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1 relinquish
rə'liŋkwiʃ(to give up: The dictator was forced to relinquish control of the country.) renunciar (a)tr[rɪ'lɪŋkwɪʃ]1 renunciar arelinquish [ri'lɪŋkwɪʃ, -'lɪn-] vt1) give up: renunciar a, abandonar2) release: soltarv.• abandonar v.• dejar v.• renunciar v.rɪ'lɪŋkwɪʃa) \<\<possession/claim/right\>\> renunciar ab) ( release) (liter)[rɪ'lɪŋkwɪʃ]VT [+ claim, right] renunciar a; [+ control] ceder; [+ post] renunciar a, dimitir deto relinquish one's grip on sth — (lit) soltar algo
* * *[rɪ'lɪŋkwɪʃ]a) \<\<possession/claim/right\>\> renunciar ab) ( release) (liter) -
2 forsake
fə'seikpast tense - forsook; verb(to leave alone; to abandon: He was forsaken by his friends.) abandonartr[fə'seɪk]1 formal use (abandon) abandonar2 (give up) renunciar a1) abandon: abandonar, desamparar2) relinquish: renunciar av.(§ p.,p.p.: forsook, forsaken) = abandonar v.• dejar v.• desamparar v.• desertar v.• renegar v.fər'seɪk, fə'seɪka) ( abandon) abandonarb) ( relinquish) \<\<pleasure/habits\>\> renunciar a[fǝ'seɪk](pt forsook) (pp forsaken) VT (=abandon) abandonar; (=give up) [+ plan] renunciar a; [+ belief] renegar de* * *[fər'seɪk, fə'seɪk]a) ( abandon) abandonarb) ( relinquish) \<\<pleasure/habits\>\> renunciar a -
3 surrender
sə'rendə
1. verb1) (to yield: The general refused to surrender to the enemy; We shall never surrender!) rendirse2) (to give up or abandon: He surrendered his claim to the throne; You must surrender your old passport when applying for a new one.) renunciar (a); devolver
2. noun((an) act of surrendering: The garrison was forced into surrender.) rendiciónsurrender vb rendirsetr[sə'rendəSMALLr/SMALL]1 (capitulation) rendición nombre femenino; (submission) sumisión nombre femenino, claudicación nombre femenino2 (giving up - of arms) entrega; (- of rights) renuncia1 SMALLMILITARY/SMALL (weapons, town) rendir, entregar1 rendirse, entregarse\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto surrender oneself to something dejarse vencer por algosurrender [sə'rɛndər] vt1) : entregar, rendir2)to surrender oneself : entregarsesurrender vi: rendirse: rendición m (de una ciudad, etc.), entrega f (de posesiones)n.• entrega s.f.• rendición s.f.• renuncia s.f.• sujeción s.f.v.• ceder v.• entregar v.• rendir v.• rendirse v.• renunciar a v.
I
1. sə'rendər, sə'rendə(r)a) ( Mil) \<\<arms/town\>\> rendir*, entregar*b) ( hand over) (frml) \<\<document/ticket\>\> entregar*c) ( relinquish) \<\<right/claim\>\> renunciar a
2.
vi \<\<soldier/army\>\> rendirse*to surrender TO somebody — entregarse* a alguien
3.
v reflto surrender oneself TO something — \<\<to indulgence/idleness\>\> dejarse vencer por algo
II
a) u c ( capitulation) rendición f, capitulación fb) ( submission) (no pl) claudicación fc) (frml) (no pl) (handing over - of passport, document) entrega f; (- of rights) renuncia f[sǝ'rendǝ(r)]1. N1) (=capitulation) (Mil) rendición f ; (fig) claudicación fno surrender! — ¡no nos rendimos nunca!
