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1 слух
м.1. ear, hearingтонкий, острый слух — keen ear
хороший слух — good* ear
иметь хороший музыкальный слух — have a good* ear for music
играть, петь по слуху, на слух — play, sing* by ear
2. ( молва) rumour, hearsayпо слухам — it is said / rumoured, they / people say, from hearsay
пустить слух — set* a rumour abroad / afloat, float a rumour
есть слух, что — there is some talk that
ходят слухи — it is rumoured, rumours are afloat / abroad, there are rumours going round
♢
он весь обратился в слух — he is all earsслухом земля полнится посл. — news quickly
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2 слух
м.1) ( способность слышать) ear, hearingо́рган слуха — organ of hearing
то́нкий / о́стрый слух — keen ear
плохо́й слух — dull hearing
хоро́ший слух — good ear
потеря́ть слух — lose one's hearing (ability)
2) ( музыкальный) ear (for music)име́ть хоро́ший слух — have a good ear for music
абсолю́тный слух — absolute pitch
у него́ нет слуха — he is tone-deaf [-'def]
3) ( молва) rumour, hearsayпо слухам — it is said / rumoured, they / people say, from hearsay
пусти́ть слух — set a rumour abroad / afloat, float a rumour
есть слух, хо́дят слухи — there are rumours, it is rumoured
до него́ дошли́ слухи — rumours reached him
••слухом земля́ по́лнится посл. — news spreads quickly; bad news travels fast
быть (у всех) на слуху́ — be familiar / known to everybody; (о слове, имени) be a household name / word
игра́ть [петь] на слух — play [sing ] by ear
он весь обрати́лся в слух книжн. — he was all ears
ни слуху ни ду́ху (о пр.) — nothing is heard (of)
не вся́кому слуху верь посл. — ≈ believe only half of what you hear
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3 abandonar
v.1 to leave (place).María abandonó la habitación rápidamente Mary abandoned the room quickly.2 to leave (person).3 to give up (estudios).abandonó la carrera en el tercer año she dropped out of university in her third year, she gave up her studies in her third year4 to abandon, to desert, to forsake, to bail out on.Pedro abandonó a su familia Peter abandoned his family.Silvia abandonó sus sueños por Pedro Silvia abandoned her dreams for Peter.5 to quit, to cease trying, to desist, to give up.María abandonó Mary quit.6 to check out on.* * *1 (desamparar) to abandon, forsake2 (lugar) to leave, quit3 (actividad) to give up, withdraw from4 (traicionar) to desert5 (renunciar) to relinquish, renounce6 (descuidar) to neglect7 DEPORTE (retirarse) to withdraw from1 (descuidarse) to neglect oneself, let oneself go2 (entregarse) to give oneself up (a, to)3 (ceder) to give in* * *verb1) to abandon2) desert3) leave4) neglect5) give up6) renounce•* * *1. VT1) (=dejar abandonado) [+ cónyuge, hijo] to abandon, desert; [+ animal, casa, posesiones] to abandon; [+ obligaciones] to neglectla abandonó por otra mujer — he abandoned o deserted her for another woman
tuvimos que abandonar nuestras pertenencias en la huida — we had to abandon all our belongings when we fled
2) (=marcharse de) [+ lugar, organización] to leave3) (=renunciar a) [+ estudios, proyecto] to give up, abandon; [+ costumbre, cargo] to give up; [+ privilegio, título] to renounce, relinquishhemos abandonado la idea de montar un negocio — we have given up o abandoned the idea of starting a business
he decidido abandonar la política — I've decided to give up o abandon politics
si el tratamiento no da resultado lo abandonaremos — if the treatment doesn't work, we'll abandon it
se comprometieron a abandonar sus reivindicaciones territoriales — they promised to renounce o relinquish their territorial claims
4) [buen humor, suerte] to desert2. VI1) (Atletismo) [antes de la prueba] to pull out, withdraw; [durante la prueba] to pull out, retire2) (Boxeo) to concede defeat, throw in the towel * o (EEUU) sponge3) (Ajedrez) to resign, concede4) (Inform) to quit3.See:* * *1.verbo transitivo1)a) (frml) < lugar> to leavelas tropas abandonaron el área — the troops pulled out of o left the area
b) <familia/bebé> to leave, abandon; <marido/amante> to leave; <coche/barco> to abandon2) fuerzas to desert3)a) <actividad/propósito/esperanza> to give upabandonó la lucha — he gave up the fight, he abandoned the struggle
