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1 pull out
اِنْطَلَقَ (قَطَعَ) \ do: to go (at a certain speed, or for a certain distance): This car can do 80 miles an hour. We did 150 miles before breakfast. go: (of instruments that call people) sound: The whistle went and the game ended. pull out: (of a vehicle or driver) to move out: The train pulled slowly out of the station. run: (of a vehicle or ship) to go: Trains run every hour from here to Glasgow. -
2 pull
[pul]1. verb1) to (try to) move something especially towards oneself usually by using force:يَسْحَب، يَجُرThis railway engine can pull twelve carriages.
يَسْحَبُ نَفَسا من السّيجارَهHe pulled at his cigarette.
3) to row:يُجَذِّفHe pulled towards the shore.
4) (of a driver or vehicle) to steer or move in a certain direction:يَقودُ أو يوقِف السَّيّارة في إتّجاه مُعَيَّنHe pulled off the road.
2. noun1) an act of pulling:جَر، سَحْب، شَد، جَذْبHe took a pull at his beer/pipe.
2) a pulling or attracting force:جَذْبthe pull (=attraction) of the sea.
3) influence:تأثيرHe thinks he has some pull with the headmaster.
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3 pull
جَذَبَ \ attract: to pull towards by a hidden force: magnets attract iron, to draw the attention of Football attracts large crowds. haul: to pull with great effort: We hauled the boat out of the water. pluck: to pick or pull, with a sharp twist of the hand: The child plucked at her sleeve. pull: (the opposite of push) to draw (sth.) towards oneself: Pull the rope to ring the bell. Don’t pull so hard, or you’ll break it. -
4 pull
سَحَبَ \ drag: to pull with difficulty (sth. or sb. heavy or unwilling to move): We dragged the fallen tree off the road. I dragged my son out of bed. draw (drew, drawn): to obtain (money from a bank, pay from one’s employer, water from a well, etc.). pull: (the opposite of push) to draw (sth.) towards oneself: Pull the rope to ring the bell. Don’t pull so hard, or you’ll break it. retract: to take back (sth. said before): She retracted her statement, because she had got the facts wrong. revoke: to take back (an official order, decision, etc.). tow: to pull with a rope (a vehicle or boat): The damaged car was towed away. withdraw: to take back (an offer, money from the bank, soldiers, from a battle, etc.). \ See Also جر (جَرَّ)، ألغى (أَلْغَى)، تَراجَعَ (عن أقواله)، استرد (اِسْتَرَدَّ) -
5 pull up
تَوَقَّفَ \ break down: (of a machine) to stop working: My car broke down on the way to town. cease: to stop; come to an end: The noise suddenly ceased. He ceased caring (or to care) about his health long ago. close: to come to an end: She closed her speech with a funny joke. come to rest: to stop: The car rolled forward, and came to rest against a tree. draw up: to stop: The train drew up at the station. The car drew up and the driver jumped out. fail: (of engine, electricity, or any supply) to stop or become useless. halt: to stop moving. leave off: to stop: Begin reading where you left off yesterday. pull up: to stop: The car pulled up at the crossroads. run down: (of a clock, that needs winding; of a battery that needs charging, etc.) to weaken or stop working, for lack of power. stop: to come to rest: This train stops at every station, not continue It has stopped raining. The rain has stopped. My clock stopped at midnight. \ See Also كَفَّ عن، اِنْتَهَى -
6 kick out
فَصَلَ \ detach: to separate sth. from sth. else; unfasten. disconnect: to separate; pull out the wires of (sth. electrical) which join it to the main supply: The doctor disconnected the machine. dismiss: to send away, esp. from work: He was dismissed from his job for laziness. The teacher dismissed the class. divide: to separate and keep apart: A fence divides my garden from his. drop: to leave out from a group: The lazy players were dropped from the team. expel: to drive away from a group: He was expelled from school for stealing. intervene: to join in a quarrel between two people, so as to stop it or to help the loser: He would have been killed if I had not intervened between them in the fight. kick out: to send away; force sb. to leave: He was kicked out of his job because he stole money. segregate: to keep groups of people apart (because of difference in sex, race, religion, etc.): Boys and girls are sometimes segregated in schools. sever: to cut through (or cut off) violently and completely: He severed the rope with a knife. His left arm was severed in the accident. \ See Also فك (فَكَّ)، قَطَعَ الاتصال، عزل (عَزَلَ)، طرد (طَرَدَ)، أبعد (أَبْعَدَ)، دَخَلَ بين (تَوَسَّطَ)، بتر (بَتَرَ) -
7 root out
1) to pull up or tear out by the roots:يَسْتَأصِلThe gardener began to root out the weeds.
2) to get rid of completely:يَتَخَلَّص كُليّا منWe must do our best to root out poverty.
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8 fish out
to pull something out with some difficulty:يَسْحَبAt last he fished out the letter he was looking for.