2) (=handover) [of weapons] entrega f3) (Jur) [of lease, property] cesión f4) (Insurance) [of policy] rescate m (previo al vencimiento)2.VI (Mil) rendirseI surrender! — ¡me rindo!
to surrender to despair — abandonarse or entregarse a la desesperación
3. VT1) (Mil) [+ weapons] rendir, entregar; [+ territory, city] entregarto surrender o.s. — (Mil) rendirse; (to police) entregarse
to surrender o.s. to despair — abandonarse or entregarse a la desesperación
I surrendered myself to his charms — me rendí a or ante sus encantos
2) (=renounce, give up) [+ claim, right] renunciar a; [+ lease, ownership] ceder; liter [+ hope] abandonar4) (=redeem) [+ insurance policy] rescatar (antes del vencimiento)4.CPDsurrender value N — valor m de rescate
* * *
I
1. [sə'rendər, sə'rendə(r)]a) ( Mil) \<\<arms/town\>\> rendir*, entregar*b) ( hand over) (frml) \<\<document/ticket\>\> entregar*c) ( relinquish) \<\<right/claim\>\> renunciar a
2.
vi \<\<soldier/army\>\> rendirse*to surrender TO somebody — entregarse* a alguien
3.
v reflto surrender oneself TO something — \<\<to indulgence/idleness\>\> dejarse vencer por algo
II
a) u c ( capitulation) rendición f, capitulación fb) ( submission) (no pl) claudicación fc) (frml) (no pl) (handing over - of passport, document) entrega f; (- of rights) renuncia f -
4 release
rə'li:s
1. verb1) (to set free; to allow to leave: He was released from prison yesterday; I am willing to release him from his promise to me.) liberar2) (to stop holding etc; to allow to move, fall etc: He released (his hold on) the rope.) soltar3) (to move (a catch, brake etc) which prevents something else from moving, operating etc: He released the handbrake and drove off.) soltar4) (to allow (news etc) to be made known publicly: The list of winners has just been released.) hacer público, dar a conocer5) (to offer (a film, record etc) to the general public: Their latest record will be released next week.) (película) emitir; sacar (disco)
2. noun1) (the act of releasing or being released: After his release, the prisoner returned to his home town; the release of a new film; (also adjective) the release catch.) liberación, puesta en libertad2) (something that is released: This record is their latest release; The Government issued a press release (= a statement giving information about something, sent or given to newspapers, reporters etc).) lanzamiento, estreno; comunicadorelease1 n liberaciónafter their release, the hostages went home después de su liberación, los rehenes se fueron a casarelease2 vb liberar / poner en libertadtr[rɪ'liːs]1 (setting free) liberación nombre femenino, puesta en libertad2 (relief) alivio3 (of film) estreno; (of record) lanzamiento4 (of gas etc) emisión nombre femenino5 (new thing - film) estreno, novedad nombre femenino cinematográfica; (- record) nuevo disco, novedad nombre femenino discográfica6 (statement) comunicado1 (set free) liberar, poner en libertad2 (let go of) soltar3 (brake etc) soltar; (shutter) disparar4 (bring out - film) estrenar; (- record) sacar5 (gas etc - give out) emitir; (- give off) desprender6 (statement, information) hacer público, dar a conocer\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto release from jail excarcelar1) free: liberar, poner en libertad2) loosen: soltar, aflojarto release the brake: soltar el freno3) relinquish: renunciar a, ceder4) issue: publicar (un libro), estrenar (una película), sacar (un disco)release n1) liberation: liberación f, puesta f en libertad2) relinquishment: cesión f (de propiedad, etc.)3) issue: estreno m (de una película), puesta f en venta (de un disco), publicación f (de un libro)4) escape: escape m, fuga f (de un gas)n.• descargo s.m.• desunión s.f.• disparador s.m.• disparo s.m.• estreno general s.m.• excarcelación s.f.• liberación s.f.• soltura s.f.• suelta s.f.v.• desaprisionar v.• desprender v.• estrenar v.• exonerar v.• largar v.• liberar v.• libertar v.• relevar v.• soltar v.