abandonar los estudios — to drop out of school/college
b) (Dep) <carrera/partido> to retire, pull out2.abandonar vi (Dep)a) (antes de la carrera, competición) to withdraw, pull outb) (iniciada la carrera, competición) to retire, pull out; ( en ajedrez) to resign; (en boxeo, lucha) to concede defeat3.abandonarse v pron1) ( entregarse)abandonarse a algo — a vicios/placeres to abandon oneself to something
2) ( en el aspecto personal) to let oneself go* * *= abandon, abort, drop, eschew, give up, quit, relinquish, stop, leave + wandering in, forsake, sweep aside, desert, opt out of, scrap, pull back, ditch, surrender, bail out, bargain away, dump, maroon, flake out, leave by + the wayside, get away, desist, go + cold turkey, walk out on, walk out, jump + ship.Ex. The Library of Congress has now reconsidered the position, and abandoned what was known as its compatible headings policy.Ex. It is important to know what police or fire responses are triggered by alarms and how that reaction can be aborted and the alarm silenced.Ex. Unfruitful lines of enquiry are dropped and new and more promising search terms are introduced as the search progresses.Ex. However, most contributors to the debate about the future of SLIS have eschewed practicalities in favour of sweeping and dramatic generalizations.Ex. If support for quality cataloging is not going to be given, I think we should give it up entirely.Ex. If you decide not to send or save the message, replace the question mark in front of ' Quit' with another character.Ex. The Library will consider relinquishing them only when there is strong assurance that their transfer would not adversely affect the library community.Ex. Program function key 1 (FP1) tells DOBIS/LIBIS to stop whatever it is doing and go back to the function selection screen.Ex. It is our professional duty to help the reader, leading him from author to author, book to book, with enough sure-footed confidence that he is guided up the literary mountain and not left wandering in the viewless foothills because of one's own incompetence.Ex. Indeed, she was delighted to forsake the urban reality of steel and glass, traffic and crime, aspirin and litter, for the sort of over-the-fence friendliness of the smaller city.Ex. The development of optical fibres for information transmission has exciting potential here, but there is a very large investment in the present systems which cannot be swept aside overnight.Ex. Recently, however, libraries have deserted the individual and have pandered too much to the needs of the general public.Ex. The author takes a critical look at the UK government's education policy with regard to schools' ' opting out' of local government control.Ex. There have even been rumours of plans to scrap most of the industrial side of its work and disperse key elements, such as the work on regional and industrial aid, to the provinces.Ex. To pull back now would make both her and him look bad.Ex. It is time that higher education institutions accepted the wisdom of collaboration and ditched, once and for all, the rhetoric of competition = Ya es hora de que las instituciones de enseñanza superior acepten la colaboración y rechacen, de una vez por todas, la competitividad.Ex. Instead the two ecclesiastical disputes which arose from Diocletian's decree to surrender scriptures must be seen as more disastrous to Christian unity than the destruction of libraries.Ex. In the article ' Bailing out' 9 of the 10 librarians interviewed admitted that they were trying to get out of librarianship partly due to unrealistic expectations learned in library school.Ex. Reduced support is a fact of life, and librarians cannot bargain away their budget pressures.Ex. The books may simply be laid before the librarian as they are found, ' dumped in his lap', as one writer puts it.Ex. A seemingly simple tale of schoolboys marooned on an island, the novel 'Lord of the Flies' is an enigmatic and provocative piece of literature.Ex. The actress flaked out again and the director is trying to line up a replacement.Ex. She seeks to recontextualize those