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1 seep
تَسَرَّبَ \ escape: to find a way out: Oil was escaping from a crack in the engine. leak: (of liquid or gas) to escape through a small hole: Oil leaked on to the floor, (of secrets) to become known to those who should not know Some of the questions leaked out on the day before the exam. seep: (of liquid) to pass slowly through some material: The blood seeped through his coat. \ See Also رشح (رَشَحَ)، نز (نَزَّ) -
2 seep
نَزَّ \ leak: (of liquid or gas) to escape through a small hole: Oil leaked on to the floor. ooze: (of thick liquid) to flow slowly: Blood oozed from the wound in his arm. seep: (of liquid) to pass slowly through some material: The blood seeped through his coat. \ See Also تسرب (تَسَرَّبَ) -
3 seep
تَرَشَّحَ \ seep: (of liquid) to pass slowly through some material: The blood seeped through his coat. \ See Also نز (نَزَّ)، تسرب (تَسَرَّب) -
4 seep
[siːp] verb(of liquids) to flow slowly eg through a very small opening:يَنِزُّ، يَرْشَح، يَسيلُ بِبُطءAll his confidence seeped away.
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5 doorkwellen
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6 doorzweten
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7 doorsijpelen
seep through; percolate -
8 penetrar
v.1 to pierce, to penetrate (introducirse en) (sujeto: arma, sonido).Los policías penetraron The policemen penetrated.Ella penetró el misterio She penetrated=understood the mystery.El ácido penetra la piel Acid penetrates the skin.La bala penetra la pared The bullet pierces the wall.2 to get to the bottom of (secreto, misterio).3 to penetrate (sexualmente).4 to go deep into, to penetrate.El misil penetró la tierra The missile went deep into the ground.* * *1 (introducirse - en un territorio) to penetrate (en, -); (- en una casa, propiedad) to enter2 (atravesar) to penetrate, seep through1 (atravesar) to penetrate; (ruido) to pierce■ el olor era tan fuerte que penetró la ropa the smell was so strong that it got right into our clothes2 (descifrar - misterio) to get to the bottom of; (- secreto) to fathom (out)* * *verb1) to penetrate2) enter* * *1. VI1) (=entrar)penetraron a través de o por una claraboya — they entered through a skylight
el agua había penetrado a través de o por las paredes — the water had seeped into the walls
penetrar en: penetramos en un túnel — we went into o entered a tunnel
el cuchillo penetró en la carne — the knife went into o entered o penetrated the flesh
2) frm (=descifrar) to penetrate2. VT1) (=atravesar) to go right through2) [sexualmente] to penetrate3) frm (=descubrir) [+ misterio] to fathom; [+ secreto] to unlock; [+ sentido] to grasp; [+ intención] to see through, grasp3.See:* * *1.verbo intransitivoa) ( entrar)penetrar por algo — agua/humedad to seep through something
b) ( en el acto sexual) to penetrate2.penetrar vta) <defensa/membrana> to penetrateb) (liter) <misterio/secreto> to fathom, penetrate (liter)c) (Com) < mercado> to penetrated) ( en el acto sexual) to penetrate* * *= cut through, go into, penetrate, go in, permeate, break through, tread into, seep into, seep through, seep, pervade, see through, insinuate + Reflexivo + (into), insinuate + Posesivo + way through, insinuate into, pierce, intromit.Ex. Publishers attempting to cut through this nomenclature morass can check with the library's administration.Ex. As something you may or may not know, every item going into the processing stream is assigned a priority, and our judgment will in many cases be different from yours, as our needs will be different from yours.Ex. But the leaven of the principles, promulgated by the International Federation, has not yet penetrated into more than half the lump of documentary material.Ex. But in the country the processes of printing always provoke such lively curiosity that the customers preferred to go in by a glazed door set in the shop-front and giving onto the street.Ex. This concept permeates all bibliothecal activities from start to finish, especially indexing and abstracting.Ex. Is there a glass ceiling for librarians? If so, what's the best way to break through it?.Ex. This seems to suggest that Schopenhauer may have trodden much further into the mystics' domain than he is willing to admit.Ex. Rampant commercialism is seeping into every crevice of American culture.Ex. The consequences were beginning to seep through to respondents at the time of the visits made to them and were creating a great deal of concern.Ex. The outer edges of the sheet -- the deckle edges -- are rough and uneven where the stuff