I rɪ'liːs1)a) \<\<prisoner/hostage\>\> poner* en libertad, liberarto release somebody FROM something: she was released from jail fue puesta en libertad, salió de la cárcel; they released him from the contract — le condonaron las obligaciones emanadas del contrato (frml)
b) ( unleash) desatarc) \<\<funds/personnel\>\> ceder2) \<\<information/figures\>\> hacer* público, dar* a conocer; \<\<record/book\>\> sacar* (a la venta); \<\<movie\>\> estrenar3) ( emit) \<\<gas\>\> despedir*4)a) ( let go) \<\<bomb\>\> arrojarb) \<\<brake/clutch\>\> soltar*
II
1) ua) (from prison, captivity) puesta f en libertad, liberación fb) (of funds, personnel) cesión f2)in o (BrE) on general release — en todos los cines
b) c (record, movie)new releases — ( records) novedades fpl discográficas; ( movies) últimos estrenos mpl
3) u ( of gas) escape m[rɪ'liːs]1. N1) (=liberation) [of prisoner, hostage] liberación f, puesta f en libertad; [of convict] excarcelación f, puesta f en libertadhis release came through on Monday — se aprobó su excarcelación el lunes, la orden de su puesta en libertad llegó el lunes
on his release from prison he... — al salir de la cárcel...
daycomplications have delayed his release from hospital — ciertas complicaciones han impedido que se le dé de alta todavía
2) (fig) (=relief) alivio mdeath came as a merciful release — la muerte fue una bendición or un gran alivio
3) (=issue) [of film] estreno m ; [of record, video] puesta f en venta; [of book] puesta f en venta or circulación; [of news] publicación f4) (=record, book, film, video)their new release is called... — su nuevo disco se llama...
the pick of this month's video releases — las mejores novedades en vídeo or (LAm) video de este mes
press 4.new releases — (=records) novedades fpl discográficas; (=films) nuevas producciones fpl ; (=books) nuevas publicaciones fpl
5) (=making available) [of documents] publicación f ; [of funds] cesión f6) (=emission) [of gas, smoke] escape m, emisión f ; [of hormones] secreción f7) (Tech, Phot) (=catch) disparador m ; shutter8) (Jur) [of right, property] cesión f2. VT1) (=set free) [+ prisoner, hostage] poner en libertad, liberar; [+ convict] excarcelar, poner en libertad; [+ patient] dar de alta; [+ victim] (from wreckage) liberar; [+ animal] soltar, dejar en libertad; [+ person] (from obligation) eximirshe was released from hospital after treatment — le dieron de alta del hospital después de un tratamiento
bailto release sb from a debt — eximir a algn de una deuda, condonar una deuda a algn frm
2) (=issue) [+ film] estrenar; [+ record, video] sacar, poner a la venta; [+ book] publicar; [+ news, report, information, statement] hacer público, dar a conocerthe police have released the names of the victims — la policía ha hecho públicos or dado a conocer los nombres de las víctimas
3) (=make available) [+ documents] facilitar; [+ funds] facilitar, ceder4) (=emit) [+ gas, smoke, heat, energy] despedir, emitir; [+ hormones] secretar, segregar5) (=let go) [+ sb's hand, arm] soltar; (Tech) [+ spring, clasp, catch] soltar; (Phot) [+ shutter] dispararto release one's grip or hold (on sth/sb): he released his grip on my arm — me soltó el brazo
the state has to release its hold on the economy — el estado tiene que soltar las riendas de la economía
6) (=let out, give vent to) [+ anger, frustration] descargar, dar rienda suelta a; [+ creativity] sacar a flote; [+ memories] desatar, desencadenar; [+ tension] relajaryour book has released a flood of memories — tu libro ha desatado or desencadenado una lluvia de recuerdos
7) (Aut) [+ brake] soltar8) (Jur) [+ right, property] ceder3.CPDrelease date N — [of film] fecha f de estreno; [of CD] fecha f de salida; [of prisoner] fecha f de puesta en libertad
* * *