events that history has estranged, destroyed or capriciously left by the wayside.Ex. Guards in the lead car of the convoy threw their doors open and ran for cover, screaming, 'Get away, get away'.Ex. One of them sputtered and gesticulated with sufficient violence to induce us to desist.Ex. Judging by the critical responses to the article so far, it looks like the world isn't quite ready to go cold turkey on its religion addiction.Ex. There are many thankless jobs in this world, but does that mean you can just walk out on them for your own selfish reasons?.Ex. At least five members of the audience walked out during the bishop's address.Ex. A new study suggests that up to 40% of currently employed individuals are ready to jump ship once the economy rebounds.----* abandonar el barco = abandon + ship.* abandonar las armas = put down + weapons.* abandonar los estudios = drop out (from school), drop out of + school.* abandonar los servicios de Alguien = drop out.* abandonarse = go to + seed.* abandonarse a = abandon + Reflexivo + to.* abandonar toda esperanza = give up + hope.* abandonar (toda/la) esperanza = abandon + (all) hope.* abandonar un hábito = stop + habit.* abandonar un lugar = quit + Lugar.* estudiante de bachiller que abandona los estudios = high-school dropout.* estudiante universitario que abandona los estudios = college dropout.* no abandonar = stick with, stand by.* persona que abandona Algo = quitter.* * *1.verbo transitivo1)a) (frml) < lugar> to leavelas tropas abandonaron el área — the troops pulled out of o left the area
b) <familia/bebé> to leave, abandon; <marido/amante> to leave; <coche/barco> to abandon2) fuerzas to desert3)a) <actividad/propósito/esperanza> to give upabandonó la lucha — he gave up the fight, he abandoned the struggle
abandonar los estudios — to drop out of school/college
b) (Dep) <carrera/partido> to retire, pull out2.abandonar vi (Dep)a) (antes de la carrera, competición) to withdraw, pull outb) (iniciada la carrera, competición) to retire, pull out; ( en ajedrez) to resign; (en boxeo, lucha) to concede defeat3.abandonarse v pron1) ( entregarse)abandonarse a algo — a vicios/placeres to abandon oneself to something
2) ( en el aspecto personal) to let oneself go* * *= abandon, abort, drop, eschew, give up, quit, relinquish, stop, leave + wandering in, forsake, sweep aside, desert, opt out of, scrap, pull back, ditch, surrender, bail out, bargain away, dump, maroon, flake out, leave by + the wayside, get away, desist, go + cold turkey, walk out on, walk out, jump + ship.Ex: The Library of Congress has now reconsidered the position, and abandoned what was known as its compatible headings policy.
Ex: It is important to know what police or fire responses are triggered by alarms and how that reaction can be aborted and the alarm silenced.Ex: Unfruitful lines of enquiry are dropped and new and more promising search terms are introduced as the search progresses.Ex: However, most contributors to the debate about the future of SLIS have eschewed practicalities in favour of sweeping and dramatic generalizations.Ex: If support for quality cataloging is not going to be given, I think we should give it up entirely.Ex: If you decide not to send or save the message, replace the question mark in front of ' Quit' with another character.Ex: The Library will consider relinquishing them only when there is strong assurance that their transfer would not adversely affect the library community.Ex: Program function key 1 (FP1) tells DOBIS/LIBIS to stop whatever it is doing and go back to the function selection screen.Ex: It is our professional duty to help the reader, leading him from author to author, book to book, with enough sure-footed confidence that he is guided up the literary mountain and not left wandering in the viewless foothills because of one's own incompetence.Ex: Indeed, she was delighted to forsake the urban reality of steel and glass, traffic and crime, aspirin and litter, for the sort of over-the-fence friendliness of the smaller city.Ex: The development of optical fibres for information transmission has exciting potential here, but there is a very large investment in