simulare [ illness] -
25 make believe
* * *(to pretend (that): The children made believe they were animals.) fare finta di* * * -
26 malinger
[mə'lɪŋgə(r)]verbo intransitivo spreg. darsi malato* * *[mə'liŋɡə](to pretend to be unwell eg in order to avoid work: He says he's ill, but I think he's just malingering.) simulare (una malattia)* * *[mə'lɪŋgə(r)]verbo intransitivo spreg. darsi malato -
27 pass (something or someone) off as
(to pretend that (something or someone) is (something or someone else): He passed himself off as a journalist.) farsi passare perEnglish-Italian dictionary > pass (something or someone) off as
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28 pass (something or someone) off as
(to pretend that (something or someone) is (something or someone else): He passed himself off as a journalist.) farsi passare perEnglish-Italian dictionary > pass (something or someone) off as
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29 play at
1) (to pretend to be etc: The children were playing at cowboys and Indians.) giocare a2) (used when asking angrily what someone is doing: What does he think he's playing at (=doing)?) giocare a -
30 play possum
(to pretend to be dead or asleep.) (fingersi morto); (fingere di dormire) -
31 profess
[prə'fes]1) (claim) pretendere2) (declare openly) professare, dichiarare apertamente [opinion, religion]* * *[prə'fes] 1. verb1) (to state or declare openly.) professare, dichiarare2) (to claim or pretend: He professed to be an expert.) dichiararsi•- professional 2. noun(( abbreviation pro [prou]) a person who is professional: a golf professional/pro.) professionista* * *[prə'fes]1) (claim) pretendere2) (declare openly) professare, dichiarare apertamente [opinion, religion] -
32 put on an act
(to pretend: I thought she had hurt herself but she was only putting on an act.) fare finta, fingere -
33 turn a blind eye
(to pretend not to see or notice (something): Because he works so hard, his boss turns a blind eye when he comes in late.) (chiudere un occhio)
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См. также в других словарях:
Pretend — Pre*tend , v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Pretended}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Pretending}.] [OE. pretenden to lay claim to, F. pr[ e]tendre, L. praetendere, praetentum, to stretch forward, pretend, simulate, assert; prae before + tendere to stretch. See {Tend}, v … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
pretend — [prē tend′, pritend′] vt. [ME pretenden, to intend < MFr pretendre < L praetendere, to hold forth, allege < prae , before + tendere, to stretch: see THIN] 1. to claim; profess; allege [to pretend ignorance of the law] 2. to claim or… … English World dictionary
Pretend — Pre*tend , v. i. 1. To put in, or make, a claim, truly or falsely; to allege a title; to lay claim to, or strive after, something; usually with to. Countries that pretend to freedom. Swift. [1913 Webster] For to what fine he would anon pretend,… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
pretend to — [phrasal verb] pretend to (something) formal : to claim that you have (something, such as a quality or ability) She pretends to a deep religious devotion, but I don t believe her. usually used in negative statements I don t pretend to any… … Useful english dictionary
pretend — [v1] fake, falsify act, affect, allege, assume, be deceitful, beguile, be hypocritical, bluff, cheat, claim, claim falsely, counterfeit, cozen, deceive, delude, dissemble, dissimulate, dupe, fake out*, feign, fish*, fool, fudge*, hoodwink*,… … New thesaurus
pretend — ► VERB 1) make it appear that something is the case when in fact it is not. 2) engage in an imaginative game. 3) simulate (an emotion or quality). 2) (pretend to) lay claim to (a quality or title). ► ADJECTIVE informal ▪ imaginary; make believe … English terms dictionary
pretend — I verb act, affect, assume, be deceitful, be hypocritical, beguile, bemask, bluff, cheat, claim falsely, counterfeit, cozen, deceive, delude, disguise, dissemble, dissimulare, dissimulate, dupe, fake, falsify, feign, fingere, fool, give a false… … Law dictionary
pretend to be — index assume (simulate), impersonate, pose (impersonate) Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
pretend — (v.) late 14c., to profess, assert, maintain (a claim, etc.), to direct (one s) efforts, from O.Fr. pretendre to lay claim, from L. praetendere stretch in front, put forward, allege, from prae before (see PRE (Cf. pre )) + tendere to stretch,… … Etymology dictionary
pretend — *assume, affect, simulate, feign, counterfeit, sham Analogous words: *disguise, dissemble, cloak, mask, camouflage: *deceive, delude, mislead, beguile … New Dictionary of Synonyms
pretend — I UK [prɪˈtend] / US verb Word forms pretend : present tense I/you/we/they pretend he/she/it pretends present participle pretending past tense pretended past participle pretended ** 1) [intransitive/transitive] to behave in a particular way… … English dictionary