-
1 cado
cădo, cĕcĭdi, cāsum, 3 ( part. pres. gen. plur. cadentūm, Verg. A. 10, 674; 12, 410), v. n. [cf. Sanscr. çad-, to fall away].I.Lit.A.In an extended sense, to be driven or carried by one ' s weight from a higher to a lower point, to fall down, be precipitated, sink down, go down, sink, fall (so mostly poet.; in prose, in place of it, the compounds decĭdo, occĭdo, excĭdo, etc.; cf. also ruo, labor;2.opp. surgo, sto): tum arbores in te cadent,
Plaut. Men. 2, 3, 25: (aves) praecipites cadunt in terram aut in aquam, fall headlong to the earth or into the water, Lucr. 6, 745; cf. id. 6, 828;imitated by Verg.: (apes) praecipites cadunt,
Verg. G. 4, 80:nimbus, Ut picis e caelo demissum flumen, in undas Sic cadit, etc.,
Lucr. 6, 258:cadit in terras vis flammea,
id. 2, 215; so with in, id. 2, 209; 4, 1282; 6, 1006; 6, 1125; Prop. 4 (5), 4, 64:in patrios pedes,
Ov. F. 2, 832.—With a different meaning:omnes plerumque cadunt in vulnus,
in the direction of, towards their wound, Lucr. 4, 1049; cf.:prolapsa in vulnus moribunda cecidit,
Liv. 1, 58, 11:cadit in vultus,
Ov. M. 5, 292:in pectus,
id. ib. 4, 579.—Less freq. with ad:ad terras,
Plin. 2, 97, 99, § 216:ad terram,
Quint. 5, 10, 84.—The place from which is designated by ab, ex, de:a summo cadere,
Plaut. Mil. 4, 4, 15:a mento cadit manus,
Ov. F. 3, 20:aves ab alto,
Plin. 10, 38, 54, § 112:ut cadat (avis) e regione loci,
Lucr. 6, 824:ex arbore,
Plin. 17, 20, 34, § 148; Dig. 50, 16, 30, § 4; 18, 1, 80, § 2:cecidisse de equo dicitur,
Cic. Clu. 62, 175:cadere de equo,
Plaut. Mil. 3, 1, 125 (for which Cæsar, Nepos, and Pliny employ decidere):de manibus arma cecidissent,
Cic. Phil. 14, 7, 21; cf.:de manibus civium delapsa arma ipsa ceciderunt,
id. Off. 1, 22, 77:cadunt altis de montibus umbrae,
Verg. E. 1, 84:de caelo,
Lucr. 5, 791; Ov. M. 2, 322:de matre (i. e. nasci),
Claud. in Rufin. 1, 92.—With per:per inane profundum,
Lucr. 2, 222:per aquas,
id. 2, 230:per salebras altaque saxa,
Mart. 11, 91; cf.:imbre per indignas usque cadente genas,
Ov. Tr. 1, 3, 18.—With the adverb altius: altius atque cadant summotis nubibus imbres, and poured forth from a greater height, etc., Verg. E. 6, 38.—And absol.:folia nunc cadunt,
Plaut. Men. 2, 3, 24; Ter. Ad. 1, 1, 12; Lucr. 6, 297:ut pluere in multis regionibus et cadere imbres,
id. 6, 415:cadens nix,
id. 3, 21; 3, 402:velut si prolapsus cecidisset,
Liv. 1, 56, 12: quaeque ita concus [p. 259] sa est, ut jam casura putetur, Ov. P. 2, 3, 59:cadentem Sustinuisse,
id. M. 8, 148:saepius, of epileptics,
Plin. Val. 12, 58:casuri, si leviter excutiantur, flosculi,
Quint. 12, 10, 73.—Esp.a.Of heavenly bodies, to decline, set (opp. orior), Ov. F. 1, 295:b.oceani finem juxta solemque cadentem,
Verg. A. 4, 480; 8, 59; Tac. G. 45:soli subjecta cadenti arva,
Avien. Descr. Orb. 273; cf. Tac. Agr. 12:quā (nocte) tristis Orion cadit,
Hor. Epod. 10, 10:Arcturus cadens,
id. C. 3, 1, 27.—To separate from something by falling, to fall off or away, fall out, to drop off, be shed, etc.:c.nam tum dentes mihi cadebant primulum,
Plaut. Men. 5, 9, 57:dentes cadere imperat aetas,
Lucr. 5, 671; Sen. Ep. 12, 3; 83, 3:pueri qui primus ceciderit dens,
Plin. 28, 4, 9, § 41:barba,
Verg. E. 1, 29:quam multa in silvis autumni frigore primo Lapsa cadunt folia,
id. A. 6, 310; cf. Cat. 11, 22; Hor. A. P. 61:lanigeris gregibus Sponte suā lanae cadunt,
Ov. M. 7, 541:saetae,
id. ib. 14, 303:quadrupedibus pilum cadere,
Plin. 11, 39, 94, § 231:poma,
Ov. M. 7, 586:cecidere manu quas legerat, herbae,
id. ib. 14, 350:elapsae manibus cecidere tabellae,
id. ib. 9, 571:et colus et fusus digitis cecidere remissis,
id. ib. 4, 229.—Of a stream, to fall, empty itself:d.amnis Aretho cadit in sinum maris,
Liv. 38, 4, 3; 38, 13, 6; 44, 31, 4:flumina in pontum cadent,
Sen. Med. 406:flumina in Hebrum cadentia,
Plin. 4, 11, 18, § 50:tandem in alterum amnem cadit,
Curt. 6, 4, 6.—Of dice, to be thrown or cast; to turn up:e.illud, quod cecidit forte,
Ter. Ad. 4, 7, 23 sq.; Liv. 2, 12, 16.—Alicui (alicujus) ad pedes, to fall at one ' s feet in supplication, etc. (post-class. for abicio, proicio), Sen. Contr. 1, 1, 19; Eutr. 4, 7; Aug. Serm. 143, 4; Vulg. Joan. 11, 32 al.—f.Super collum allcujus, to embrace (late Lat.), Vulg. Luc. 15, 20.—B.In a more restricted sense.1.To fall, to fall down, drop, fall to, be precipitated, etc.; to sink down, to sink, settle (the usual class. signif. in prose and poetry):2.cadere in plano,
Ov. Tr. 3, 4, 17 sq.:deorsum,
Plaut. Rud. 1, 2, 89:uspiam,
Ter. Ad. 1, 1, 12:Brutus, velut si prolapsus cecidisset,
Liv. 1, 56, 12; cf. id. 5, 21, 16; 1, 58, 12:dum timent, ne aliquando cadant, semper jacent,
Quint. 8, 5, 32:sinistrā manu sinum ad ima crura deduxit (Caesar), quo honestius caderet,
Suet. Caes. 82:cadere supinus,
id. Aug. 43 fin.:in pectus pronus,
Ov. M. 4, 579:cadunt toti montes,
Lucr. 6, 546:radicitus exturbata (pinus) prona cadit,
Cat. 64, 109:concussae cadunt urbes,
Lucr. 5, 1236:casura moenia Troum,
Ov. M. 13, 375; id. H. 13, 71:multaque praeterea ceciderunt moenia magnis motibus in terris,
Lucr. 6, 588: languescunt omnia membra;bracchia palpebraeque cadunt,
their arms and eyelids fall, id. 4, 953; 3, 596; so,ceciderunt artus,
id. 3, 453:sed tibi tamen oculi, voltus, verba cecidissent,
Cic. Dom. 52, 133; cf.:oculos vigiliā fatigatos cadentesque in opere detineo,
Sen. Ep. 8, 1:patriae cecidere manus,
Verg. A. 6, 33:cur facunda parum decoro Inter verba cadit lingua silentio?
Hor. C. 4, 1, 36:cecidere illis animique manusque,
Ov. M. 7, 347; Val. Fl. 1, 300; cf. II. F. infra.—In a pregn. signif. (as in most langg., to fall in battle, to die), to fall so as to be unable to rise, to fall dead, to fall, die (opp. vivere), Prop. 2 (3), 28, 42 (usu. of those who die in battle;b.hence most freq. in the histt.): hostes crebri cadunt,
Plaut. Am. 1, 1, 79 sq.:aut in acie cadendum fuit aut in aliquas insidias incidendum,
Cic. Fam. 7, 3, 3; Curt. 4, 1, 28; Ov. M. 7, 142:ut cum dignitate potius cadamus quam cum ignominiā serviamus,
Cic. Phil. 3, 14, 35:pauci de nostris cadunt,
Caes. B. G. 1, 15; id. B. C. 3, 53:optimus quisque cadere aut sauciari,
Sall. J. 92, 8; so id. C. 60, 6; id. J. 54, 10; Nep. Paus. 1, 2; id. Thras. 2, 7; id. Dat. 1, 2; 6, 1; 8, 3; Liv. 10, 35, 15 and 19; 21, 7, 10; 23, 21, 7; 29, 14, 8; Tac. G. 33; Hor. Ep. 1, 12, 27; Ov. M. 7, 142:per acies,
Tac. A. 1, 2:pro patriā,
Quint. 2, 15, 29:ante diem,
Verg. A. 4, 620:bipenni,
Ov. M. 12, 611:ense,
Val. Fl. 1, 812.—Not in battle:inque pio cadit officio,
Ov. M. 6, 250.—With abl. of means or instrument:suoque Marte (i. e. suā manu) cadunt,
Ov. M. 3, 123; cf. Tac. A. 3, 42 fin.:suā manu cecidit,
fell by his own hand, id. ib. 15, 71:exitu voluntario,
id. H. 1, 40:muliebri fraude cadere,
id. A. 2, 71: cecidere justā Morte Centauri, cecidit tremendae Flamma Chimaerae, Hor. C. 4, 2, 14 sq.:manu femineā,
Sen. Herc. Oet. 1179:femineo Marte,
Ov. M. 12, 610.—With abl. of agent with ab:torqueor, infesto ne vir ab hoste cadat,
should be slain by, Ov. H. 9, 36; so id. M. 5, 192; Suet. Oth. 5:a centurione volneribus adversis tamquam in pugnā,
Tac. A. 16, 9.—And without ab:barbarae postquam cecidere turmae Thessalo victore,
Hor. C. 2, 4, 9; imitated by Claudian, IV. Cons. Hon. 89; Grat. Cyn. 315.—Of victims, to be slain or offered, to be sacrificed, to fall ( poet.):3.multa tibi ante aras nostrā cadet hostia dextrā,
Verg. A. 1, 334:si tener pleno cadit haedus anno,
Hor. C. 3, 18, 5; Tib. 1, 1, 23; 4, 1, 15; Ov. M. 7, 162; 13, 615; id. F. 4, 653.—In mal. part., = succumbo, to yield to, Plaut. Pers. 4, 4, 104; Tib. 4, 10, 2; Sen. Contr. 1, 3, 7.—4.Matre cadens, just born ( poet.), Val. Fl. 1, 355; cf. of the custom of laying the new-born child at the father's feet: tellure cadens. Stat. S. 1, 2, 209; 5, 5, 69.II.Trop.A.To come or fall under, to fall, to be subject or exposed to something (more rare than its compound incidere, but class.); constr. usually with sub or in, sometimes with ad:B.sub sensus cadere nostros,
i. e. to be perceived by the senses, Lucr. 1, 448:sub sensum,
Cic. Inv. 1, 30, 48: in cernendi sensum. id. Tim. 3:sub oculos,
id. Or. 3, 9:in conspectum,
to become visible, id. Tusc. 1, 22, 50:sub aurium mensuram,
id. Or. 20, 67:sponte suā (genus humanum) cecidit sub leges artaque jura,
subjected itself to law and the force of right, Lucr. 5, 1146; so id. 3, 848:ad servitia,
Liv. 1, 40, 3:utrorum ad regna,
Lucr. 3, 836; so,sub imperium dicionemque Romanorum,
Cic. Font. 5, 12 (1, 2):in potestatem unius,
id. Att. 8, 3, 2:in cogitationem,
to suggest itself to the thoughts, id. N. D. 1, 9, 21:in hominum disceptationem,
id. de Or. 2, 2, 5:in deliberationem,
id. Off. 1, 3, 9:in offensionem alicujus,
id. N. D. 1, 30, 85:in morbum,
id. Tusc. 1, 32, 79:in suspitionem alicujus,
Nep. Paus. 2, 6:in calumniam,
Quint. 9, 4, 57:abrupte cadere in narrationem,
id. 4, 1, 79:in peccatum,
Aug. in Psa. 65, 13.—In gen.: in or sub aliquem or aliquid, to belong to any object, to be in accordance with, agree with, refer to, be suitable to, to fit, suit, become (so esp. freq. in philos. and rhet. lang.):C.non cadit in hos mores, non in hunc pudorem, non in hanc vitam, non in hunc hominem ista suspitio,
Cic. Sull. 27, 75:cadit ergo in bonum virum mentiri, emolumenti sui causā?