the present systems which cannot be swept aside overnight.Ex: Recently, however, libraries have deserted the individual and have pandered too much to the needs of the general public.Ex: The author takes a critical look at the UK government's education policy with regard to schools' ' opting out' of local government control.Ex: There have even been rumours of plans to scrap most of the industrial side of its work and disperse key elements, such as the work on regional and industrial aid, to the provinces.Ex: To pull back now would make both her and him look bad.Ex: It is time that higher education institutions accepted the wisdom of collaboration and ditched, once and for all, the rhetoric of competition = Ya es hora de que las instituciones de enseñanza superior acepten la colaboración y rechacen, de una vez por todas, la competitividad.Ex: Instead the two ecclesiastical disputes which arose from Diocletian's decree to surrender scriptures must be seen as more disastrous to Christian unity than the destruction of libraries.Ex: In the article ' Bailing out' 9 of the 10 librarians interviewed admitted that they were trying to get out of librarianship partly due to unrealistic expectations learned in library school.Ex: Reduced support is a fact of life, and librarians cannot bargain away their budget pressures.Ex: The books may simply be laid before the librarian as they are found, ' dumped in his lap', as one writer puts it.Ex: A seemingly simple tale of schoolboys marooned on an island, the novel 'Lord of the Flies' is an enigmatic and provocative piece of literature.Ex: The actress flaked out again and the director is trying to line up a replacement.Ex: She seeks to recontextualize those events that history has estranged, destroyed or capriciously left by the wayside.Ex: Guards in the lead car of the convoy threw their doors open and ran for cover, screaming, 'Get away, get away'.Ex: One of them sputtered and gesticulated with sufficient violence to induce us to desist.Ex: Judging by the critical responses to the article so far, it looks like the world isn't quite ready to go cold turkey on its religion addiction.Ex: There are many thankless jobs in this world, but does that mean you can just walk out on them for your own selfish reasons?.Ex: At least five members of the audience walked out during the bishop's address.Ex: A new study suggests that up to 40% of currently employed individuals are ready to jump ship once the economy rebounds.* abandonar el barco = abandon + ship.* abandonar las armas = put down + weapons.* abandonar los estudios = drop out (from school), drop out of + school.* abandonar los servicios de Alguien = drop out.* abandonarse = go to + seed.* abandonarse a = abandon + Reflexivo + to.* abandonar toda esperanza = give up + hope.* abandonar (toda/la) esperanza = abandon + (all) hope.* abandonar un hábito = stop + habit.* abandonar un lugar = quit + Lugar.* estudiante de bachiller que abandona los estudios = high-school dropout.* estudiante universitario que abandona los estudios = college dropout.* no abandonar = stick with, stand by.* persona que abandona Algo = quitter.* * *abandonar [A1 ]vtA1 ( frml); ‹lugar› to leaveel público abandonó el teatro the audience left the theaterse le concedió un plazo de 48 horas para abandonar el país he was given 48 hours to leave the countrymiles de personas abandonan la capital durante el verano thousands of people leave the capital in the summerlas tropas han comenzado a abandonar el área the troops have started to pull out of o leave the areaabandonó la reunión en señal de protesta he walked out of the meeting in protest2 ‹persona›abandonó a su familia he abandoned o deserted his familylo abandonó por otro she left him for another manabandonó al bebé en la puerta del hospital she abandoned o left the baby at the entrance to the hospitalabandonar a algn A algo to abandon sb TO sthdecidió volver, abandonando al grupo a su suerte he decided to turn back, abandoning the group to its fate3 ‹coche/barco› to abandonB «fuerzas» to desertlas fuerzas lo abandonaron y cayó al suelo his strength deserted him and he fell to the floorla suerte me ha