seeped between the deckle and the mould.Ex. I strongly believe that we must cultivate a more positive attitude towards change in the field of library work, and that this attitude must pervade all levels of librarianship.Ex. Books can seldom be disbound for the benefit of bibliographers (although it is worth remembering that they sometimes have to be rebound, when they are completely dismembered), but we can now see through printing ink by means of betaradiography.Ex. But self-concern can insinuate itself into every corner of the emotional life.Ex. As they insinuated their way through the stack area, the secretary responded that all she knew was that the director had just returned from a meeting.Ex. While endorsing the thought that language is insinuated into brains, I also identify what I believe is the theory's Achilles heel.Ex. She waited like Saint Sebastian for the arrows to begin piercing her.Ex. During copulation, hamster females maintain lordosis for hundreds of seconds, while the male mounts and intromits repeatedly.----* osar penetrar = venture into.* palabras + penetrar = words + sink.* penetrar de un modo inclinado = slant into.* penetrar una barrera = break through + barrier.* * *1.verbo intransitivoa) ( entrar)penetrar por algo — agua/humedad to seep through something
b) ( en el acto sexual) to penetrate2.penetrar vta) <defensa/membrana> to penetrateb) (liter) <misterio/secreto> to fathom, penetrate (liter)c) (Com) < mercado> to penetrated) ( en el acto sexual) to penetrate* * *= cut through, go into, penetrate, go in, permeate, break through, tread into, seep into, seep through, seep, pervade, see through, insinuate + Reflexivo + (into), insinuate + Posesivo + way through, insinuate into, pierce, intromit.Ex: Publishers attempting to cut through this nomenclature morass can check with the library's administration.
Ex: As something you may or may not know, every item going into the processing stream is assigned a priority, and our judgment will in many cases be different from yours, as our needs will be different from yours.Ex: But the leaven of the principles, promulgated by the International Federation, has not yet penetrated into more than half the lump of documentary material.Ex: But in the country the processes of printing always provoke such lively curiosity that the customers preferred to go in by a glazed door set in the shop-front and giving onto the street.Ex: This concept permeates all bibliothecal activities from start to finish, especially indexing and abstracting.Ex: Is there a glass ceiling for librarians? If so, what's the best way to break through it?.Ex: This seems to suggest that Schopenhauer may have trodden much further into the mystics' domain than he is willing to admit.Ex: Rampant commercialism is seeping into every crevice of American culture.Ex: The consequences were beginning to seep through to respondents at the time of the visits made to them and were creating a great deal of concern.Ex: The outer edges of the sheet -- the deckle edges -- are rough and uneven where the stuff seeped between the deckle and the mould.Ex: I strongly believe that we must cultivate a more positive attitude towards change in the field of library work, and that this attitude must pervade all levels of librarianship.Ex: Books can seldom be disbound for the benefit of bibliographers (although it is worth remembering that they sometimes have to be rebound, when they are completely dismembered), but we can now see through printing ink by means of betaradiography.Ex: But self-concern can insinuate itself into every corner of the emotional life.Ex: As they insinuated their way through the stack area, the secretary responded that all she knew was that the director had just returned from a meeting.Ex: While endorsing the thought that language is insinuated into brains, I also identify what I believe is the theory's Achilles heel.Ex: She waited like Saint Sebastian for the arrows to begin piercing her.Ex: During copulation, hamster females maintain lordosis for hundreds of seconds, while the male mounts and intromits repeatedly.* osar penetrar = venture into.* palabras + penetrar = words + sink.* penetrar de un modo inclinado = slant into.* penetrar una barrera = break through + barrier.