id. Off. 3, 20, 81; so id. Cael. 29, 69; id. Har. Resp. 26, 56:haec Academica... in personas non cadebant,
id. Att. 13, 19, 5:qui pedes in orationem non cadere quī possunt?
id. Or. 56, 188:neque in unam formam cadunt omnia,
id. ib. 11, 37; 57, 191; 27, 95; id. de Or. 3, 47, 182; Quint. 3, 7, 6; 4, 2, 37; 4, 2, 93; 6, prooem. § 5; 7, 2, 30 and 31; Plin. 35, 10, 36, § 82:heu, cadit in quemquam tantum scelus?
Verg. E. 9, 17; Cic. Or. 27, 95; 11, 37; Quint. 3, 5, 16; 3, 6, 91; 5, 10, 30; 6, 3, 52; 7, 2, 31; 9, 1, 7;9, 3, 92: hoc quoque in rerum naturam cadit, ut, etc.,
id. 2, 17, 32:in iis rebus, quae sub eandem rationem cadunt,
Cic. Inv. 1, 30, 47; Quint. 8, 3, 56.—To fall upon a definite time (rare):D.considera, ne in alienissimum tempus cadat adventus tuus,
Cic. Fam. 15, 14, 4:in id saeculum Romuli cecidit aetas, cum, etc.,
id. Rep. 2, 10, 18.—Hence, in mercantile lang., of payments, to fall due: in eam diem cadere ( were due) nummos, qui a Quinto debentur, Cic. Att. 15, 20, 4.—(Acc. to I. 1. e.) Alicui, to fall to one (as by lot), fall to one ' s lot, happen to one, befall; and absol. (for accidere), to happen, come to pass, occur, result, turn out, fall out (esp. in an unexpected manner; cf. accido; very freq. in prose and poetry).1.Alicui:2.nihil ipsis jure incommodi cadere possit,
Cic. Quint. 16, 51:hoc cecidit mihi peropportune, quod, etc.,
id. de Or. 2, 4, 15; id. Att. 3, 1:insperanti mihi, cecidit, ut, etc.,
id. de Or. 1, 21, 96; id. Att. 8, 3, 6; id. Mil. 30, 81:mihi omnia semper honesta et jucunda ceciderunt,
id. Q. Fr. 1, 3, 1:sunt, quibus ad portas cecidit custodia sorti,
Verg. G. 4, 165:haec aliis maledicta cadant,
Tib. 1, 6, 85:neu tibi pro vano verba benigna cadunt,
Prop. 1, 10, 24:ut illis... voluptas cadat dura inter saepe pericla,
Hor. S. 1, 2, 40: verba cadentia, uttered at random, id. Ep. 1, 18, 12.—Ab sol., Afran. ap. Charis. p. 195 P.;3.Cic. Leg.2, 13, 33: verebar quorsum id casurum esset,
how it would turn out, id. Att. 3, 24:aliorsum vota ceciderunt,
Flor. 2, 4, 5:cum aliter res cecidisset ac putasses,
had turned out differently from what was expected, Cic. Fam. 5, 19, 1:sane ita cadebat ut vellem,
id. Att. 3, 7, 1; id. Div. 2, 52, 107; Cael. ap. Cic. Fam. 8, 12, 3; Cic. Verr. 1, 2, 5; Caes. B. C. 3, 73, Nep. Milt. 2, 5 Dähne:cum, quae tum maxime acciderant, casura praemonens, a furioso incepto eos deterreret,
Liv. 36, 34, 3; 22, 40, 3; 35, 13, 9; 38, 46, 6; Plin. Pan. 31, 1; Tac. A. 2, 80; 6, 8; Suet. Tib. 14 al.; Verg. A. 2, 709:ut omnia fortiter fiant, feliciter cadant,
Sen. Suas. 2, p. 14:multa. fortuito in melius casura,
Tac. A. 2, 77.—With adj.:si non omnia caderent secunda,
Caes. B. C. 3, 73:vota cadunt, i.e. rata sunt,
are fulfilled, realized, Tib. 2, 2, 17 (diff. from Prop. 1, 17, 4; v. under F.).—With in and acc.: nimia illa libertas et populis et privatis in nimiam servitutem cadit (cf. metaballei), Cic. Rep. 1, 44, 68.—Esp.: in (ad) irritum or cassum, to be frustrated, fail, be or remain fruitless:E.omnia in cassum cadunt,
Plaut. Poen. 1, 2, 147; Lucr. 2, 1166:ad irritum cadens spes,
Liv. 2, 6, 1; so Tac. H. 3, 26:in irritum,
id. A. 15, 39; cf. with irritus, adj.:ut irrita promissa ejus caderent,
Liv. 2, 31, 5:haud irritae cecidere minae,
id. 6, 35, 10.—To fall, to become less (in strength, power, worth, etc.), to decrease, diminish, lessen:F. 1.cadunt vires,
Lucr. 5, 410:mercenarii milites pretia militiae casura in pace aegre ferebant,
Liv. 34, 36, 7.—More freq. in an extended signif. (acc. to I. B. 2.),In gen.: pellis item cecidit, vestis contempta ferina. declined in value, Lucr. 5, 1417:2.turpius est enim privatim cadere (i. e. fortunis everti) quam publice,
Cic. Att. 16, 15, 6; so id. Fam. 6, 10, 2:atque ea quidem tua laus pariter cum re publicā cecidit,
id. Off. 2, 13, 45:tanta civitas, si cadet,
id. Har. Resp. 20, 42:huc cecidisse Germanici exercitus gloriam, ut, etc.,
Tac. H. 3, 13:non tibi ingredienti fines ira cecidit?
