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1 beg
[beg] 1.verbo transitivo (forma in -ing ecc. - gg-) chiedere (in elemosina) [food, money] ( from a); chiedere [favour, permission, forgiveness] ( from, of a); supplicare, pregare [ person] ( to do di fare)to beg sb. for sth. — chiedere qcs. a qcn. (con insistenza)
2."stop, I beg (of) you!" — "fermatevi, vi prego!"
verbo intransitivo (forma in -ing ecc. - gg-) [ person] chiedere l'elemosina ( from a); [ dog] = stare seduto con le zampe anteriori sollevate in attesa di cibo, ecc.to beg for — elemosinare, mendicare [money, food]
- beg off••* * *[beɡ] 1. past tense, past participle - begged; verb1) (to ask (someone) for (money, food etc): The old man was so poor that he had to beg in the street; He begged (me) for money.) elemosinare, chiedere l'elemosina2) (to ask (someone) desperately or earnestly: I beg you not to do it.) pregare•- beggar2. verb(to make very poor: He was beggared by the collapse of his firm.) rovinare, ridurre in miseria- beg to differ* * *[bɛɡ]1. vthe begged me to help him — mi ha supplicato or pregato di aiutarlo
I beg your pardon — (apologising) mi scusi, (not hearing) scusi?
2)2. vi•- beg off* * *[beg] 1.verbo transitivo (forma in -ing ecc. - gg-) chiedere (in elemosina) [food, money] ( from a); chiedere [favour, permission, forgiveness] ( from, of a); supplicare, pregare [ person] ( to do di fare)to beg sb. for sth. — chiedere qcs. a qcn. (con insistenza)
2."stop, I beg (of) you!" — "fermatevi, vi prego!"
verbo intransitivo (forma in -ing ecc. - gg-) [ person] chiedere l'elemosina ( from a); [ dog] = stare seduto con le zampe anteriori sollevate in attesa di cibo, ecc.to beg for — elemosinare, mendicare [money, food]
- beg off•• -
2 ♦ (to) beg
♦ (to) beg /bɛg/A v. t.2 chiedere ( umilmente o come favore): to beg a favour of sb., chiedere un favore a q.; to beg sb. 's forgiveness, chiedere perdono a q.; to beg leave to do st., chiedere il permesso di fare qc.4 (form.) chiedere (il permesso) di: I beg to differ, (se permettete,) non sono d'accordo; I beg to second the motion, desidero appoggiare la mozioneB v. i.1 mendicare; chiedere l'elemosina: He is too proud to beg, è troppo orgoglioso per chiedere l'elemosina; to beg for money, chiedere l'elemosina2 ( to beg of) supplicare; implorare: I begged of him not to get into trouble, lo implorai di non mettersi nei guai● to beg the question, fare una petizione di principio; dare per scontato qc.; ( anche, ora molto comune) rendere inevitabile la domanda □ (bur., comm., antiq.) We beg to inform you that…, ci pregiamo informarVi che… □ to be going begging, essere disponibile, libero, ecc. ( perché nessuno lo vuole). -
3 ♦ (to) beg
♦ (to) beg /bɛg/A v. t.2 chiedere ( umilmente o come favore): to beg a favour of sb., chiedere un favore a q.; to beg sb. 's forgiveness, chiedere perdono a q.; to beg leave to do st., chiedere il permesso di fare qc.4 (form.) chiedere (il permesso) di: I beg to differ, (se permettete,) non sono d'accordo; I beg to second the motion, desidero appoggiare la mozioneB v. i.1 mendicare; chiedere l'elemosina: He is too proud to beg, è troppo orgoglioso per chiedere l'elemosina; to beg for money, chiedere l'elemosina2 ( to beg of) supplicare; implorare: I begged of him not to get into trouble, lo implorai di non mettersi nei guai● to beg the question, fare una petizione di principio; dare per scontato qc.; ( anche, ora molto comune) rendere inevitabile la domanda □ (bur., comm., antiq.) We beg to inform you that…, ci pregiamo informarVi che… □ to be going begging, essere disponibile, libero, ecc. ( perché nessuno lo vuole).
См. также в других словарях:
question-begging — I. ˈ ̷ ̷ ̷ ̷ˌ ̷ ̷ ̷ ̷ adjective : that involves the fallacy of petitio principii : that involves an assumption of something whose truth may be questioned question begging arguments question begging epithets compare beg vt 3b II. noun ( s) … Useful english dictionary
question, begging the — See begging the question … Philosophy dictionary
Begging the question — Bust of Aristotle, whose Prior Analytics contained an early discussion of this fallacy. Begging the question (or petitio principii, assuming the initial point ) is a type of logical fallacy in which the proposition to be proven is assumed… … Wikipedia
begging the question — Strictly speaking, to beg a question is to present as proof something that itself needs proving. Bernstein cites as an example the sentence Parallel lines will never meet because they are parallel. The second half of the sentence only seems to … Dictionary of troublesome word
Begging — Beg Beg, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Begged}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Begging}.] [OE. beggen, perh. fr. AS. bedecian (akin to Goth. bedagwa beggar), biddan to ask. (Cf. {Bid}, v. t.); or cf. beghard, beguin.] 1. To ask earnestly for; to entreat or supplicate… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
begging the question — noun A logical fallacy in which a premise of an argument contains a direct or indirect assumption that the conclusion is true; offering a circular argument; circular reasoning. It is an instance of begging the question to argue that God can only… … Wiktionary
begging the question — The procedure of assuming what is at issue in an argument. Although the charge is commonly made, there is no logical definition of those kinds of argument that beg the question. In the widest sense, any valid argument might be thought to beg the… … Philosophy dictionary
begging the question — An argument which assumes as proved the very thing in issue … Ballentine's law dictionary
Complex question — Complex question, trick question, multiple question or plurium interrogationum (Latin, of many questions ) is a question that has a presupposition that is complex. The presupposition is a proposition that is presumed to be acceptable to the… … Wikipedia
Loaded question — A loaded question is a question which contains a controversial assumption such as a presumption of guilt.[1] Such questions are used rhetorically, so that the question limits direct replies to be those that serve the questioner s agenda.[2] The… … Wikipedia
Open Question Argument — The Open Question Argument is a philosophical argument put forward by British philosopher G. E. Moore in §13 of Principia Ethica (1903), to refute the equating of the property good with some non moral property, whether naturalistic (e.g.… … Wikipedia