* * *penetrar [A1 ]vi1(en un lugar): la puerta por donde penetró el ladrón the door through which the thief enteredel agua penetraba por entre las tejas water was seeping in o coming in between the tilesuna luz tenue penetraba a través de los visillos a pale light filtered in through the lace curtainsun intenso olor penetraba por todos los rincones de la casa a pungent smell pervaded every corner of the housepenetrar EN algo:la bala penetró en el pulmón izquierdo the bullet pierced his left lungtropas enemigas han penetrado en nuestras fronteras enemy troops have pushed over o crossed o penetrated our bordershace un frío que penetra en los huesos the cold gets right into your bonesla humedad había penetrado en las paredes the damp had seeped into the wallsesta crema penetra rápidamente en la piel this cream is quickly absorbed by the skin2 (descubrir, descifrar) penetrar EN algo:intenta penetrar en la intimidad del personaje he attempts to delve into the personality of the characteres difícil penetrar en su mente it is difficult to fathom his thoughts o ( colloq) to get inside his head3 (en un mercado) penetrar EN algo to penetrate sth4 (en el acto sexual) to penetrate■ penetrarvt1 (atravesar) to penetrateun ruido que penetra los oídos a piercing o ear-splitting noisees difícil penetrar la corteza it is difficult to penetrate o get through the outer layer2 ‹misterio/secreto› to fathom3 ( Com) ‹mercado› to penetrate4 (en el acto sexual) to penetrate* * *
penetrar ( conjugate penetrar) verbo intransitivo ( entrar) penetrar por algo [agua/humedad] to seep through sth;
[ luz] to shine through sth;
[ ladrón] to enter through sth;
penetrar EN algo to penetrate sth
verbo transitivo
to penetrate;◊ la bala le penetró el pulmón the bullet penetrated o entered his lung
penetrar
I verbo transitivo to penetrate: el aceite penetró el tejido y no pude sacar la mancha, the oil went straight through the material and I couldn't get it out
era incapaz de penetrar el sentido de sus palabras, it was impossible to get to the bottom of his meaning
un intenso olor penetraba el lugar, a strong smell seeped through the place
II vi (en un recinto) to go o get [en, in]: un frente frío penetrará por el noroeste, a cold front will sweep over from the north-east
el veneno penetró en la piel, the poison was soaked in through the skin
' penetrar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
calar
- internarse
English:
come through
- penetrate
- pierce
- sink in
- soak in
- strike through
- break
* * *♦ viel agua penetraba por la puerta the water was seeping under the door;la luz penetraba por entre las rendijas the light came filtering through the cracks;[filtrarse por] to get into, to penetrate; [perforar] to pierce; [llegar a conocer] to get to the bottom of;cinco terroristas penetraron en el palacio five terrorists got into the palace;no consiguen penetrar en el mercado europeo they have been unable to penetrate the European market♦ vt1. [introducirse en] [sujeto: arma, sonido] to pierce, to penetrate;[sujeto: humedad, líquido] to permeate; [sujeto: emoción, sentimiento] to pierce;la bala le penetró el corazón the bullet pierced her heart;el frío les penetraba hasta los huesos they were chilled to the bone;el grito le penetró los oídos the scream pierced her eardrums;han penetrado el mercado latinoamericano they have made inroads into o penetrated the Latin American market2. [secreto, misterio] to get to the bottom of3. [sexualmente] to penetrate* * *I v/t penetrateII v/i1 ( atravesar) penetrate2 ( entrar) enter* * *penetrar vi1) : to penetrate, to sink in2)penetrar por orpenetrar en : to pierce, to go in, to enter intoel frío penetra por la ventana: the cold comes right in through the windowpenetrar vt1) : to penetrate, to permeate2) : to pierceel dolor penetró su corazón: sorrow pierced her heart3) : to fathom, to understand* * *penetrar vb1. (entrar) to get into2. (perforar) to penetrate / to pierce -
9 filtrarse
1 (pasar a través) to filter* * *VPR1) [líquido] to seep, leak; [luz, sonido] to filterel agua se filtraba por las paredes — water was seeping o leaking in through the walls
2) (=desaparecer) [dinero, bienes] to disappear* * *(v.) = seep through, percolate, seep into, seepEx. The consequences were beginning to seep through to respondents at the time of the visits made to them and were creating a great deal of concern.Ex. A culture of violence and hatred seems to have percolated through the corridors of the institutions of learning particularly schools.Ex. Rampant commercialism is seeping into every crevice of American culture.Ex. The outer edges of the sheet -- the deckle edges -- are rough and uneven where the stuff seeped between the deckle and the mould.* * *(v.) = seep through, percolate, seep into, seepEx: The consequences were beginning to seep through to respondents at the time of the visits made to them and were creating a great deal of concern.