Liv. 2, 40, 7; Pers. 5, 91:amicitia nec debilitari animos aut cadere patitur,
Cic. Lael. 7, 23:animus,
to fail, Liv. 1, 11, 3; Ov. M. 11, 537; cf. id. ib. 7, 347:non debemus ita cadere animis, etc.,
to lose courage, be disheartened, Cic. Fam. 6, 1, 4:tam graviter,
id. Off. 1, 21, 73; cf. Sen. Ep. 8, 3.—Esp., to fail in speaking:magnus orator est... minimeque in lubrico versabitur, et si semel constiterit numquam cadet,
Cic. Or. 28, 98:alte enim cadere non potest,
id. ib. —So in the lang. of the jurists, causā or formulā, to lose one ' s cause or suit:causā cadere,
Cic. Inv. 2, 19, 57; so id. de Or. 1, 36, 166 sq.; id. Fam. 7, 14, 1; Quint. 7, 3, 17; Luc. 2, 554; Suet. Calig. 39:formulā cadere,
Sen. Ep. 48, 10; Quint. 3, 6, 69.—With in:ita quemquam cadere in judicio, ut, etc.,
Cic. Mur. 28, 58.—Also absol.:cadere,
Tac. H. 4, 6; and:criminibus repetundarum,
id. ib. 1, 77:conjurationis crimine,
id. A. 6, 14:ut cecidit Fortuna Phrygum,
Ov. M. 13, 435:omniaque ingrato litore vota cadunt, i. e. irrita sunt,
remain unfulfilled, unaccomplished, Prop. 1, 17, 4 (diff. from Tib. 2, 2, 17; v. above, D. 2.); cf.:at mea nocturno verba cadunt zephyro,
Prop. 1, 16, 34:multa renascentur, quae jam cecidere, cadentque Quae nunc sunt in honore vocabula,
to fall into disuse, grow out of date, Hor. A. P. 70 —Hence of theatrical representations, to fall through, to fail, be condemned (opp. stare, to win applause;the fig. derived from combatants): securus cadat an recto stet fabula talo,
Hor. Ep. 2, 1, 176.— Impers.. periculum est, ne cadatur, Aug. Don. Persev. 1.—Esp. of the wind (opp. surgo), to abate, subside, die away, etc.:G.cadit Eurus et umida surgunt Nubila,
Ov. M. 8, 2:ventus premente nebulā cecidit,
Liv. 29, 27, 10:cadente jam Euro,
id. 25, 27, 11:venti vis omnis cecidit,
id. 26, 39, 8:ubi primum aquilones ceciderunt,
id. 36, 43, 11; cf.:sic cunctus pelagi cecidit fragor,
Verg. A. 1, 154:ventosi ceciderunt murmuris aurae,
id. E. 9, 58; id. G. 1, 354 Serv. and Wagn.—Rhet. and gram. t. t. of words, syllables, clauses, etc., to be terminated, end, close:verba melius in syllabas longiores cadunt,
Cic. Or. 57, 194; 67, 223: qua (littera [p. 260] sc. m) nullum Graece verbum cadit, Quint. 12, 10, 31:plerique censent cadere tantum numerose oportere terminarique sententiam,
Cic. Or. 59, 199; so id. Brut. 8, 34:apto cadens oratio,
Quint. 9, 4, 32:numerus opportune cadens,
id. 9, 4, 27:ultima syllaba in gravem vel duas graves cadit semper,
id. 12, 10, 33 Spald.: similiter cadentia = omoioptôta, the ending of words with the same cases or verbal forms, diff. from similiter desinentia = omoioteleuta, similar endings of any kind, Cic. de Or. 3, 54, 206; id. Or. 34, 135; Auct. Her. 4, 20, 28; Quint. 9, 4, 42; cf. id. 9, 4, 18; 9, 3, 78; 9, 3, 79; 1, 7, 23; Aquil. Rom. Figur. §§ 25 and 26. -
2 dimoveo
dī-mŏvĕo, ōvi, ōtum (DISMOTUM, v. infra), 2, v. a. (in MSS. and edd. often confounded with demoveo, q. v.; not freq. before the Aug. per.; not in Caes. and Quint.; perh. not in Cic., where demovere appears everywhere to be the better reading).I.To move asunder, to part, put asunder, separate, divide:B.terram aratro,
Verg. G. 2, 513; cf.:glebas aratro,
Ov. M. 5, 341:aera (c. c. dispellere umbras),
Verg. A. 5, 839; cf.auras,
id. ib. 9, 645:cinerem foco,
Ov. M. 8, 642:undas,
Lucr. 6, 891; Ov. M. 4, 708; cf.aquas,
id. H. 18, 80; 19, 48:rubum,
Hor. C. 1, 23, 7.— Poet.:ubi sol radiis terram dimovit abortus (preceded by: ubi roriferis terram nox obruit umbris),
cleaves the earth, lays it open, Lucr. 6, 869.—Transf.1.Of a multitude of persons or things, to separate from each other, to scatter, disperse, drive away, dismiss:2.humentem umbram polo,
Verg. A. 3, 589; 4, 7; cf.:gelidam umbram caelo,
id. ib. 11, 210:obstantes propinquos,
Hor. C. 3, 5, 51:turbam,
Tac. H. 3, 31; 80; Suet. Galb. 19; cf.:dimotis omnibus,
Tac. H. 2, 49; cf.: VTEI EA BACANALIA SEI QVA SVNT... DISMOTA SIENT, i. e. be dissolved, abolished, S. C. de Bacchan. fin. —To separate from something, to remove.a.Lit.:b.quos (equites) spes societatis a plebe dimoverat,
Sall. J. 42, 1; Plin. 8, 7, 7, § 23:dimovit perfregitque custodias Poena,
Plin. Pan. 49:parietes (al. demotis),
Tac. A. 6, 24:plagulas (lecticae),
Suet. Tit. 10 al. —Trop.: gaudentem patrios findere sarculo Numquam dimoveas, ut, etc., thou canst never entice away, in order to, etc., Hor. C. 1, 1, 13 (al. demo-).—II.To move to and fro, to put in motion (cf. dimitto, no. I.—so perh. only in Celsus):superiores partes,
Cels. 3, 27, 3:manus,
id. 2, 14 fin.:se inambulatione levi,
id. 4, 24 al. -
3 avello
ā-vello, velli or vulsi, vulsum or volsum, 3, v. a. ( pluperf. avellerat, Curt. 5, 6, 5; perf. avulsi, Luc. 9, 764), to tear off or away, to pull or rend off (syn.: abripio, eximo).I.In gen. (class.):II.avellere tigna trabesque,
to tear away planks and beams, Lucr. 6, 241:avolsaque saxa Montibus,
the rocks rent from the mountains, id. 4, 141:avolsum umeris caput,
Verg. A. 2, 558; so Ov. M. 3, 727; 2, 358:avolsos silices a montibus altis,
Lucr. 5, 313:avolsus radicibus oculus,
id. 3, 563: poma ex arboribus, si cruda sunt, vix avelluntur;si matura et cocta, decidunt,
Cic. Sen. 19, 71; id. Verr. 2, 4, 49 fin.:Cum ripa simul avolsos ferat Aufidus acer,
Hor. S. 1, 1, 58; 2, 8, 89:Avellit frondes,
Ov. M. 2, 351:summitatem frondium ejus avulsit,
Vulg. Ezech. 17, 4 al.:Ex eā avolsa postea Therasia,
Plin. 4, 12, 23, § 70:Euboea avolsa Boeotiae,
id. 4, 12, 21, § 63.—Esp.A.To take away by force, to tear away:B.rus ab aliquo,
Ter. Eun. 3, 3, 14:pretium alicui,
Hor. S. 1, 2, 104:fatale sacrato avellere templo Palladium,
Verg. A. 2, 165:fundum emptori,
Dig. 23, 7, 17; 40, 7, 3:avellamus eum ad nos,
Vulg. Isa. 7, 6;so of carrying off the bride,
Cat. 62, 21 Ellis.—To separate from something by pulling, to part, to remove:aliquem de matris complexu avellere atque abstrahere,
Cic. Font. 17:ab uberibus avellere,
to wean, Vulg. Isa. 28, 9:ut sperem posse (eum) avelli,
Ter. And. 3, 3, 21:Non potes avelli! simul, ah, simul ibimus, inquit,
Ov. Tr. 1, 3, 81:complexu avolsus Iuli,
Verg. A. 4, 616:ut avellerentur castris,
Tac. A. 1, 44: se, to tear one ' s self away, Ter. Hec. 4, 1, 39.— And in pass. without the notion of violence, to withdraw:Et ipse avulsus est ab eis,
Vulg. Luc. 22, 41 Tisch.— Trop.:aliquem a tanto errore,
Cic. Off. 3, 4, 83. -
4 separar
v.1 to separate.las hojas se han pegado y no las puedo separar the pages have stuck together and I can't separate them o get them apartson muchas las cosas que nos separan there are many differences between usMaría separó las galletas Mary separated the cookies.2 to move away.separa un poco las sillas move the chairs apart a bit3 to put aside.4 to split, to draw apart, to pull away, to pull apart.El adulterio separa a las parejas Adultery splits couples.5 to set apart, to put away.6 to abduce.* * *1 (gen) to separate2 (hacer grupos) to separate, sort out3 (guardar aparte) to set aside, put aside4 (apartar) to move away (de, from)5 (de empleo, cargo) to remove (de, from), dismiss (de, from)6 figurado (mantener alejado) to keep away (de, from)1 (tomar diferente camino) to separate, part company2 (matrimonio) to separate3 (apartarse) to move away (de, from)4 (desprenderse) to separate (de, from), come off (de, -)5 (de amigo etc) to part company (de, with)6 separarse de (dejar algo) to part with* * *verb1) to separate2) divide•* * *1. VT1) (=apartar) to separatela maestra nos separó para que no habláramos — the teacher split us up o separated us so that we wouldn't talk
si no los llegan a separar se matan — if no one had pulled them apart o separated them, they would have killed each other
separar algn/algo de algn/algo — to separate sb/sth from sb/sth
al nacer los separaron de sus padres — they were taken (away) o separated from their parents at birth
los separaron del resto de los pasajeros — they were split up o separated from the rest of the passengers
2) (=distanciar)éramos buenos amigos, pero la política nos separó — we were good friends but politics came between us
3) (=existir entre)el abismo que separa a los ricos de los pobres — the gulf between o separating (the) rich and (the) poor
4) (=deslindar)unas barreras de protección separaban el escenario de la plaza — there were crash barriers separating the stage from the rest of the square
la frontera que separa realidad y ficción — the dividing line between reality and fiction, the line that separates reality from o and fiction
5) (=dividir) to divide6) (=poner aparte)¿me puedes separar un poco de tarta? — can you put aside some cake for me?
