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1 ought
[ɔːt]1) (expressing probability, expectation)••Note:In virtually all cases, ought is translated by the conditional tense of dovere: you ought to go now = dovresti andartene adesso; they ought to arrive tomorrow = dovrebbero arrivare domani. - The past ought to have done / seen etc is translated by the past conditional of dovere: he ought to have been more polite = avrebbe dovuto essere più gentile. For further examples, including negative sentences, see the entry below. - The Italian verb dovere is irregular; for its conjugation see the Italian verb tables* * *[o:t]negative short form - oughtn't; verb1) (used to indicate duty; should: You ought to help them; He oughtn't to have done that.) dovere2) (used to indicate something that one could reasonably expect; should: He ought to have been able to do it.) dovere* * *I [ɔːt] nSee:aughtII [ɔːt]modal aux vb ought pt1)I ought to do it — dovrei farlo2)you ought to go and see it — dovresti andare a vederlo, faresti bene ad andarlo a vedere3)that ought to be enough — quello dovrebbe bastarehe ought to have arrived by now — dovrebbe essere arrivato, ormai
* * *[ɔːt]1) (expressing probability, expectation)••Note:In virtually all cases, ought is translated by the conditional tense of dovere: you ought to go now = dovresti andartene adesso; they ought to arrive tomorrow = dovrebbero arrivare domani. - The past ought to have done / seen etc is translated by the past conditional of dovere: he ought to have been more polite = avrebbe dovuto essere più gentile. For further examples, including negative sentences, see the entry below. - The Italian verb dovere is irregular; for its conjugation see the Italian verb tables -
2 still
I [stɪl]1) (up to and including a point in time) ancora2) (expressing surprise) ancora3) (yet to happen) ancora4) (expressing probability) ancora5) (nevertheless) ancora, tuttaviastill, it's the thought that counts — in fondo, è il pensiero che conta
6) (with comparatives: even) ancoraII 1. [stɪl]faster still still faster ancora più veloce; worse still — ancora peggio
1) (motionless) [air, water] calmo; [hand, person] immobile, fermo2) (peaceful) [house, streets] tranquillo, silenzioso2.1) (immobile) [lie, stay] immobileto hold [sth.] still — tenere (ben) fermo [camera, mirror]
2) (calmly)to keep o stand still — non muoversi, stare fermo
••III [stɪl]1) (calmness)2) cinem. fotogramma m.; fot. posa f.IV [stɪl]1) (silence) fare tacere [critic, voice]2) (calm) calmare [crowd, doubt]V [stɪl]* * *I 1. [stil] adjective1) (without movement or noise: The city seems very still in the early morning; Please stand/sit/keep/hold still while I brush your hair!; still (= calm) water/weather.)2) ((of drinks) not fizzy: still orange juice.)2. noun(a photograph selected from a cinema film: The magazine contained some stills from the new film.)- stillborn II [stil] adverb1) (up to and including the present time, or the time mentioned previously: Are you still working for the same firm?; By Saturday he had still not / still hadn't replied to my letter.)2) (nevertheless; in spite of that: Although the doctor told him to rest, he still went on working; This picture is not valuable - still, I like it.)3) (even: He seemed very ill in the afternoon and in the evening looked still worse.)* * *I [stɪl]1) (up to and including a point in time) ancora2) (expressing surprise) ancora3) (yet to happen) ancora4) (expressing probability) ancora5) (nevertheless) ancora, tuttaviastill, it's the thought that counts — in fondo, è il pensiero che conta
6) (with comparatives: even) ancoraII 1. [stɪl]faster still still faster ancora più veloce; worse still — ancora peggio
1) (motionless) [air, water] calmo; [hand, person] immobile, fermo2) (peaceful) [house, streets] tranquillo, silenzioso2.1) (immobile) [lie, stay] immobileto hold [sth.] still — tenere (ben) fermo [camera, mirror]
2) (calmly)to keep o stand still — non muoversi, stare fermo
••III [stɪl]1) (calmness)2) cinem. fotogramma m.; fot. posa f.IV [stɪl]1) (silence) fare tacere [critic, voice]2) (calm) calmare [crowd, doubt]V [stɪl]
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