Ex: A culture of violence and hatred seems to have percolated through the corridors of the institutions of learning particularly schools.Ex: Rampant commercialism is seeping into every crevice of American culture.Ex: The outer edges of the sheet -- the deckle edges -- are rough and uneven where the stuff seeped between the deckle and the mould.* * *
■filtrarse verbo reflexivo
1 (líquido) seep
2 (una noticia) to leak out
' filtrarse' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
filtrar
English:
filter out
- filter through
- get out
- leak
- seep
- filter
- percolate
* * *vpr1. [penetrar] to filter, to seep ( por through);la luz se filtra por una rendija the light filters in through a crack;la humedad se filtra por la pared the damp seeps through the wall2. [información, noticia] to be leaked* * ** * *vr: to seep through, to leak* * *filtrarse vb1. (líquidos) to leak / to seep2. (luz) to filter3. (información) to leak -
10 filtrar
v.1 to filter.Mario aclara el destilado Mario filters the distilled liquid.2 to leak.* * *1 (hacer pasar) to filter2 (seleccionar) to filter3 (divulgar) to leak1 (pasar a través) to filter* * *verb1) to filter2) leak* * *1. VT1) [+ líquido, luz] to filter2) [+ llamadas, visitantes] to screen3) [+ información, documento, grabación] to leak2.See:* * *1.verbo transitivo1)a) <líquido/rayos> to filterb) < llamadas> to screen2) <informaciones/noticias> to leak2.filtrar vi líquido/luz to filter3.filtrarse v pron2)a) noticia to leakb) dinero to seep away, dwindle* * *= filter (out), winnow, strain.Ex. Central libraries are an important part of the interlending system and by ensuring regional utilisation of public library resources and thus filtering requests they protect research libraries.Ex. Not only are entries weeded in order to be subject-specific, but those weeded entries are winnowed even further so that only useful information is left.Ex. Sampling for immature stages of mosquito was done weekly between May 1999 and January 2000 by straining them from the water in ravines and gutters.----* filtrar el acceso = filter + access.* filtrar + Información = leak + Información.* filtrarse = seep through, percolate, seep into, seep.* * *1.verbo transitivo1)a) <líquido/rayos> to filterb) < llamadas> to screen2) <informaciones/noticias> to leak2.filtrar vi líquido/luz to filter3.filtrarse v pron2)a) noticia to leakb) dinero to seep away, dwindle* * *= filter (out), winnow, strain.Ex: Central libraries are an important part of the interlending system and by ensuring regional utilisation of public library resources and thus filtering requests they protect research libraries.
Ex: Not only are entries weeded in order to be subject-specific, but those weeded entries are winnowed even further so that only useful information is left.Ex: Sampling for immature stages of mosquito was done weekly between May 1999 and January 2000 by straining them from the water in ravines and gutters.* filtrar el acceso = filter + access.* filtrar + Información = leak + Información.* filtrarse = seep through, percolate, seep into, seep.* * *filtrar [A1 ]vtA1 ‹líquido/rayos› to filter2 ‹llamadas› to screenB ‹informaciones/noticias› to leakC ( Inf) to filter■ filtrarvi«líquido/luz» to filterlas nubes dejaban filtrar los rayos del sol the sun's rays filtered through the cloudsA1 «agua» to leakel agua se filtraba por un pequeño agujero en el tejado the water seeped o leaked through a small hole in the roofla humedad que se filtra por las paredes the damp that seeps through the walls2 «dinero» to seep away, dwindleB «noticia» to leakla noticia se ha filtrado a la prensa the news has leaked to the press* * *
filtrar ( conjugate filtrar) verbo transitivo
filtrarse verbo pronominal
[ humedad] to seep;
filtrar verbo transitivo
1 (un líquido) to filter
2 (una noticia, un dato) to leak
' filtrar' also found in these entries:
English:
filter
- leak
- strain
* * *♦ vt1. [tamizar] to filter2. [información, noticia] to leak3. [llamadas] to screen* * *v/t1 agua filter2 información leak* * *filtrar v: to filter* * *filtrar vb1. (líquidos, luz) to filter2. (información) to leak -
11 durchsickern
v/i (trennb., ist -ge-)2. fig. Informationen: filter through; ungewollt: leak out; durchsickern bis auch filter ( oder trickle) down to* * *das Durchsickernleakage* * *dụrch|si|ckernvi sep aux sein (lit, fig)to trickle through, to seep through; (fig trotz Geheimhaltung) to leak out or through* * *1) (to come bit by bit or gradually: The news filtered out.) filter2) (the passing of gas, water etc through a crack or hole: a gas-leak.) leak3) (a giving away of secret information: a leak of Government plans.) leak4) ((an act of) leaking: Leakages in several water-mains had been reported; a leakage of information.) leakage5) (to (cause something) to pass through a leak: Gas was leaking from the cracked pipe; He was accused of leaking secrets to the enemy.) leak* * *durch|si·ckern[ˈdʊrçzɪkɐn]vi Hilfsverb: sein1. (lit)2. (allmählich bekannt werden)Informationen \durchsickern lassen to leak information▪ \durchsickern, dass... to get out that...* * *intransitives Verb; mit sein1) seep throughes ist durchgesickert, dass... — news has leaked out that...