7) (=destituir) [de un cargo] to remove, dismissser separado del servicio — (Mil) to be discharged
2.See:* * *1.verbo transitivo1)a) (apartar, alejar) to separate; < boxeadores> to separate, partno se aconseja separar a la madre de su ternero — it is not advisable to take the calf away from its mother
b) ( dividir un todo) to divide2)a) ( deslindar) to separate, divideb) ( despegar)3) (frml) ( destituir) to dismiss (frml)2.fue separado de su cargo/sus funciones — he was removed from office/relieved of his duties (frml)
separarse v prona) matrimonio to separatese separaron hace un mes — they separated o split up a month ago
b) (apartarse, alejarse) to split upno se separen, que los pequeños se pueden perder — please stay together in case the children get lost
separarse DE algo/alguien: esta niña no se separa del televisor this child is always glued to the television; no me he separado nunca de mis hijos I've never been away o apart from my children; no se separen de su equipaje — do not leave your luggage unattended
c) (guardar, reservar) to put o set aside* * *= carry off, cut off, detach, put by, segregate, separate, sift, screen out, tell out into, sort out + Nombre + from + Nombre, drive + a wedge between, hive off, disaggregate, sever, prise + Nombre + apart, unbundle, spread out, sift out, cleave, tease apart, balkanize, sunder, decouple, strip off, splay.Ex. The 'sweated' rags were pounded to a pulp (or stuff) by water-powered hammers, impurities being carried off through filters by running water.Ex. The stages are not cut off from one another, are not sharply defined.Ex. The words from the deleted abstract in the abstract word file will be detached when DOBIS/LIBIS is not busy with other work.Ex. The raw material of white paper was undyed linen -- or in very early days hempen -- rags, which the paper-maker bought in bulk, sorted and washed, and then put by in a damp heap for four or five days to rot.Ex. In summary, the advantages of the electronic catalog is the ability to segregate the fast searches from the slowest.Ex. The description of the component part is separated from that of the host document by a double slash.Ex. Thus many non-relevant documents have been retrieved and examined in the process of sifting relevant and non-relevant documents.Ex. Most journals rely for a substantial part of their income on advertisements; how would advertisers view the prospect of being selectively screened out by readers?.Ex. The finished paper was sorted for imperfections and told out into quires and reams for sale.Ex. Ward's study is likely to remain a standard reference source for years to come, but trying to sort out the generalities from the particularities is a very difficult business.Ex. While the current problems associated with serial economics have driven a wedge between vendors, librarians and publishers, they should be cooperating and communicating in order to withstand the information explosion.Ex. Non-fiction is normally shelved according to the Dewey decimal system with perhaps a major category such as autobiography and biography hived off as a completely separate ad hoc classification.Ex. Outcomes can be disaggregated along age, class, ethnic, racial, & gender dimensions.Ex. This art is is mass produced, often mechanically, and thus severed from tradition.Ex. The symbiotic relationship between scholarly discourse and scholarly publication that has existed for 3 centuries is being prised apart by new technology.Ex. It is recommended that CD-ROM producers unbundle the retrieval software from the data.Ex. For instance, in reproduction of Renoir's work under the subject IMPRESSIONISM, Renoir's works would not stand together in the catalog but be spread out according to their titles.Ex. Whichever he chooses he will still have to sift out and categorize the numerous errors that disfigure all the early texts of the play.Ex. Ethnic and racial differences cleaved the American working class.Ex. The author and his colleagues embarked on a series of studies to tease apart hereditary and environmental factors thought to be implicated in schizophrenia.Ex. The scholarly system has become balkanized into autonomous, even antagonistic, cultures or camps based on differing technological competencies and interests.Ex. Both novels tell essentially the same story, that of a woman sundered from her high estate and her betrothed.Ex. The physical library will probably become less viable over time and so it is important to decouple the information professional from the library unit.Ex. They gathered a whole sackful, stripped off the husks, and filled the sack again.Ex. Walk your feet up the wall, then take the belt and place it on your upper arms right above your elbows to keep your arms from splaying.----* Hasta que la muerte nos separe = Till death do us part.* que se puede separar = detachable.* separar aun más = widen + the gap between... and.* separar con una cortina = curtain off.* separar de = wean from, isolate from, divide from, wean away from.* separar el grano de la paja = divide into + Adjetivo + sheep and + Adjetivo + goats, sort the + Adjetivo + sheep from the + Adjetivo + goats, separate + the wheat from the chaff, sort out + the wheat from the chaff, sift + the wheat from the chaff.* separar haciendo palanca = pry + Nombre + out, prise + Nombre + out.* separar la realidad de la ficción = distinguish + fact from fiction.* separar las manos = spread out + hands.* separar + Nombre + de + Nombre = discern + Nombre + from + Nombre.* separarse = drift apart, part, divorce, go (our/their) separate ways, fork.* separarse (de) = become + parted from, move away from, turn away from, secede (from).* separarse descendiendo = droop away from.* separar una pelea = break up + fight, break up + fight.* * *1.verbo transitivo1)a) (apartar, alejar) to separate; < boxeadores> to separate, partno se aconseja separar a la madre de su ternero — it is not advisable to take the calf away from its mother
b) ( dividir un todo) to divide2)a) ( deslindar) to separate, divideb) ( despegar)3) (frml) ( destituir) to dismiss (frml)2.fue separado de su cargo/sus funciones — he was removed from office/relieved of his duties (frml)
separarse v prona) matrimonio to separatese separaron hace un mes — they separated o split up a month ago
b) (apartarse, alejarse) to split upno se separen, que los pequeños se pueden perder — please stay together in case the children get lost
separarse DE algo/alguien: esta niña no se separa del televisor this child is always glued to the television; no me he separado nunca de mis hijos I've never been away o apart from my children; no se separen de su equipaje — do not leave your luggage unattended
c) (guardar, reservar) to put o set aside* * *= carry off, cut off, detach, put by, segregate, separate, sift, screen out, tell out into, sort out + Nombre + from + Nombre, drive + a wedge between, hive off, disaggregate, sever, prise + Nombre + apart, unbundle, spread out, sift out, cleave, tease apart, balkanize, sunder, decouple, strip off, splay.Ex: The 'sweated' rags were pounded to a pulp (or stuff) by water-powered hammers, impurities being carried off through filters by running water.
Ex: The stages are not cut off from one another, are not sharply defined.Ex: The words from the deleted abstract in the abstract word file will be detached when DOBIS/LIBIS is not busy with other work.Ex: The raw material of white paper was undyed linen -- or in very early days hempen -- rags, which the paper-maker bought in bulk, sorted and washed, and then put by in a damp heap for four or five days to rot.Ex: In summary, the advantages of the electronic catalog is the ability to segregate the fast searches from the slowest.Ex: The description of the component part is separated from that of the host document by a double slash.Ex: Thus many non-relevant documents have been retrieved and examined in the process of sifting relevant and non-relevant documents.Ex: Most journals rely for a substantial part of their income on advertisements; how would advertisers view the prospect of being selectively screened out by readers?.Ex: The finished paper was sorted for imperfections and told out into quires and reams for sale.Ex: Ward's study is likely to remain a standard reference source for years to come, but trying to sort out the generalities from the particularities is a very difficult business.Ex: While the current problems associated with serial economics have driven a wedge between vendors, librarians and publishers, they should be cooperating and communicating in order to withstand the information explosion.Ex: Non-fiction is normally shelved according to the Dewey decimal system with perhaps a major category such as autobiography and biography hived off as a completely separate ad hoc classification.Ex: Outcomes can be disaggregated along age, class, ethnic, racial, & gender dimensions.Ex: This art is is mass produced, often mechanically, and thus severed from tradition.Ex: The symbiotic relationship between scholarly discourse and scholarly publication that has existed for 3 centuries is being prised apart by new technology.Ex: It is recommended that CD-ROM producers unbundle the retrieval software from the data.Ex: For instance, in reproduction of Renoir's work under the subject IMPRESSIONISM, Renoir's works would not stand together in the catalog but be spread out according to their titles.Ex: Whichever he chooses he will still have to sift out and categorize the numerous errors that disfigure all the early texts of the play.Ex: Ethnic and racial differences cleaved the American working class.Ex: The author and his colleagues embarked on a series of studies to tease apart hereditary and environmental factors thought to be implicated in schizophrenia.Ex: The scholarly system has become balkanized into autonomous, even antagonistic, cultures or camps based on differing technological competencies and interests.Ex: Both novels tell essentially the same story, that of a woman sundered from her high estate and her betrothed.Ex: The physical library will probably become less viable over time and so it is important to decouple the information professional from the library unit.Ex: They gathered a whole sackful, stripped off the husks, and filled the sack again.Ex: Walk your feet up the wall, then take the belt and place it on your upper arms right above your elbows to keep your arms from splaying.* Hasta que la muerte nos separe = Till death do us part.* que se puede separar = detachable.* separar aun más = widen + the gap between... and.* separar con una cortina = curtain off.* separar de = wean from, isolate from, divide from, wean away from.* separar el grano de la paja = divide into + Adjetivo + sheep and + Adjetivo + goats, sort the + Adjetivo + sheep from the + Adjetivo + goats, separate + the wheat from the chaff, sort out + the wheat from the chaff, sift + the wheat from the chaff.* separar haciendo palanca = pry + Nombre + out, prise + Nombre + out.* separar la realidad de la ficción = distinguish + fact from fiction.* separar las manos = spread out + hands.* separar + Nombre + de + Nombre = discern + Nombre + from + Nombre.* separarse = drift apart, part, divorce, go (our/their) separate ways, fork.* separarse (de) = become + parted from, move away from, turn away from, secede (from).