abandonado my luck has run out o deserted menunca lo abandona el buen humor he's always good-humored, his good humor never deserts himC ‹actividad/propósito› to give upabandonó los estudios she abandoned o gave up her studies¿vas a abandonar el curso cuando te falta tan poco? you're not going to drop out of o give up the course at this late stage, are you?abandonó la lucha he gave up the fight, he abandoned the struggleha abandonado toda pretensión de salir elegido he has given up o abandoned any hopes he had of being electedabandonó la terapia he gave up his therapy, he stopped having therapy■ abandonarvi( Dep)1 (antes de iniciarse la carrera, competición) to withdraw, pull out2 (una vez iniciada la carrera, competición) to retire, pull out; (en ajedrez) to resign; (en boxeo, lucha) to concede defeat, throw in the towelA(descuidarse): desde que tuvo hijos se ha abandonado since she had her children she's let herself gono te abandones y ve al médico don't neglect your health, go and see the doctorB (entregarse) abandonarse A algo ‹a vicios/placeres› to abandon oneself TO sthse abandonó al ocio she gave herself up to o abandoned herself to a life of leisurese abandonó al sueño he gave in to o succumbed to sleep, he let sleep overcome him, he surrendered to sleep* * *
abandonar ( conjugate abandonar) verbo transitivo
1
‹marido/amante› to leave;
‹coche/barco› to abandon;
2 [ fuerzas] to desert
3
◊ abandonar los estudios to drop out of school/college
verbo intransitivo (Dep)
(en boxeo, lucha) to concede defeat
abandonarse verbo pronominal
1 ( entregarse) abandonarse a algo ‹a vicios/placeres› to abandon oneself to sth
2 ( en el aspecto personal) to let oneself go
abandonar
I verbo transitivo
1 (irse de) to leave, quit: tenemos que vernos hoy, porque mañana abandono Madrid, we've got to see eachother today because I'm leaving Madrid tomorrow
2 (a una persona, a un animal) to abandon
abandonar a alguien a su suerte, to leave someone to his fate
3 (un proyecto, los estudios) to give up
4 Dep (retirarse de una carrera) to drop out of
(un deporte) to drop
II vi (desfallecer) to give up: los resultados no son los esperados, pero no abandones, the results aren't as good as we expected, but don't give up
' abandonar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
dejar
- botar
- plantar
English:
abandon
- back away
- cast aside
- caution
- desert
- drop
- forsake
- free
- give up on
- habit
- idea
- jettison
- leave
- quit
- retire
- scrap
- stand by
- throw in
- walk out
- ditch
- give
- maroon
- stick
- vacate
- walk
* * *♦ vt1. [lugar] to leave;[barco, vehículo] to abandon;abandonó la sala tras el discurso she left the hall after the speech;abandonó su pueblo para trabajar en la ciudad she left her home town for a job in the city;abandonar el barco to abandon ship;¡abandonen el barco! abandon ship!;los cascos azules abandonarán pronto la región the UN peacekeeping troops will soon be pulling out of the region2. [persona] to leave;[hijo, animal] to abandon;abandonó a su hijo she abandoned her son;¡nunca te abandonaré! I'll never leave you!3. [estudios] to give up;[proyecto] to abandon;abandonó la carrera en el tercer año she dropped out of university in her third year, she gave up her studies in her third year;han amenazado con abandonar las negociaciones they have threatened to walk out of the negotiations;han amenazado con abandonar la liga they have threatened to pull out of the league;abandonar la lucha to give up the fight4. [sujeto: suerte, buen humor] to desert;lo abandonaron las fuerzas y tuvo que retirarse his strength gave out and he had to drop out;nunca la abandona su buen humor she never loses her good humour♦ vi1. [en carrera, competición] to pull out, to withdraw;[en ajedrez] to resign; [en boxeo] to throw in the towel;abandonó en el primer asalto his corner threw in the towel in the first round;una avería lo obligó a abandonar en la segunda vuelta a mechanical fault forced him to retire on the second lap2. [rendirse] to give up;no abandones ahora que estás casi al final don't give up now you've almost reached the end* * *I v/tII v/i DEP pull out* * *abandonar vt1) dejar: to abandon, to leave2) : to give up, to quitabandonaron la búsqueda: they gave up the search* * *abandonar vb2. (un sitio) to leave -