I [rɪ'liːs]1)a) \<\<prisoner/hostage\>\> poner* en libertad, liberarto release somebody FROM something: she was released from jail fue puesta en libertad, salió de la cárcel; they released him from the contract — le condonaron las obligaciones emanadas del contrato (frml)
b) ( unleash) desatarc) \<\<funds/personnel\>\> ceder2) \<\<information/figures\>\> hacer* público, dar* a conocer; \<\<record/book\>\> sacar* (a la venta); \<\<movie\>\> estrenar3) ( emit) \<\<gas\>\> despedir*4)a) ( let go) \<\<bomb\>\> arrojarb) \<\<brake/clutch\>\> soltar*
II
1) ua) (from prison, captivity) puesta f en libertad, liberación fb) (of funds, personnel) cesión f2)in o (BrE) on general release — en todos los cines
b) c (record, movie)new releases — ( records) novedades fpl discográficas; ( movies) últimos estrenos mpl
3) u ( of gas) escape m -
5 to give up
1 (renounce) dejar; (idea) abandonar, renunciar a2 (relinquish, hand over) ceder, renunciar a3 (devote) dedicar■ he gave up every spare minute of his time to aiding the sick dedicó cada minuto de su tiempo libre a ayudar a los enfermos4 (surrender) entregarse1 (admit defeat) darse por vencido,-a, rendirse■ I give up! ¡me rindo!
См. также в других словарях:
relinquish — ► VERB ▪ willingly cease to keep or claim; give up. DERIVATIVES relinquishment noun. ORIGIN Latin relinquere, from linquere to leave … English terms dictionary
relinquish — verb ADVERB ▪ voluntarily ▪ They will never voluntarily relinquish their independence. ▪ finally ▪ Adrian finally relinquished Eva s hand from his grip. VERB + RELINQUISH … Collocations dictionary
relinquish — verb (T) formal to let someone else have your position, power, or rights, especially unwillingly: The Duke was obliged to relinquish all rights and claims to the territory. | relinquish sth to sb: He refused to relinquish sovereignty to his son.… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
relinquish — verb 1) he relinquished control of the company Syn: renounce, give up/away, hand over, let go of Ant: retain, keep 2) she relinquished her post Syn: leave, resign from … Thesaurus of popular words
relinquish — I verb abandon, abdicate, abjure, cast off, cease, cede, deliver, demit, desert, disclaim, discontinue, dismiss, do without, drop, eliminate, forgo, forsake, forswear, give over, give up, give up claim to, go without, hand over, jettison, lay… … Law dictionary
relinquish — verb a) To give up, abandon or retire from something. The delegations saved the negotiations by relinquishing their incompatible claims to sole jurisdiction b) To let go (free, away), physically … Wiktionary
relinquish — verb 1) he relinquished control of the company Syn: renounce, give up/away, hand over, let go of 2) he relinquished his post Syn: leave, resign from, stand down from, bow out of, give up; informal quit, chuc … Synonyms and antonyms dictionary
relinquish — UK [rəˈlɪŋkwɪʃ] / US verb [transitive] Word forms relinquish : present tense I/you/we/they relinquish he/she/it relinquishes present participle relinquishing past tense relinquished past participle relinquished formal to give up your power,… … English dictionary
relinquish — transitive verb Etymology: Middle English relinquisshen, from Anglo French relinquiss , stem of relinquir, from Latin relinquere to leave behind, from re + linquere to leave more at loan Date: 15th century 1. to withdraw or retreat from ; leave… … New Collegiate Dictionary
relinquish — re|lin|quish [ rə lıŋkwıʃ ] verb transitive FORMAL to give up your power, position, or an advantage, especially when you do not want to do this: She was forced to relinquish her leadership. relinquish your hold on something (=to lose control of… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
relinquish — [[t]rɪlɪ̱ŋkwɪʃ[/t]] relinquishes, relinquishing, relinquished VERB If you relinquish something such as power or control, you give it up. [FORMAL] [V n] He does not intend to relinquish power. Syn: give up … English dictionary