* separarse descendiendo = droop away from.* separar una pelea = break up + fight, break up + fight.* * *separar [A1 ]vtA1 (apartar, alejar) to separatedos transeúntes intentaron separarlos two passersby tried to separate o part themha hecho todo lo posible por separarnos he has done everything he can to split us uplas consonantes dobles no se separan en español in Spanish, double consonants should not be split upla maestra las separó porque charlaban mucho the teacher separated them o split them up because they were talking so muchsepara la cama de la pared move the bed away from the wallno se aconseja separar a la madre de su ternero it is not advisable to take the calf away from its motherseparar la yema de la clara separate the white from the yolkseparar los machos de las hembras to separate the males from the females2 (dividir un todo) to divideseparar las palabras en sílabas divide the words into syllablesla guerra separó a muchas familias the war divided many families3 (guardar, reservar) to put o set asidesepárame un trocito para Pablo, que va a venir más tarde can you put o set aside a slice for Pablo, he'll be coming latersepara la ropa que llevarás puesta put the clothes you're going to wear on one sideB1 (deslindar) to separate, divideuna valla separa a los hinchas de los dos equipos there is a fence separating the fans of the two teamslos separan profundas diferencias they are divided by deepseated differencesseparar algo DE algo to separate sth FROM sthlos Andes separan Argentina de Chile the Andes separate Argentina from Chile2(despegar): no puedo separar estas dos fotos I can't get these two photographs apartsepara las lonchas de jamón separate the slices of hamno separe la etiqueta antes de rellenarla do not remove o detach the label before filling it infue separado de su cargo/sus funciones he was removed from office/relieved of his duties ( frml)separar del servicio ( Mil) to discharge1 «matrimonio» to separatese separaron tras diez años de matrimonio they separated o split up after ten years of marriagees hijo de padres separados his parents are separatedsepararse DE algn to separate FROM sbse separó de su marido en octubre she separated from her husband in October2 (alejarse, apartarse) to split upa mitad de camino nos separamos we split up half waylos socios se separaron en 1996 they dissolved their partnership in 1996 ( frml), the partners split up in 1996no se separen, que los pequeños se pueden perder please don't split up o divide up o please stay together in case the children get lostsepararse DE algo/algn:esta niña no se separa del televisor this child is always glued to the televisionno me he separado nunca de mis hijos I've never been away o apart from my childrenno se separen de su equipaje do not leave your luggage unattended* * *
separar ( conjugate separar) verbo transitivo
1
separa la cama de la pared move the bed away from the wall
c) (guardar, reservar) to put o set aside
2
b) ( despegar):
separarse verbo pronominal
separarse DE algn to separate from sb
c) (apartarse, alejarse):◊ no se separen, que los pequeños se pueden perder please stay together in case the children get lost;
no me he separado nunca de mis hijos I've never been away o apart from my children
separar verbo transitivo
1 (aumentar la distancia física) to move apart
2 (poner aparte) to separate: separa las rosas de los claveles, separate the roses from the carnations
3 (reservar) to save
4 (algo pegado, grapado) to detach
5 (distanciar, disgregar) to divide
' separar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
abrir
- desgajar
- desunir
- paja
- quitar
- segregar
- aislar
- apartar
- cortar
- desmontar
- desprender
English:
detach
- divide
- divorce
- fence off
- part
- peel off
- prise
- pull apart
- screen off
- separate
- sort out
- space
- split up
- twist off
- wall off
- fence
- pull
- screen
- sort
- splay
- split
- wall
* * *♦ vt1. [alejar, dividir, aislar] to separate (de from);lo han separado de sus hijos they've taken his children away from him;tuvo que venir la policía para separarlos the police had to be called to break them up o separate them;el muro que separa los dos campos the wall separating o that separates the two fields;separar algo en grupos/partes iguales to divide sth into groups/equal parts;son muchas las cosas que nos separan there are many differences between us;quiere separar su vida privada de su vida pública she wants to keep her private life separate from her public life2. [apartar, dejar espacio entre] to move away (de from);separe el cuerpo del volante keep your body away from the steering wheel;separa un poco las sillas move the chairs apart a bit;separa bien las piernas open your legs wide3. [desunir, quitar]las hojas se han pegado y no las puedo separar the pages have stuck together and I can't separate them o get them apart;separe la carne del caldo remove the meat from the stock;no separaba los ojos del reloj she never took her eyes off the clock4. [reservar] to put asidefue separado del cargo he was removed (from his post), he was dismissed (from his job);separaron al coronel del servicio the colonel was removed from active service* * *v/t separate* * *separar vt1) : to separate, to divide2) : to split up, to pull apart♦ separarse vr* * *separar vb1. (en general) to separate2. (apartar) to move away -
5 desligar
v.1 to untie.2 to separate.* * *1 (desatar) to untie, unfasten3 figurado (librar de una obligación) to release (de, from), free (de, from)■ lo desligó del compromiso que había contraído he released him from the commitment he had entered into1 (desatarse) to break away (de, from)2 (librarse) to release oneself (de, from), free oneself (de, from)* * *1. VT1) (=desatar) to untie, undo2) (=separar) to detach3) (=absolver) to absolve, free (de from)4) (=aclarar) to unravel, disentangle2.See:* * *1.verbo transitivoa) ( separar) to separatehay que desligar el punto de vista económico del social — economic considerations should not be confused with social ones
b) (alejar, apartar)desligar a alguien de alguien/algo — to cut somebody off from somebody/something
c) ( librar)2.desligarse v prona) ( librarse)desligarse de algo — de obligaciones to free oneself of something
compromisos sociales de los que no puede desligarse — social commitments which she cannot get out of
b) ( apartarse)desligarse de algo/alguien — to cut oneself off from something/somebody
* * *1.verbo transitivoa) ( separar) to separatehay que desligar el punto de vista económico del social — economic considerations should not be confused with social ones
b) (alejar, apartar)desligar a alguien de alguien/algo — to cut somebody off from somebody/something
c) ( librar)2.desligarse v prona) ( librarse)desligarse de algo — de obligaciones to free oneself of something
compromisos sociales de los que no puede desligarse — social commitments which she cannot get out of
b) ( apartarse)desligarse de algo/alguien — to cut oneself off from something/somebody
* * *desligar [A3 ]vt1 (separar) to separatedos conceptos que no se pueden desligar two concepts which cannot be separated o which are inseparablehay que desligar el punto de vista económico del social economic considerations should not be confused with o should be kept separate from social ones2 (alejar, apartar) desligar a algn DE algn/algo to cut sb off FROM sb/sthel exilio los ha desligado de su cultura living in exile has cut them off from their culture3 (librar) desligar a algn DE algo to free sb FROM sthesta anulación lo desliga de toda obligación this annulment frees him from o of any obligation1 (librarse) desligarse DE algo:tiene muchas obligaciones de las que no puede desligarse she has a lot of commitments which she cannot get out of2 (apartarse) desligarse DE algo/algn to cut oneself off FROM sth/sb* * *
desligar verbo transitivo
1 (cuestiones, asuntos) to separate
2 (una cuerda, amarra, etc) to untie, unfasten
* * *♦ vt1. [desatar] to untie2. [separar] to separate (de from);en política conviene desligar lo privado de lo público in politics it's advisable to keep one's private and public lives separate* * ** * *desligar {52} vt1) : to separate, to undo2) : to free (from an obligation) -
6 trennen
I v/t1. (ab-, loslösen) detach (von, aus from), remove (from); ( abschneiden, auch fig.) cut off (from), sever (from); (herausschneiden) cut out (of, from); (Glied etc.) sever; operativ: amputate, take off; (auftrennen) (Jacke etc.) unpick; das Futter aus der Jacke trennen remove the lining from ( oder take the lining out of) the jacket; den Kopf vom Rumpf trennen sever the head from the body, cut the head off2. (etw. Zusammengesetztes in seine Bestandteile zerlegen) separate, break down (auch TECH., CHEM., Müll etc.); (sortieren) sort, categorize, split up, break down, break up, divide, reduce (auch Müll, Material etc.); (Verbindung eines Stoffes mit einem anderen auflösen) separate; (Erz vom Gestein) separate out, extract; (zerteilen, zersägen) cut up, saw up3. (räumlich auseinander bringen, ihr Verhältnis lösen) separate, divide; (Familie) auch split up, break up; (Rassen etc., Geschlechter) segregate; (Boxer) separate; (absondern) isolate, separate out, keep separate; er versuchte, die Kämpfenden zu trennen he tried to break up the fight ( oder to separate the combatants geh.); durch den Krieg getrennt werden Familie etc.: be split up by the war; Landesteile etc.: be divided ( oder partitioned) as a result of the war; ihre Ehe wurde getrennt their marriage was annulled4. (unterscheiden, auseinander halten) (Begriffe) distinguish (between), demarcate geh.; man muss die Dinge trennen you have to keep things separate, there has to be some clear thinking; das Private vom Beruflichen trennen keep one’s private life and one’s job separate5. (zwischen Personen etc. eine Kluft bilden) separate, divide; die beiden trennt zu viel they ( oder the two of them) don’t have enough in common, they are incompatible in too many ways; uns trennen Welten we’re worlds apart6. (eine Grenze darstellen) demarcate, mark a boundary between, divide; (zwischen zwei Bereichen liegen) be ( oder lie etc.) between, separate ( von from); der Kanal trennt England vom Kontinent between Britain and the Continent lies the (English) Channel, the (English) Channel separates Britain from the Continent; nur noch ein paar Tage trennen uns von Weihnachten we’ve only got a few days to go till Christmas, (there are) only a few days between us and Christmas now7. (teilen) divide; (Wort, nach Silben) divide (up), hyphenate, break; wo wird das Wort getrennt? where do you hyphenate the word?III v/refl1. (auseinander gehen) part company, go one’s separate ways; (sich verabschieden) say goodbye; die Mannschaften trennten sich unentschieden the teams had to settle for a draw, the match ended in a draw; hier trennen sich unsere Wege bes. fig. this is where we go our separate ways2. (eine Gemeinschaft, Partnerschaft etc. aufgeben) split up ( von with), end one’s association (with), agree to part; Ehepartner: separate, split up; sie hat sich von i-m Mann getrennt she and her husband have split up, she’s left her husband3. sich trennen von (einer Sache) part with, let go; (einer Idee etc.) give up, get away from, abandon; von dem Gedanken wirst du dich trennen müssen auch you’ll (just) have to rethink that ( oder forget the idea); ich konnte mich von dem Auto / von ihr / von dem Anblick nicht trennen I couldn’t bear ( oder bring myself) to part with the car / I couldn’t tear myself away from her / I couldn’t take my eyes off it; er kann sich wieder mal nicht trennen umg. (losreißen) as usual he can’t quite bring himself to make the break ( oder get up and go); er kann sich von nichts trennen he just can’t let go, he has to hold on to everything* * *(abtrennen) to detach; to winnow; to segregate; to dissociate; to cut off; to disjoin; to separate; to sever; to disassociate;(auftrennen) to unpick; to undo;(scheiden) to divorce; to sunder; to disunite; to part;(unterbrechen) to disconnect;(zerteilen) to divide;sich trennento split up; to divide; to secede; to part company; to separate; to disunite* * *trẹn|nen ['trɛnən]1. vt1) (= entfernen) Mensch, Tier to separate (von from); (Tod) to take away (von from); (= in Teile teilen, abtrennen) to separate; Kopf, Glied etc to sever; (= abmachen) to detach (von from); Aufgenähtes to take off, to remove2) (= aufspalten, scheiden) Bestandteile, Eier, Raufende to separate; Partner, Freunde to split up; (COMPUT, TELEC) Verbindung to disconnect; (räumlich) to separate; Begriffe to differentiate, to distinguish (between); (nach Rasse, Geschlecht) to segregateGut von Böse trennen — to distinguish between good and evil, to differentiate or distinguish good from evil