4 do|jść
pf — do|chodzić1 impf (dojdę, dojdziesz, doszedł, doszła, doszli — dochodzę) Ⅰ vi 1. (dotrzeć) to reach (do czegoś to sth), to arrive- dojść do domu to reach a. get home- jak mogę dojść do dworca? how can I get to the railway station (from here)?- dochodząc do szkoły, usłyszał dzwonek na lekcje on reaching school he heard the bell ring for lessons2. (ogień, woda) to reach, to come (do czegoś up to sth)- pożar dochodził już do strychu the fire was already reaching up to the attic- woda doszła do samych drzwi the water came right up to the door- opatrunek jest za ścisły i krew nie dochodzi do nogi the dressing is too tight and the blood isn’t flowing to the leg3. [list, przesyłka, wiadomość] to reach (do kogoś sb)- jego list jeszcze nie doszedł his letter hasn’t arrived yet- czy pieniądze już doszły? has the money arrived yet?- doszło do moich uszu, że przenosi się pan do Paryża I heard that you’re moving to Paris- doszły mnie słuchy, że wyszłaś za mąż I hear you got married- dochodzą (do) nas plotki o jej życiu prywatnym we hear various rumours about her private life- mało z tego, co mu tłumaczę, dochodzi do niego not much of what I say gets through to him- wreszcie doszło do jego świadomości, że… it finally got through to him that…- program dochodzi przez satelitę the programme’s transmitted by satellite4. (dolecieć) [dźwięk, zapach] to come- z ogrodu dochodził miły zapach kwiatów a pleasant smell of flowers was coming from the garden- uliczny hałas tu nie dochodzi you can’t hear the traffic here- dziwny dźwięk doszedł do jego uszu he heard a strange sound5. (dołączyć) to join (do czegoś sth)- do naszego zespołu doszli nowi zawodnicy some new players have joined our team- doszedł nam nowy temat do dyskusji we have a new topic to discuss- do pensji dochodzi premia oraz różne dodatki on top of the salary there’s a bonus and various additions- po urodzeniu się dziecka dojdą nam nowe obowiązki after the baby’s born, we’ll have additional obligations6. [liczba, temperatura, cena] to amount, to come (do czegoś to sth)- liczba ofiar w wypadkach drogowych w tym miesiącu doszła już do 1000 the number of road accident victims this month has already reached 1,000- jego długi dochodziły do dwóch milionów złotych his debts amounted a. came to almost two million zlotys- kurs dolara doszedł do 4 zł the exchange rate for the dollar went up to a. reached 4 zlotys- upał dochodził do 40°C the temperature was approaching 40°C7. (osiągnąć) to achieve, to attain (do czegoś sth)- dojść do perfekcji w czymś to achieve a. attain perfection in sth- dojść do bogactwa to become rich- dojść do pełnoletności to come of age- dojść do punktu kulminacyjnego/zenitu to reach a high/zenith- dojść z kimś do porozumienia a. zgody to reach a. come to (an) agreement a. an understanding with sb- po długich negocjacjach rząd i związki dochodzą do porozumienia after protracted negotiations, the government and unions are coming to an understanding- dojść do sławy to become famous- dojść do władzy to come a. rise to power- jak on doszedł do takich pieniędzy? how did he come into that kind of money?- tylko najwytrwalsi do czegoś dochodzą only the most persevering people achieve anything (in this world)- jego wściekłość dochodziła do obłędu his fury verged on madness8. (domagać się) to demand- dochodzić zwrotu długu to demand the settlement of a debt- dochodzić swoich praw na drodze sądowej to pursue one’s rights in a court of law- dochodzić sprawiedliwości to seek a. demand justice9. (ustalić) to find out- dochodzić prawdy to search for the truth- nie dojdziesz prawdy you’ll never find out a. know the truth- postanowił dojść, o co im chodzi he resolved to find out what they meant- trudno dojść, jak jest naprawdę it’s hard to find out what the real situation is- dojść do wniosku a. przekonania to reach a. come to a conclusion10. (dogonić) to catch up- dojść kogoś to catch sb up a. catch up with sb- dochodził biegnącego przed nim Francuza he was catching up with the French runner in front of him- dojść do piłki/podania to get