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41 Abstand von einer Forderung nehmen
Abstand von einer Forderung nehmen
to abate (relinquish, waive) a claimBusiness german-english dictionary > Abstand von einer Forderung nehmen
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42 Schuld erlassen
Schuld erlassen
to release from a debt (an indebtedness), to relinquish (waive, cancel, forgive) a debt, to remit a claim -
43 rinunciare
give up (a something)* * *rinunciare v. intr.1 to renounce (sthg.), to give* up (sthg.), to forgo* (sthg.); ( abbando-nare) to abandon (sthg.), to relinquish (sthg.): ho dovuto rinunciare a partire, I had to abandon (o to give up) the idea of leaving; ha rinunciato all'idea di fare carriera in banca, he has given up the idea of making a career in banking; come si fa a rinunciare al piacere di una bella dormita?!, how can you forgo the pleasure of a good sleep?!; rinunciare ai divertimenti, to give up amusements; rinunciare al trono, to renounce the throne; rinunciare all'eredità, to renounce one's claim to the inheritance; rinunciare a un'opzione, to abandon an option; rinunciare a un impiego, to give up a job2 (dir.) to release (sthg.); to waive (sthg.); to recede (sthg.); to renounce (sthg.): rinunciare a un diritto, to waive (o to release) a right.* * *[rinun'tʃare]rinunciare a — to give up, to abandon, to drop [ idea]; to renounce [ eredità]; to abdicate, to abjure form. [diritto, potere]; to remise [ proprietà]
* * *rinunciare/rinun't∫are/ [1](aus. avere) to give* up, to renounce; rinunciare a to give up, to abandon, to drop [ idea]; to renounce [ eredità]; to abdicate, to abjure form. [diritto, potere]; to remise [ proprietà]; rinunciare al mondo to renounce the world; rinunciare a fare to give up doing; ci rinuncio! I give up! -
44 престол
вступить на престол — to come to / to take the throne, to take the crown
отречься от престола в пользу кого-л. — to abdicate in favour of smb.
свергнуть с престола — to uncrown, to depose, to dethrone
папский / святейший престол — papacy, the Holy See
вступление на престол — accession to the throne, enthronement
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45 отказываться от требования
abandon (give up, relinquish, resign, surrender, waive) a claimBanks. Exchanges. Accounting. (Russian-English) > отказываться от требования
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46 Time
In appropriating time for themselves, and abstracting it into a stark mathematical parameter, physicists have robbed it of much of its original, human, content. The physicist will usually say, "Ours is the real time-and all that there really is. The richness of human psychological time derives entirely from subjective factors and is unrelated to the intrinsic qualities of real, physical time"-and then go about his or her work and daily life immersed in the complexities of human time like everyone else.Should we simply shrug the human experience of time aside as a matter solely for psychologists? Does the time of an altered state of conciousness have no relevance at all to the time of Newton or Einstein? Does our impression of the flow of time, or the division of time into past, present and future, tell us nothing at all about how time is as opposed to how it merely appears to us muddle-headed humans?As a physicist, I am well aware how much intuition can lead us astray. As I remarked earlier, intuition suggests that the sun moves around the earth. Yet, as a human being, I find it impossible to relinquish the sensation of a flowing time and a moving present moment. It is something so basic to my experience of the world that I am repelled by the claim that it is only an illusion or misperception. It seems to me there is an aspect of time of great significance that we have so far overlooked in our description of the physical universe. (Davies, 1995, p. 275)Historical dictionary of quotations in cognitive science > Time
См. также в других словарях:
relinquish a claim — give up a claim … English contemporary dictionary
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 — relinquish, yield, leave, resign, surrender, cede, abandon, waive are comparable when they mean to let go from one s control or possession or to give up completely. Relinquish in itself seldom carries any added implication, but it often acquires… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
Relinquish — Re*lin quish ( kw?sh), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Relinquished} ( kw?sht); p. pr. & vb. n. {Relinquishing}.] [OF. relinquir, L. relinquere to leave behind; pref. re re + linquere to leave. See {Loan}, and cf. {Relic}, {Relict}.] [1913 Webster] 1. To… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
claim — vb *demand, exact, require Analogous words: *maintain, assert, defend, vindicate, justify: allege, *adduce, advance Antonyms: disclaim: renounce Contrasted words: disavow, disown, dis acknowledge (see affirmative verbs at ACKNOWLEDGE): reject,… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
relinquish — [ri liŋ′kwish] vt. [LME relinquissen < extended stem of OFr relinquir < L relinquere < re , from + linquere, to leave: see LOAN] 1. to give up; abandon (a plan, policy, etc.) 2. to renounce or surrender (something owned, a right, etc.) 3 … English World dictionary
relinquish — ► VERB ▪ willingly cease to keep or claim; give up. DERIVATIVES relinquishment noun. ORIGIN Latin relinquere, from linquere to leave … English terms dictionary
claim — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun 1 statement saying that sth is true ADJECTIVE ▪ dubious, false, unfounded, unsubstantiated ▪ conflicting ▪ There are conflicting claims about the cause of the fire … Collocations 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 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 — re•lin•quish [[t]rɪˈlɪŋ kwɪʃ[/t]] v. t. 1) to renounce or surrender (a possession, right, claim, etc.) 2) to give up; put aside or desist from: to relinquish a plan[/ex] 3) to let go; release: to relinquish one s hold[/ex] • Etymology: 1425–75;… … From formal English to slang