alles Trennende (zwischen uns/den beiden) —
das Radio trennt die Sender gut/schlecht — the radio has good/bad selectivity
See:→ auch getrennt3) (= in Bestandteile zerlegen) Kleid to take to pieces; (LING ) Wort to divide, to split up; (CHEM ) Gemisch to separate (out)2. vr1) (= auseinandergehen) to separate; (Partner, Eheleute etc) to split up, to separate; (= Abschied nehmen) to partsich von jdm/der Firma trennen — to leave sb/the firm
die Firma trennte sich von ihrem Geschäftsführer — the firm parted company with its managing director
die zwei Mannschaften trennten sich 2:0 — the final score was 2-0
sich im Guten/Bösen trennen — to part on good/bad terms
2)(= weggeben, verkaufen etc)
sich von etw trennen — to part with sther konnte sich davon nicht trennen — he couldn't bear to part with it; (von Plan) he couldn't give it up; (von Anblick) he couldn't take his eyes off it
3) (= sich teilen) (Wege, Flüsse) to divide3. vi(zwischen Begriffen) to draw or make a distinction* * *1) (to separate: They were cut off from the rest of the army.) cut off2) (to separate; to break the connection (especially electrical) with: Our phone has been disconnected.) disconnect3) (to separate, especially in thought.) dissociate4) (to separate: You can't divorce these two concepts.) divorce5) ((sometimes with into or from) to place, take, keep or force apart: He separated the money into two piles; A policeman tried to separate the men who were fighting.) separate6) (to separate from others; to keep (people, groups etc) apart from each other: At the swimming-pool, the sexes are segregated.) segregate* * *tren·nen[ˈtrɛnən]I. vt1. (abtrennen)▪ etw von etw dat \trennen to separate sth from sth; (mit scharfem Gegenstand) to cut sth off sth; (Körperteil bei einem Unfall) to sever sth from sth2. (ablösen)vor dem Reinigen müssen die Lederknöpfe vom Mantel getrennt werden the leather buttons have to be removed from [or taken off] the coat before cleaningdas Eiweiß vom Eigelb \trennen to separate the egg white from the yolk▪ etw \trennen to separate sth▪ etw \trennen to separate stheine Naht \trennen to undo [or unpick] a seam▪ jdn und jdn/von jdm \trennen to separate sb and sb/from sbes kann gefährlich sein, bei einer Prügelei die Streitenden zu \trennen it can be dangerous to separate people in a fightnichts kann uns mehr \trennen nothing can ever come between us6. (scheiden)eine Ehe \trennen to dissolve a marriage7. (teilen)ein Zaun trennt die beiden Grundstücke the two plots are separated by a fence▪ jdn/etw von jdm/etw \trennen to separate sb/sth and sb/sthdie Wüste trennt den Norden vom Süden des Landes the north and south of the country are separated by the desertdie beiden \trennen Welten the two are worlds apartzu vieles trennt sie they have too little in commonvom Frühlingsanfang \trennen uns nur noch wenige Tage we've only got a few days to go till the first day of springman muss Ursache und Wirkung \trennen one has to make a distinction between cause and effect11. (nach Rasse, Geschlecht)▪ jdn/etw \trennen to segregate sb/sthdie Geschlechter \trennen to segregate the sexes▪ jdn und jdn/von jdm \trennen to segregate sb and sb/from sbjdn \trennen to cut off [or disconnect] sbII. vrhier \trennen wir uns this is where we part company [or go our separate waysder Schwimmer und sein Trainer haben sich vergangenen Monat getrennt the swimmer and his coach parted company last monther gehört zu den Menschen, die sich von nichts \trennen können he is one of those people who have to hold on to everythingSchalke 04 und Hertha trennten sich 5:3 [the game between] Schalke 04 and Hertha finished 5-3, the final score [in the game] between Schalke 04 and Hertha was 5-3; s.a. WegIII. vi▪ [zwischen etw dat und etw dat] \trennen to draw [or make] a distinction [or differentiate] [between sth and sth]2. RADIOgut/schlecht \trennen to have good/bad selectivity* * *1.transitives Verb1) separate ( von from); (abschneiden) cut off; sever <head, arm>2) (auftrennen) unpick <dress, seam>3) (teilen) divide <word, parts of a room etc., fig.: people>uns trennen Welten — (fig.) we are worlds apart
5) (zerlegen) separate < mixture>6) (auseinander halten) differentiate or distinguish between; make a distinction between < terms>2.reflexives Verb1) (voneinander weggehen) part [company]; (fig.)die Mannschaften trennten sich 0:0 — the game ended in a goalless draw; the two teams drew 0:0
2) (eine Partnerschaft auflösen) <couple, partners> split up3) (hergeben)* * *A. v/t1. (ab-, loslösen) detach (von, aus from), remove (from); ( abschneiden, auch fig) cut off (from), sever (from); (herausschneiden) cut out (of, from); (Glied etc) sever; operativ: amputate, take off; (auftrennen) (Jacke etc) unpick;das Futter aus der Jacke trennen remove the lining from ( oder take the lining out of) the jacket;den Kopf vom Rumpf trennen sever the head from the body, cut the head off2. (etwas Zusammengesetztes in seine Bestandteile zerlegen) separate, break down ( auch TECH, CHEM, Müll etc); (sortieren) sort, categorize, split up, break down, break up, divide, reduce (auch Müll, Material etc); (Verbindung eines Stoffes mit einem anderen auflösen) separate; (Erz vom Gestein) separate out, extract; (zerteilen, zersägen) cut up, saw up3. (räumlich auseinanderbringen, ihr Verhältnis lösen) separate, divide; (Familie) auch split up, break up; (Rassen etc, Geschlechter) segregate; (Boxer) separate; (absondern) isolate, separate out, keep separate;er versuchte, die Kämpfenden zu trennen he tried to break up the fight ( oder to separate the combatants geh);durch den Krieg getrennt werden Familie etc: be split up by the war; Landesteile etc: be divided ( oder partitioned) as a result of the war;ihre Ehe wurde getrennt their marriage was annulled4. (unterscheiden, auseinanderhalten) (Begriffe) distinguish (between), demarcate geh;man muss die Dinge trennen you have to keep things separate, there has to be some clear thinking;das Private vom Beruflichen trennen keep one’s private life and one’s job separate5. (zwischen Personen etc eine Kluft bilden) separate, divide;die beiden trennt zu viel they ( oder the two of them) don’t have enough in common, they are incompatible in too many ways;uns trennen Welten we’re worlds apart6. (eine Grenze darstellen) demarcate, mark a boundary between, divide; (zwischen zwei Bereichen liegen) be ( oder lie etc) between, separate (von from);der Kanal trennt England vom Kontinent between Britain and the Continent lies the (English) Channel, the (English) Channel separates Britain from the Continent;nur noch ein paar Tage trennen uns von Weihnachten we’ve only got a few days to go till Christmas, (there are) only a few days between us and Christmas nowwo wird das Wort getrennt? where do you hyphenate the word?8. TEL cut off, disconnect;B. v/i:trennen zwischen distinguish between;gut trennen Radio: have good selectivityC. v/rdie Mannschaften trennten sich unentschieden the teams had to settle for a draw, the match ended in a draw;hier trennen sich unsere Wege besonders fig this is where we go our separate ways2. (eine Gemeinschaft, Partnerschaft etc aufgeben) split up (von with), end one’s association (with), agree to part; Ehepartner: separate, split up;sie hat sich von i-m Mann getrennt she and her husband have split up, she’s left her husband3.von dem Gedanken wirst du dich trennen müssen auch you’ll (just) have to rethink that ( oder forget the idea);ich konnte mich von dem Auto/von ihr/von dem Anblick nicht trennen I couldn’t bear ( oder bring myself) to part with the car/I couldn’t tear myself away from her/I couldn’t take my eyes off it;er kann sich wieder mal nicht trennen umg (losreißen) as usual he can’t quite bring himself to make the break ( oder get up and go);er kann sich von nichts trennen he just can’t let go, he has to hold on to everything* * *1.transitives Verb1) separate ( von from); (abschneiden) cut off; sever <head, arm>2) (auftrennen) unpick <dress, seam>3) (teilen) divide <word, parts of a room etc., fig.: people>uns trennen Welten — (fig.) we are worlds apart
5) (zerlegen) separate < mixture>6) (auseinander halten) differentiate or distinguish between; make a distinction between < terms>2.reflexives Verb1) (voneinander weggehen) part [company]; (fig.)die Mannschaften trennten sich 0:0 — the game ended in a goalless draw; the two teams drew 0:0
2) (eine Partnerschaft auflösen) <couple, partners> split up3) (hergeben)* * *v.to disassociate v.to disconnect v.to disjoin v.to disrupt v.to dissociate v.to disunite v.to part v.to secede v.to segregate v.to separate v.to sever v.to slit v.(§ p.,p.p.: slit)to sunder v.to unlink v. -
7 disociar
v.to dissociate.* * *1 to dissociate* * *1.VT to dissociate (de from)2.See:* * *1.2.disociar algo de algo — to separate o dissociate something from something
disociarse v prondisociarse DE algo/alguien — to dissociate o disassociate oneself from something/somebody
* * *----* disociarse = dissociate, disassociate.* * *1.2.disociar algo de algo — to separate o dissociate something from something
disociarse v prondisociarse DE algo/alguien — to dissociate o disassociate oneself from something/somebody
* * ** disociarse = dissociate, disassociate.* * *disociar [A1 ]vt1 ( Quím) to dissociate2 (separar) disociar algo DE algo to separate sth FROM sthdisociarse DE algo/algn to dissociate o disassociate oneself FROM sth/sb* * *
disociar verbo transitivo & verbo reflexivo to dissociate, separate
' disociar' also found in these entries:
English:
dissociate
* * *♦ vt* * *v/t dissociate* * *disociar vt: to dissociate, to separate -
8 desvincular
v.1 to disentail (law) (bienes, propiedades).El juez desvinculó la propiedad The judge disentailed the property.2 to separate, to set apart.3 to disassociate, to unpeg.El paciente desvinculó las ideas The patient disassociated the ideas.* * *1 (gen) to separate, detach, dissociate2 (de la familia) to cut off (de, from)1 to cut oneself off (de, from), break away (de, from), dissociate oneself (de, from)* * *1.2.See:* * *1.verbo transitivo2.desvincular algo/a alguien de algo — to dissociate something/somebody from something