to the ball11. (o potrawie, mięsie, ryżu) to be ready- ziemniaki jeszcze twarde, ale zaraz dojdą the potatoes are still a bit hard, but they’ll be ready in a minute- zostaw mięso w piecu, niech dojdzie leave the meat in the oven to finish off for a bit12. (dojrzeć) [zboże, owoce, warzywa] to ripen- zboża już dochodzą the corn will be ripe soonⅡ v imp. (zdarzyć się) to happen, to come about- nie wiem, jak do tego doszło I’ve no idea how it happened a. came about- po operacji doszło do powikłań some complications arose after the operation- często dochodziło pomiędzy nimi do spięć there were often arguments between them- na tym skrzyżowaniu często dochodzi do wypadków accidents often occur at this crossroads- dochodzi do tego, że dzieci kłócą się z nauczycielami w szkole it’s coming to the point a. reaching the stage where children are quarrelling with their teachers at school- doszło do tego, że nikt nie podał mu ręki in the end no one shook his hand- do czego to doszło! what (on earth) are things coming to!■ dojść z czymś do ładu to get to grips with sth- dojść do ładu ze swymi myślami to get a. bring one’s thoughts under control- dojść z kimś do ładu to reach an understanding with sb- gdy się upił, trudno było z nim dojść do ładu when he got drunk, it was difficult to get through to him- nie dojdę z tym chłopakiem do ładu, nie chce mnie w ogóle słuchać I can’t cope with that boy, he doesn’t want to listen to me at allThe New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > do|jść
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5 do|trzeć
pf — do|cierać impf Ⅰ vt 1. (utrzeć dodatkowo) to grate (some) more- trzeba dotrzeć chrzanu, bo zabraknie we need to grate some more horseradish as there’s not enough2. (utrzeć do końca) to finish grating- jak dotrę marchew, pozmywam I’ll do the washing-up as soon as I finish grating the carrots3. Techn. to run in [silnik, samochód] Ⅱ vi 1. (znaleźć się w określonym miejscu) to reach vt; to get (do kogoś/czegoś to sb/sth)- zadzwonią po dotarciu do celu podróży they’ll phone upon reaching their destination- dotrzeć do domu to reach a. get home- dotrzeć na szczyt to reach the top także przen.- taksówka w ciągu dziesięciu minut dotarła do szpitala the taxi made it to the hospital in ten minutes- pociąg dotarł do stacji końcowej the train arrived at the terminus- głębie oceanu, gdzie nie dociera światło the depths of the ocean where light doesn’t penetrate- telewizja satelitarna dotarła już do wszystkich zakątków świata satellite TV now reaches every corner of the globe- dotrzeć do finału to get through to the finals- wreszcie dotarłem do ostatniej strony książki I finally reached the last page of the book- dotrzeć do źródła informacji to get to the source of the information- skoro dotarł do tych listów, postanowił je ujawnić since he’d unearthed the letters, he decided to make them public- dotarcie do wszystkich świadków tragedii trwało rok it took a year to track down all the witnesses of the tragedy3. (dojść) [list, przesyłka, wiadomość] to get through (do kogoś to sb)- docierają do nas różne pogłoski various rumours are reaching our ears- prawda docierała do nas stopniowo the truth was gradually dawning on us- dopiero po chwili dotarło do niego, że ktoś do niego mówił it took him a moment to realize someone was talking to him- może nie w pełni do pani dotarło, kim on jest naprawdę maybe you don’t fully realize who he is- jego argumenty zupełnie do niej nie docierają his arguments don’t get through to her at all- tylko groźby do nich docierają threats are the only things that get through to them- nie wiem już, jak mam do nich dotrzeć I don’t know how to get through to them- „i żadnego wychodzenia wieczorem, dotarło?” ‘and you’re grounded! do you read me?! a. is that clear?!’ pot.Ⅲ dotrzeć się — docierać się 1. (dopasować się) [osoby, zespół, małżeństwo] to adapt a. adjust (to each other)- drużyna/personel potrzebuje trochę czasu, żeby się dotrzeć the team/staff need(s) some time to get in synch2. Techn. [silnik, samochód] to be run inThe New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > do|trzeć
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