* * *durchsickern v/i (trennb, ist -ge-)1.* * *intransitives Verb; mit sein1) seep through2) (bekannt werden) < news> leak outes ist durchgesickert, dass... — news has leaked out that...
* * *v.to infiltrate v.to percolate v.to soak v. -
12 trasminar
v.1 to undermine, to excavate, to dig under ground.2 to emit a strong scent.3 to pierce, to penetrate.4 to seep through, to seep.* * *1.verbo transitivo/ intransitivo to seep through2.trasminarse v pron to seep through* * *1.verbo transitivo/ intransitivo to seep through2.trasminarse v pron to seep through* * *trasminar [A1 ]vt/vito seep throughto seep through -
13 colarse
1 (escabullirse) to slip in, gatecrash2 (en una cola) to push in, jump the queue, US jump the line3 familiar (equivocarse) to slip up, make a mistake4 (enamorarse) to fall ( por, for)* * *VPR1) (=filtrarse)el agua se cuela por las rendijas — the water seeps (in) through o gets in through the cracks
2) [personas] [sin pagar] to get in without paying; [en lugar prohibido] to sneak in; [en fiesta] to gatecrashun equipo de segunda división se había colado en las semifinales — a second division team had slipped through to the semifinals
3) [error]se le colaron varias faltas al revisar el texto — he overlooked several mistakes when revising the text
4) [en una cola] to jump the queue, cut in line (EEUU)¡oiga, no se cuele! — excuse me, there's a queue!
5) Esp * (=equivocarse) to get it wrong *¡huy! ¡me colé! — oops! I got it wrong! *
ahí te has colado porque yo no dije nada de eso — you got it wrong there, because I didn't say anything about that
6) Esp (=enamorarse)* * *= creep + past, sneak + past, sneak through, slither + Posesivo + way into, seep, creep (up) (in/into), sneak, weasel + Posesivo + way into, sneak into, worm + Posesivo + way through.Ex. Too frequently absurd errors creep past the abstractor who does not know the field.Ex. The more expensive media such as kits, models, and games are too large for someone to sneak past a vigilant charge out system = Los conjuntos documentales multimedia, las maquetas y los juegos son demasiado grandes para que alguien los pase sin ser visto por el sistema de préstamo.Ex. I think I am probably 99.9% effective at catching these spams but this was one of the.1% that snuck through.Ex. That's despite grumpy comments like those of William Hartston who said it was 'surely one of the ugliest words ever to slither its way into our dictionaries'.Ex. The outer edges of the sheet -- the deckle edges -- are rough and uneven where the stuff seeped between the deckle and the mould.Ex. Abstracting may not always be accorded a high priority by volunteer abstractors and undesirable delays may creep into the preparation of abstracts.Ex. With a no fine policy there'll no longer be a need for patrons to sneak books back on the shelves after they're due and then pretend they were there all the time = Sin una política de sanciones los usuarios ya no tendrán la necesidad de devolver los libros a los estantes sin ser vistos después de haber vencido su préstamo y luego fingir que estaban allí desde hace tiempo.Ex. He then rented a hidden camera and weaseled his way into the private ceremony to take a shot of the singer.Ex. The police said that he had sneaked into a her house and raped her nearly 200 times over a 13-month period.Ex. Corruption wormed its way through their ranks, as it did through the ranks of their kinfolk.----* colarse en = slip into.* colarse inadvertidamente = slip through.* * *= creep + past, sneak + past, sneak through, slither + Posesivo + way into, seep, creep (up) (in/into), sneak, weasel + Posesivo + way into, sneak into, worm + Posesivo + way through.Ex: Too frequently absurd errors creep past the abstractor who does not know the field.