desvincularse v prondesvincularse de alguien/algo — to dissociate oneself from something/somebody
* * *----* desvincularse = dissociate, distance, disassociate.* * *1.verbo transitivo2.desvincular algo/a alguien de algo — to dissociate something/somebody from something
desvincularse v prondesvincularse de alguien/algo — to dissociate oneself from something/somebody
* * ** desvincularse = dissociate, distance, disassociate.* * *desvincular [A1 ]vtdesvincular algo/ A algn DE algo to dissociate sth/sb FROM sthintentó desvincular a su grupo de estos sucesos she tried to dissociate her group from these eventsdesvincularse DE algn/algo to dissociate oneself FROM sth/sbse ha ido desvinculando de sus antiguos socios he has been dissociating himself from o distancing himself from o cutting his links with his ex-partnersestá desvinculado de toda actividad política he is no longer involved in any political activity* * *
desvincular verbo transitivo to separate
' desvincular' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
desvincularse
* * *♦ vt1. [deshacer vínculo con] to dissociate (de from);la declaración del testigo lo desvinculaba del crimen the witness's statement cleared him of any involvement in the crime* * *v/t dissociate (de from)* * *desvincular vtdesvincular de : to separate from, to dissociate from -
9 entziehen
(unreg.)I v/t1. (von jemandem wegziehen) withdraw, pull away ( von from); jemandem seine Hand entziehen withdraw one’s hand (from s.o.’s); sie entzog mir ihre Hand auch she took her hand out of mine, she detached herself from my hand2. (wegnehmen, nicht länger überlassen) withdraw, take away; (Rechte etc.) deprive s.o. of s.th.; jemandem die Erlaubnis etc. / Unterstützung entziehen withdraw s.o.’s permission etc. / (one’s) support from s.o.; jemandem das Vertrauen entziehen cease to trust s.o., stop trusting s.o., no longer trust s.o., no longer have confidence in s.o. förm.; jemandem seine Befugnisse entziehen strip s.o. of his ( oder her) powers; jemandem das Wort entziehen impose silence on s.o.; einem Redner: cut s.o. short, stop s.o.; jemandem den Führerschein entziehen take s.o.’s driving licence (Am. driver’s license) away, disqualify ( oder ban) s.o. from driving3. (von etw. fernhalten) keep away (+ Dat from), separate (from), keep apart (from); etw. jemandes Blicken entziehen hide s.th. from s.o., keep s.th. out of s.o.’s sight; jemandes Einfluss / Zugriff entziehen remove from ( oder put out of) s.o.’s reach / influence; sein Beruf entzieht ihn oft der Familie the job often keeps him away from his family; jemandem den Alkohol entziehen stop s.o. ( oder prevent s.o. from) drinking4. (aus etw. ziehen) take (up) from; CHEM. remove (from), extract (from); einer Sache Kohlenstoff / Sauerstoff / Wasserstoff entziehen remove carbon / oxygen / hydrogen from; siehe auch reduzieren; dem Körper Wärme entziehen take heat (away) from s.o’s body; der Wind entzieht dem Boden Feuchtigkeit the wind dries (od. draws) moisture out of the ground, the wind dries the soil out; (aus etw. ziehen und in sich aufnehmen) Wurzeln etc.: absorb, suck, draw (alle + Dat from oder out of)5. umg. (Trinker, Süchtige) detoxII v/refl1. (sich von jemandem losmachen): sich jemandem entziehen körperlich: detach o.s. (from s.o.); mit Gewalt: break free (from s.o.); fig. einem Freund etc.: stop seeing s.o., part ways with s.o.; sich jemandes Armen / Griff / Umarmung entziehen free o.s. from ( gewandt: slip out of) s.o.’s arms / grip ( oder grasp)/ embrace; ich konnte mich der Versuchung nicht entziehen I couldn’t resist the temptation; er konnte sich ihrem Charme nicht entziehen he was not immune to her charm(s)2. geh. (sich von jemandem, etw. zurückziehen, fernhalten) sich jemandes Blicken entziehen Person: (vermeiden) hide from s.o., keep out of s.o.’s sight, avoid encountering s.o.; Sache: (versteckt sein) remain hidden (from s.o.’s view) ( oder invisible to s.o. oder unnoticed by s.o.); Person, Sache: (verschwinden) disappear (from s.o.’s view, from sight)3. (eine Aufgabe etc. nicht erfüllen, vermeiden) fail to fulfil, evade geh., shirk, dodge umg.; sich der Verantwortung entziehen evade ( oder shirk) (one’s) responsibility, be unwilling to accept (one’s) responsibility4. (entgehen, entkommen) Verfolgern etc., Verhaftung: escape, elude, evade; (sich befreien von) free o.s. from; sich der Gerechtigkeit entziehen flee from justice5. (nicht Gegenstand von etw. sein) be beyond ( oder not within) ( jemandes Kontrolle etc. s.o.’s control etc.); Sache: escape; (der Definition etc.) elude, defy; das entzieht sich meiner Beurteilung I’m in no position to judge (that), I’m no judge of that; es entzieht sich meiner Kenntnis / Kontrolle auch I have no knowledge of ( oder information about) that / I have no control over that, there’s nothing I can do about that* * *to deprive; to withdraw; to detract* * *ent|zie|hen [ɛnt'tsiːən] ptp entzogen [ɛnt'tsoːgn] irreg1. vt(+dat from) to withdraw, to take away; Gunst etc to withdraw; Flüssigkeit to draw, to extract; (CHEM) to extractjdm Alkohol/Nikotin entzíéhen —
die Ärzte versuchten ihn zu entzíéhen (inf) — the doctors tried to cure him of his addiction
jdm die Erlaubnis etc entzíéhen — to withdraw or revoke sb's permit etc, to take sb's permit etc away
jdm die Rente etc entzíéhen — to cut off or stop sb's pension etc
jdm sein Vertrauen entzíéhen — to withdraw one's confidence or trust in sb
dem Redner das Wort entzíéhen — to ask the speaker to stop
2. vrsich jdm/einer Sache entzíéhen — to evade or elude sb/sth
sich seiner Verantwortung entzíéhen — to shirk one's responsibilities
sich jds Verständnis/Kontrolle entzíéhen — to be beyond sb's understanding/control
das entzieht sich meiner Kenntnis/Zuständigkeit — that is beyond my knowledge/authority
sich jds Blicken entzíéhen — to be hidden from sight
3. vi (inf)to undergo treatment for (drug) addiction; (Alkoholiker) to dry out (inf)* * ** * *ent·zie·hen *I. vtjdm den Führerschein \entziehen to revoke sb's driving licence [or AM driver's license2. (nicht länger geben)▪ jdm etw \entziehen to withdraw sth from sb3. (wegziehen)▪ jdm etw \entziehen to remove sth from sbsie entzog ihm ihren Arm she removed her arm from himdieses Getreide entzieht dem Boden viele Nährstoffe this grain removes a lot of nutrients from the soilII. vr1. (sich losmachen)sie wollte ihn streicheln, doch er entzog sich ihr she wanted to caress him, but he resisted her2. (nicht berühren)das entzieht sich meiner Kenntnis that's beyond my knowledge* * *1.unregelmäßiges transitives Verb1) take awayetwas jemandem/einer Sache entziehen — take something away from somebody/something
jemandem das Wort entziehen — ask somebody to stop [speaking]
jemandem das Vertrauen/seine Unterstützung entziehen — withdraw one's confidence in somebody/one's support from somebody
2)2.etwas einer Sache (Dat.) entziehen — (entfernen von, aus) remove something from something; (herausziehen aus) extract something from something
sich der Gesellschaft (Dat.) entziehen — (geh.) withdraw from society
sich seinen Pflichten (Dat.) entziehen — shirk or evade one's duty
das entzieht sich meiner Kontrolle/Kenntnis — that is beyond my control/knowledge
* * *entziehen (irr)A. v/t1. (von jemandem wegziehen) withdraw, pull away (von from);sie entzog mir ihre Hand auch she took her hand out of mine, she detached herself from my hand/Unterstützung entziehen withdraw sb’s permission etc/(one’s) support from sb;jemandem das Vertrauen entziehen cease to trust sb, stop trusting sb, no longer trust sb, no longer have confidence in sb form;jemandem seine Befugnisse entziehen strip sb of his ( oder her) powers;jemandem das Wort entziehen impose silence on sb; einem Redner: cut sb short, stop sb;jemandem den Führerschein entziehen take sb’s driving licence (US driver’s license) away, disqualify ( oder ban) sb from drivingetwas jemandes Blicken entziehen hide sth from sb, keep sth out of sb’s sight;jemandes Einfluss/Zugriff entziehen remove from ( oder put out of) sb’s reach/influence;sein Beruf entzieht ihn oft der Familie the job often keeps him away from his family;jemandem den Alkohol entziehen stop sb ( oder prevent sb from) drinkingdem Körper Wärme entziehen take heat (away) from s.o’s body;der Wind entzieht dem Boden Feuchtigkeit the wind dries ( oder draws) moisture out of the ground, the wind dries the soil out; (aus etwas ziehen und in sich aufnehmen) Wurzeln etc: absorb, suck, draw (alle +dat from oder out of)B. v/r1. (sich von jemandem losmachen):sich jemandem entziehen körperlich: detach o.s. (from sb); mit Gewalt: break free (from sb); fig einem Freund etc: stop seeing sb, part ways with sb;sich jemandes Armen/Griff/Umarmung entziehen free o.s. from ( gewandt: slip out of) sb’s arms/grip ( oder grasp)/embrace;ich konnte mich der Versuchung nicht entziehen I couldn’t resist the temptation;er konnte sich ihrem Charme nicht entziehen he was not immune to her charm(s)2. geh (sich von jemandem, etwas zurückziehen, fernhalten)sich jemandes Blicken entziehen Person: (vermeiden) hide from sb, keep out of sb’s sight, avoid encountering sb; Sache: (versteckt sein) remain hidden (from sb’s view) ( oder invisible to sb oder unnoticed by sb); Person, Sache: (verschwinden) disappear (from sb’s view, from sight)sich der Verantwortung entziehen evade ( oder shirk) (one’s) responsibility, be unwilling to accept (one’s) responsibility4. (entgehen, entkommen) Verfolgern etc, Verhaftung: escape, elude, evade; (sich befreien von) free o.s. from;sich der Gerechtigkeit entziehen flee from justicedas entzieht sich meiner Beurteilung I’m in no position to judge (that), I’m no judge of that;es entzieht sich meiner Kenntnis/Kontrolle auch I have no knowledge of ( oder information about) that/I have no control over that, there’s nothing I can do about that* * *1.unregelmäßiges transitives Verb1) take awayetwas jemandem/einer Sache entziehen — take something away from somebody/something
jemandem das Wort entziehen — ask somebody to stop [speaking]
jemandem das Vertrauen/seine Unterstützung entziehen — withdraw one's confidence in somebody/one's support from somebody
2)2.etwas einer Sache (Dat.) entziehen — (entfernen von, aus) remove something from something; (herausziehen aus) extract something from something
sich der Gesellschaft (Dat.) entziehen — (geh.) withdraw from society
sich seinen Pflichten (Dat.) entziehen — shirk or evade one's duty
das entzieht sich meiner Kontrolle/Kenntnis — that is beyond my control/knowledge
* * *v.to detract v.to withdraw v.(§ p.,p.p.: withdrew, withdrawn) -
10 détacher
détacher [deta∫e]➭ TABLE 11. transitive verba. ( = délier) to untie ; [+ wagon, remorque] to take offb. [+ vêtement] to undo• « détacher suivant le pointillé » "tear off along the dotted line"d. ( = envoyer) [+ personne] to send ; (à un ministère, une organisation) to assign temporarily (à to)e. ( = mettre en relief) [+ lettres] to separate ; [+ syllabes, mots] to articulate2. reflexive verbb. [ceinture, chaussure, lacet, ficelle] to come undonec. [fruit, peau, papier collé] to come off ; [page, épingle] to come oute. ( = ressortir) to stand outf. se détacher de ( = renoncer à) to turn one's back on ; ( = se désintéresser de) to grow away from* * *detaʃe
1.