•Remark: The plural fish is never wrong, but sometimes fishes is used in talking about different individuals or species: How many fish did you catch?; the fishes of the Indian Ocean; the story of two little fishes. -
9 chala'a
pull out, take off [?] -
10 malacha
pull out [Sem m-l-ch, Uga mlhh (drawn)] -
11 اجتث
اِجْتَثّ: اِقْتَلَعَ، اِسْتَأصَلَto pluck out, tear out, extract, pull out, pull up by the roots, uproot, root up, deracinate, root out, eradicate, extirpate, exterminate -
12 استأصل
اِسْتَأصَلَto uproot, eradicate, extirpate, exterminate, root up, root out, deracinate, pull out, pull up by the roots, pluck out, tear out, tear up, extract; to remove, ablate, excise (by surgery) -
13 اصطلم
اِصْطَلَمَ: اِقْتَلَعَ، اِسْتَأصَلَto pluck out, tear out, pull out, pull up by the roots, uproot, deracinate, root up, root out, eradicate, extirpate, exterminate -
14 اقتلع
اِقْتَلَعَto pluck out, tear out, extract, pull out, pull up by the roots, uproot, deracinate, root up, root out, eradicate, extirpate, exterminate -
15 انسحب
v. withdraw, move back, pull back, push off, retire, retreat, stand down, step down, subtract, draw back, smooth away, drop, drop out, pull out, shag off, slope, recede, separate -
16 انسحب
اِنْسَحَبَ: تَرَاجَعَ، رَجَعَto withdraw, retreat, pull out, pull away, pull back, fall back, draw back, recede, retract; to retire; to evacuate; to secede -
17 استخرج
اِسْتَخْرَجَ: سَحَبَ، اِسْتَخْلَصَto pull out, take out; to extract, draw out, get out; to dig out, mine -
18 اقتطع
اِقْتَطَعَ: اِنْتَزَعَ، قَصّto tear out, tear off, take out, detach, pull out, cut out -
19 فصل
فَصَلَ \ detach: to separate sth. from sth. else; unfasten. disconnect: to separate; pull out the wires of (sth. electrical) which join it to the main supply: The doctor disconnected the machine. dismiss: to send away, esp. from work: He was dismissed from his job for laziness. The teacher dismissed the class. divide: to separate and keep apart: A fence divides my garden from his. drop: to leave out from a group: The lazy players were dropped from the team. expel: to drive away from a group: He was expelled from school for stealing. intervene: to join in a quarrel between two people, so as to stop it or to help the loser: He would have been killed if I had not intervened between them in the fight. kick out: to send away; force sb. to leave: He was kicked out of his job because he stole money. segregate: to keep groups of people apart (because of difference in sex, race, religion, etc.): Boys and girls are sometimes segregated in schools. sever: to cut through (or cut off) violently and completely: He severed the rope with a knife. His left arm was severed in the accident. \ See Also فك (فَكَّ)، قَطَعَ الاتصال، عزل (عَزَلَ)، طرد (طَرَدَ)، أبعد (أَبْعَدَ)، دَخَلَ بين (تَوَسَّطَ)، بتر (بَتَرَ) \ فَصَل بَيْن \ separate: to divide; put or keep apart: We separated the class into groups. She separated the bone from the meat. A fence separated the two fields. -
20 detach
فَصَلَ \ detach: to separate sth. from sth. else; unfasten. disconnect: to separate; pull out the wires of (sth. electrical) which join it to the main supply: The doctor disconnected the machine. dismiss: to send away, esp. from work: He was dismissed from his job for laziness. The teacher dismissed the class. divide: to separate and keep apart: A fence divides my garden from his. drop: to leave out from a group: The lazy players were dropped from the team. expel: to drive away from a group: He was expelled from school for stealing. intervene: to join in a quarrel between two people, so as to stop it or to help the loser: He would have been killed if I had not intervened between them in the fight. kick out: to send away; force sb. to leave: He was kicked out of his job because he stole money. segregate: to keep groups of people apart (because of difference in sex, race, religion, etc.): Boys and girls are sometimes segregated in schools. sever: to cut through (or cut off) violently and completely: He severed the rope with a knife. His left arm was severed in the accident. \ See Also فك (فَكَّ)، قَطَعَ الاتصال، عزل (عَزَلَ)، طرد (طَرَدَ)، أبعد (أَبْعَدَ)، دَخَلَ بين (تَوَسَّطَ)، بتر (بَتَرَ)
См. также в других словарях:
pull-out — pull outs 1) N COUNT: usu N n In a newspaper or magazine, a pull out is a section which you can remove easily and keep. ...an eight page pull out supplement. 2) N SING: oft N from/of n When there is a pull out of armed forces from a place, troops … English dictionary
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pull-out — pullˈ out adjective Denoting a section of a magazine, etc that can be removed and kept separately (see also ↑pull out below) • • • Main Entry: ↑pull … Useful english dictionary
Pull Out — is a feature documentary directed by Jyllian Gunther, released in 2004. It reflects on Gunther s past relationships and why they failed.AwardsThe film was an official selection of the following award organizations: *Hamptons International Film… … Wikipedia
pull out — ► pull out withdraw or retreat. Main Entry: ↑pull … English terms dictionary
pull out of — pull out (of (something)) to stop being involved in something. She s considering a run for governor if Mr. Lamb pulls out of the race … New idioms dictionary
pull out — (of (something)) to stop being involved in something. She s considering a run for governor if Mr. Lamb pulls out of the race … New idioms dictionary
pull|out — «PUL OWT», noun, adjective. –n. 1. a withdrawal, especially of troops: »The pullout may start this week; Gaza troops will exit by the overland motor route (Wall Street Journal). 2. the action of an aircraft in recovering from a dive and returning … Useful english dictionary
pull out — index abandon (withdraw), disinter, educe, eviscerate, extirpate, extract, leave (depart) … Law dictionary
pull out — [v] quit abandon, depart, evacuate, exit, get off, go, leave, retire, retreat, shove off, stop, stop participating, take off, withdraw; concepts 119,121,195 Ant. continue, persevere, start … New thesaurus
pull out — 1) PHRASAL VERB When a vehicle or driver pulls out, the vehicle moves out into the road or nearer the centre of the road. [V P prep] She pulled out into the street... [V P] He was about to pull out to overtake the guy in front of him. 2) PHRASAL… … English dictionary