Ex: The more expensive media such as kits, models, and games are too large for someone to sneak past a vigilant charge out system = Los conjuntos documentales multimedia, las maquetas y los juegos son demasiado grandes para que alguien los pase sin ser visto por el sistema de préstamo.Ex: I think I am probably 99.9% effective at catching these spams but this was one of the.1% that snuck through.Ex: That's despite grumpy comments like those of William Hartston who said it was 'surely one of the ugliest words ever to slither its way into our dictionaries'.Ex: The outer edges of the sheet -- the deckle edges -- are rough and uneven where the stuff seeped between the deckle and the mould.Ex: Abstracting may not always be accorded a high priority by volunteer abstractors and undesirable delays may creep into the preparation of abstracts.Ex: With a no fine policy there'll no longer be a need for patrons to sneak books back on the shelves after they're due and then pretend they were there all the time = Sin una política de sanciones los usuarios ya no tendrán la necesidad de devolver los libros a los estantes sin ser vistos después de haber vencido su préstamo y luego fingir que estaban allí desde hace tiempo.Ex: He then rented a hidden camera and weaseled his way into the private ceremony to take a shot of the singer.Ex: The police said that he had sneaked into a her house and raped her nearly 200 times over a 13-month period.Ex: Corruption wormed its way through their ranks, as it did through the ranks of their kinfolk.* colarse en = slip into.* colarse inadvertidamente = slip through.* * *
■colarse verbo reflexivo
1 (entrar sin ser visto) to slip in
(sin ser invitado) to gatecrash
(sin pagar) se coló en el autobús, he got onto the bus without paying
2 (saltarse el turno) to jump the queue, US to cut in the line
3 fam (meter la pata) to slip up, go too far
' colarse' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
colar
English:
cut in
- gatecrash
- jump
- push in
- queue
- thread
- worm
- crash
- gate
- line
- push
* * *vprel aire se cuela por esta rendija air passes through this crack;las llaves se colaron por la alcantarilla the keys dropped down the drain;el balón se coló por la portería sin que ningún jugador pudiera detenerlo the ball just slipped into the goal and no one could stop it2. [en cola] to Br jump the queue o US cut in line;¡eh, no te cueles! Br oi, don't jump the queue!, US hey, don't cut in line!3. [en sitio] to slip, to sneak (en into);se colaron en el tren they slipped o sneaked onto the train without paying;colarse en una fiesta to gatecrash a party;nos colamos por la puerta de atrás we sneaked in (by) the back doorte has colado, no es mi hermana you've got it wrong, she's not my sister* * *v/r fampush in3:colarse por alguien fam fall for s.o.* * *vr1) : to sneak in, to cut in line, to gate-crash2) : to slip up, to make a mistake* * *colarse vb1. (meterse en un lugar) to sneak inse coló en el concierto he sneaked into the concert / he got into the concert without paying2. (meterse en una cola) to push in3. (equivocarse en general) to slip up / to be wrong4. (equivocarse hablando) to put your foot in itte has colado, no debías decirle eso you've put your foot in it you shouldn't have said that -
14 durchdringen
v/i (unreg., trennb., ist -ge-)1. ( auch durchdringen durch) get through; Flüssigkeit: auch seep through; Nachricht: get out, leak (out); durchdringen zu Nachricht: reach, get to—v/t (unreg., untr., hat)1. penetrate; er durchdrang mich mit seinem Blick his look went right through me2. fig. mit dem Verstand: fathom, grasp3. (erfüllen) pervade, permeate; durchdrungen* * *to permeate; to pervade; to penetrate; to pierce; to imbue* * *dụrch|drin|gen ['dʊrçdrɪŋən]vi sep irreg aux sein1) (= hindurchkommen) to penetrate (durch etw sth); (Flüssigkeit, Kälte, Sonne) to come through (durch etw sth); (Stimme, Geräusch) to be heard (durch etw through sth)bis zu jdm durchdringen (fig) — to go or get as far as sb
2) (= sich durchsetzen, sich verständlich machen) to get throughbei, in +dat by)mit einem Vorschlag durchdringen — to get a suggestion accepted (
* * *das1) penetration2) (to move, go or make a way into, past, or through (something): The bullet penetrated his shoulder; Their minds could not penetrate the mystery.) penetrate3) ((of a liquid, gas etc) to pass or spread into or through: The water had permeated (through/into) the soil.) permeate4) ((of pointed objects) to go into or through (something): The arrow pierced his arm; A sudden light pierced the darkness.) pierce* * *durch|drin·gen1[ˈdʊrçdrɪŋən]vi irreg Hilfsverb: sein1. (durch etw dringen)2. (vordringen)▪ [bis zu jdm] \durchdringen to carry through [as far as sb]ihre Stimmen drangen durch die dünne Wand bis zu den Nachbarn durch their voices carried through the thin wall as far as the[ir] neighbours [or reached the neighbours through the thin wall3. (erreichen)▪ zu jdm \durchdringen to get as far as sbder Präsident ist zu gut abgeschirmt, zu ihm kann kein Attentäter \durchdringen the president is too well protected for any [potential] assassin to get close to him4. (sich durchsetzen)durch·drin·gen *2[dʊrçˈdrɪŋən]▪ etw \durchdringen to penetrate sth2. (geh)▪ jdn \durchdringen to pervade sb* * *IIIdurch etwas durchdringen — penetrate something; come through something
unregelmäßiges transitives Verb penetrate* * *'durchdringen v/i (irr, trennb, ist -ge-)1. ( auchdurchdringen zu Nachricht: reach, get to2. fig Person: succeed (mit with);mit etwas durchdringen auch get sth accepteddurch'dringen v/t (irr, untrennb, hat)1. penetrate;er durchdrang mich mit seinem Blick his look went right through me2. fig mit dem Verstand: fathom, grasp* * *Iunregelmäßiges intransitives Verb; mit sein <rain, sun> come throughIIdurch etwas durchdringen — penetrate something; come through something
unregelmäßiges transitives Verb penetrate* * *v.to penetrate v.to permeate v.to pervade v.to soak v.to thrill v. -
15 durchfärben
* * *dụrch|fär|ben sep1. vtto dye or colour (Brit) or color (US) (evenly)2. vito come or seep through ( durch etw sth)* * *durchfärben v/i (trennb, hat -ge-):auf +akk onto)* * *v.to imbue v. -
16 infiltrer
infiltrer [ɛ̃filtʀe]➭ TABLE 11. transitive verb[+ groupe, réseau] to infiltrate2. reflexive verb* * *ɛ̃filtʀe
1.
verbe transitif to infiltrate [organisation]
2.
s'infiltrer verbe pronominal1) [liquide] to leak ( dans into); [lumière, froid] to filter in2) [personne]s'infiltrer dans — to infiltrate [groupe, lieu]
* * *ɛ̃filtʀe vt[organisation] to infiltrate* * *infiltrer verb table: aimerA vtr to infiltrate [organisation].B s'infiltrer vpr1 [liquide] to seep through; [lumière, froid] to filter in; le doute s'infiltra dans son esprit he began to have doubts;2 [personne] s'infiltrer dans to infiltrate [groupe, lieu].[ɛ̃filtre] verbe transitif2. [organisation, réseau] to infiltrate————————s'infiltrer verbe pronominal intransitif[air, brouillard, eau] to seep[lumière] to filter in -
17 filtrer
filtrer [filtʀe]➭ TABLE 11. transitive verb[+ liquide, lumière, son] to filter ; [+ appels téléphoniques] to screen2. intransitive verb[liquide] to seep through ; [information] to filter through* * *filtʀe
1.
1) ( purifier) to filter2) ( tamiser) to filter [bruit, lumière]3) ( sélectionner) to screen [visiteurs, appels téléphoniques]
2.
verbe intransitif1) ( émerger) [informations] ( lentement) to filter through; ( malgré les précautions) to leak out; [idée] to filter through2) ( s'écouler) [liquide] to filter through3) ( passer) [son, lumière] to filter* * *filtʀe1. vtto filter, fig, [candidats, visiteurs] to screen2. vi* * *filtrer verb table: aimerA vtr1 ( purifier) to filter;2 ( tamiser) to filter [bruit, lumière];3 ( sélectionner) to screen [visiteurs, appels téléphoniques, informations].B vi1 ( émerger) [informations] ( lentement) to filter through; ( malgré des précautions) to leak out; [idée] to filter through; la nouvelle a filtré jusqu'aux journalistes/journaux the news leaked out to the journalists/newspapers;2 ( s'écouler) [liquide] to filter through;3 ( passer) [son, lumière] to filter.[filtre] verbe transitif1. [liquide, air, lumière] to filter2. [visiteurs, informations] to screen————————[filtre] verbe intransitif1. [liquide] to seep ou to filter through[lumière, bruit] to filter through2. [nouvelles] to filter through -
18 пробиваться
I несовер. - пробиваться; совер. - пробиться
1) (сквозь что-л.; через что-л.)
fight/make/force one's way (through); filter/seep (through)
2) (о растениях и т.д.)
push/shine through, come out/up
II страд. от пробивать* * *fight/make/force one's way; filter/seep* * * -
19 пробиться
несовер. - пробиваться; совер. - пробиться
1) (сквозь что-л.; через что-л.)
fight/make/force one's way (through); filter/seep (through)
2) (о растениях и т.д.)
push/shine through, come out/up* * *fight/make/force one's way; filter/seep -
20 przesiąk|nąć
pf — przesiąk|ać impf (przesiąknął a. przesiąkł, przesiąknęła a. przesiąkła, przesiąknęli a. przesiąkli — przesiąkam) vi 1. (przeniknąć) [krew, woda, wilgoć] to soak through, to seep through (coś sth)- przesiąknąć przez coś to soak a. seep through sth2. (zostać przepojonym) to be a. become saturated a. permeated (czymś with sth)- pokój przesiąkł swądem the smell of burning pervaded the room- przesiąkł/ubranie przesiąknęło mu dymem papierosowym he/his clothes reeked of cigarette smoke- ubranie przesiąkło jej wilgocią her clothes were sodden3. przen. to soak in (czymś sth); to imbibe przen. (czymś sth)- przesiąknął ideologią marksistowską/kulturą włoską he soaked up Marxist ideology/Italian culture- przesiąknęła niechęcią do wszystkiego, co obce she developed a deep aversion to anything foreignThe New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > przesiąk|nąć
См. также в других словарях:
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seep — [si:p] v [I always + adverb/preposition] [: Old English; Origin: sipian] 1.) to flow slowly through small holes or spaces seep into/through/down etc ▪ Blood seeped down his leg. 2.) to move or spread gradually seep away/into/through etc ▪ His… … Dictionary of contemporary English
seep — /seep/, v.i. 1. to pass, flow, or ooze gradually through a porous substance: Water seeps through cracks in the wall. 2. (of ideas, methods, etc.) to enter or be introduced at a slow pace: The new ideas finally seeped down to the lower echelons. 3 … Universalium
Seep — Seep, or Sipe Sipe, v. i. [AS. s[=i]pan to distill.] To run or soak through fine pores and interstices; to ooze. [Scot. & U. S.] [1913 Webster] Water seeps up through the sidewalks. G. W. Cable. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
seep — ► VERB ▪ (of a liquid) flow or leak slowly through porous material or small holes. DERIVATIVES seepage noun. ORIGIN perhaps a dialect form of an Old English word meaning «to soak» … English terms dictionary
seep — [sēp] vi. [ME * sipen < OE sipian, to soak, akin to MLowG sīpen, to drip < IE base * seib , to run out, drip > SOAP] to leak, drip, or flow out slowly through small openings or pores; ooze n. 1. a place where water, oil, etc. oozes from… … English World dictionary
seep — verb ADVERB ▪ gradually, slowly ▪ away, back, out, through, up ▪ The power had gradually seeped away … Collocations dictionary
seep — I. intransitive verb Etymology: alteration of earlier sipe, from Middle English sipen, from Old English sipian; akin to Middle Low German sipen to seep Date: 1790 1. to flow or pass slowly through fine pores or small openings ; ooze < water… … New Collegiate Dictionary
seep — [[t]sip[/t]] v. i. 1) to pass, flow, or ooze gradually, as through a porous substance 2) to become diffused; permeate 3) cvb to cause to seep; filter 4) moisture that seeps out; seepage 5) a small spring, pool, or the like, where liquid from the… … From formal English to slang
seep — /sip / (say seep) verb (i) 1. to pass gradually, as liquid, through a porous substance; ooze. 2. to enter or infiltrate gradually, as ideas. –noun 3. moisture that seeps out. 4. US a small spring, or soakage of groundwater at the surface. {?… …