1) ( ôter les liens de) to untie [personne, animal, barque, cheveux, paquet] (de from)2) ( défaire un lien) to unfasten [ceinture, collier]; to undo [chaussure, bouton]; to untie, to undo [nœud, corde]détachez-lui ses menottes — remove his/her handcuffs
3) ( défaire d'un support) [personne] to tear [something] off [timbre, coupon, chèque]; to take down [affiche]; [vent] to tear [something] off [affiche]détachez selon or suivant le pointillé — tear along the dotted line
4) ( éloigner)détacher quelqu'un de — to turn ou drive somebody away from [personne, famille]
5) ( détourner)détacher les yeux or le regard de quelque chose — to take one's eyes off something
6) ( affecter) [administration] to second GB, to transfer [enseignant, diplomate, militaire]7) ( faire ressortir) [orateur] to articulate [mot, syllabe]; [musicien] to detach [note]; [imprimeur, designer] to make [something] stand out [lettre, titre, mot]8) ( enlever les taches de) to remove the stain(s) from [vêtement]
2.
se détacher verbe pronominal1) ( se défaire de ses liens) [prisonnier, animal] to break loose (de from); [bateau] to come untied (de from)2) ( se défaire) [nœud, lien] to come undone3) ( se séparer d'un support) [coupon, feuillet] to come out (de of); [papier peint, affiche] to come away (de from), to peel (de off)4) ( se désintéresser)se détacher de — to turn one's back on [monde]; to grow away from [personne]
6) ( s'éloigner)se détacher de — [individu, invité] to detach oneself from [groupe]; [coureur, cheval] to pull away from [groupe]; [membre, pays] to break away from [organisation, union]
* * *detaʃe vt1) (= enlever) to remove2) (= délier) to untie3) (= envoyer)détacher qn auprès de qch ADMINISTRATION — to send sb on temporary assignment to sth, to second sb to sth Grande-Bretagne MILITAIREto detail sb to sth
4) (= nettoyer) [vêtement] to remove stains from* * *détacher verb table: aimerA vtr1 ( ôter les liens de) to untie [personne, animal, barque, cheveux, paquet] (de from);2 ( défaire un lien) to unfasten [agrafe, ceinture, collier]; to undo [chaussure, bouton]; to untie, to undo [nœud, corde, ficelle, lacet]; détachez-lui ses menottes remove his/her handcuffs;3 ( défaire d'un support) [personne] to tear [sth] off [timbre, coupon, chèque]; to take down [affiche, tableau, cadre]; [vent] to tear [sth] off [affiche]; to blow [sth] off [fruits, feuilles, tuiles]; [humidité] to make [sth] come away [affiche, plâtre]; détachez selon or suivant le pointillé tear along the dotted line; ‘partie à détacher’ ‘tear off here’; détacher un fruit/une feuille d'un arbre [personne] to pick a fruit/a leaf from a tree; [vent] to blow a fruit/a leaf off a tree; détacher un wagon d'un train to uncouple a carriage GB ou car US from a train;4 ( éloigner) détacher qn de to turn ou drive sb away from [personne, famille]; [défaut, mode de vie] to alienate sb from sb/sth; son travail l'a détachée de sa vie de famille her work has drawn her away from her family life;5 ( détourner) détacher les yeux or le regard/l'esprit de qch to take one's eyes/one's mind off sth; détacher son attention/ses pensées de qch to turn one's attention/one's thoughts away from sth;6 ( affecter) [administration] to second GB, to transfer [enseignant, diplomate, militaire] (à, en, auprès de to; de from); demander à être détaché en Asie to ask to be seconded to Asia; se faire détacher to be seconded;7 ( faire ressortir) [orateur] to articulate [mot, syllabe]; [musicien] to detach [note]; [imprimeur, designer] to make [sth] stand out [lettre, titre, mot]; [peintre] to make [sth] stand out [motif];8 ( écarter) détacher les bras du corps to hold one's arms away from one's body;9 ( enlever les taches de) to remove the stain(s) from [tissu, cuir, vêtement] (à with).B se détacher vpr1 ( se défaire de ses liens) [prisonnier, animal] to break loose (de from); [bateau] to come untied (de from); [colis] to come undone;2 ( se défaire) [agrafe, nœud, corde, lacet] to come undone; comment se détache cette ceinture? how does this belt unfasten?;3 ( se séparer d'un support) [coupon, feuillet] to come out (de of); [papier peint, affiche] to come away (de from), to peel (de off); les fruits se détachent facilement des branches the fruit comes off the branches easily;4 ( se désintéresser) se détacher de to lose interest in [vie, activité]; to turn one's back on [monde]; to grow away from [personne]; se détacher des biens terrestres to turn one's back on worldly goods;5 ( ressortir) [motif, titre, objet, silhouette] to stand out (dans in; sur against);6 ( s'éloigner) se détacher de [individu, invité] to detach oneself from [groupe]; [coureur, cycliste, cheval] to pull away from [groupe]; [entreprise] to pull away from [concurrent]; [personne, œuvre, style] to break away from [tradition, genre]; [membre, pays] to break away from [organisation, union];7 ( se distinguer) [élève, candidat, artiste, œuvre] to stand out (de from).[detaʃe] verbe transitif1. [libérer] to untiedétacher ses cheveux to untie one's hair, to let one's hair downdétacher une caravane to unhitch ou to unhook a caravan2. [séparer]a. [enlever le trombone] to unclip a picture from a letterb. [enlever l'agrafe] to unstaple a picture from a letterdétacher une recette d'un magazine/un timbre d'un carnet to tear a recipe out of a magazine/a stamp out of a book4. [détourner]détacher ses yeux ou son regard de quelqu'un to take one's eyes off somebody[affectivement]être détaché de to be detached from ou indifferent to6. [faire ressortir] to separate (out)détachez bien chaque mot/note make sure every word/note stands out (clearly)7. [nettoyer] to clean————————se détacher verbe pronominal (emploi réfléchi)[se libérer] to untie ou to free oneself————————se détacher verbe pronominal intransitif1. [sandale, lacet] to come undone[étiquette] to come off[page] to come loose2. SPORT [se séparer - du peloton] to break away3. [se profiler] to stand out————————se détacher de verbe pronominal plus préposition1. [se décrocher de] to come off2. [s'éloigner de]puis je me suis détachée de ma famille/de l'art figuratif later, I grew away from my family/from figurative art————————à détacher locution adjectivalefiche/recette à détacher tear-off card/recipe -
11 abgrenzen
(trennb., hat -ge-)I v/t2. fig. (unterscheiden) differentiate; (Begriffe) define; gegeneinander oder voneinander abgrenzen draw a clear dividing line between* * *to delimit; to mark off; to mark out; to limit* * *ạb|gren|zen sep1. vtGrundstück, Gelände to fence off; (fig) Rechte, Pflichten, Einflussbereich, Befugnisse, Begriff to delimit (gegen, von from)etw durch einen Zaun/ein Seil/eine Mauer/eine Hecke abgrenzen — to fence/rope/wall/hedge sth off
diese Begriffe lassen sich nur schwer ( gegeneinander) abgrenzen — it is hard to distinguish (between) these two concepts
2. vrto dis( as)sociate oneself (gegen from)* * *ab|gren·zenI. vt1. (einfrieden)▪ etw \abgrenzen to enclose sth2. (unterscheiden)zwei Dinge voneinander \abgrenzen to differentiate between two thingsdiese Begriffe lassen sich schwer gegeneinander \abgrenzen it is difficult to differentiate between these termsII. vr* * *transitives Verb1) boundetwas gegen od. von etwas abgrenzen — separate something from something
2) (unterscheiden) differentiate; distinguish* * *abgrenzen (trennb, hat -ge-)A. v/tvoneinander abgrenzen draw a clear dividing line betweenB. v/r fig:* * *transitives Verb1) boundetwas gegen od. von etwas abgrenzen — separate something from something
2) (unterscheiden) differentiate; distinguish* * *v.to delimit v.to mark down v.to mark out v.to mark-off v. -
12 secerno
sē-cerno, crēvi, crētum, 3 (old inf. secernier, Lucr. 3, 263), v. a.I.Lit., to put apart, to sunder, sever, separate (freq. and class.; not in Cæs.; cf.: sepono, sejungo, secludo); constr. with simple acc., or with ab aliquā re; less freq. ex aliquā re; poet. with abl.(α).With simple acc.:(β).quae non animalia solum Corpora sejungunt, sed terras ac mare totum Secernunt,
Lucr. 2, 729:seorsum partem utramque,
id. 3, 637:arietes, quibus sis usurus ad feturam, bimestri tempore ante secernendum,
Varr. R. R. 2, 2, 13 (cf. infra, b):stamen secernit harundo,
Ov. M. 6, 55:sparsos sine ordine flores Secernunt calathis,
separate in baskets, id. ib. 14, 267:nihil (praedae) in publicum secernendo augenti rem privatam militi favit,
setting apart for the public treasury, Liv. 7, 16; cf.:Juppiter illa piae secrevit litora genti,
hath set apart for the pious race, Hor. Epod. 16, 63:inde pares centum denos secrevit in orbes Romulus,
separated, divided, Ov. F. 3, 127.—With ab or (less freq.) with ex, and poet. with abl.:II. (α). (β).a terris altum secernere caelum,
Lucr. 5, 446:ab aëre caelum,
Ov. M. 1, 23:Europen ab Afro (medius liquor),
Hor. C. 3, 3, 47:muro denique secernantur a nobis,
Cic. Cat. 1, 13, 32:inermes ab armatis,
Liv. 41, 3:militem a populo (in spectaculis),
Suet. Aug. 44:se a bonis,
Cic. Cat. 1, 13, 32; cf.:se ab Etruscis,
Liv. 6, 10.—In the part. perf.:antequam incipiat admissura fieri, mares a feminis secretos habeant,
Varr. R. R. 2, 1, 18 (cf. supra, a); so,saepta ab aliis,
id. ib. 2, 2, 8:manus a nobis,
Lucr. 2, 912; 3, 552:sphaera ab aethereā conjunctione,
Cic. N. D. 2, 21, 55:sucus a reliquo cibo,
id. ib. 2, 55, 137:bilis ab eo cibo,
id. ib. al.:secreti ab aliis ad tribunos adducuntur,
Liv. 6, 25; 25, 30:secretis alterius ab altero criminibus,
id. 40, 8 fin.; 39, 10:se e grege imperatorum,
id. 35, 14 fin.:unum e praetextatis compluribus,
Suet. Aug. 94 med.:monile ex omni gazā,
id. Galb. 18:me gelidum nemus Nympharumque leves chori Secernunt populo,
separate, distinguish, Hor. C. 1, 1, 32.—With ab, or poet. with abl.: ut venustas et pulchritudo corporis secerni non potest a valetudine;B.sic, etc.,
Cic. Off. 1, 27, 95:animum a corpore,
id. Tusc. 1, 31, 75:tertium genus (laudationum) a praeceptis nostris,
id. de Or. 2, 84, 341; cf.:ipsam pronuntiationem ab oratore,
Quint. 1, 11, 17: dicendi facultatem a majore vitae laude, id. 2, 15, 2:sua a publicis consiliis,
Liv. 4, 57:haec a probris ac sceleribus ejus,
Suet. Ner. 19 et saep.:cur me a ceteris clarissimis viris in hoc officio secernas,
Cic. Sull. 1, 3:publica privatis, sacra profanis,
Hor. A. P. 397.—To distinguish, discern:C.blandum amicum a vero,
Cic. Lael. 25, 95:non satis acute, quae sunt secernenda, distinguit,
id. Top. 7, 31:nec natura potest justo secernere iniquum, Dividit ut bona diversis, fugienda petendis,
Hor. S. 1, 3, 113:turpi honestum,
id. ib. 1, 6, 63.—To set aside, reject:A.cum reus frugalissimum quemque secerneret,
Cic. Att. 1, 16, 3:minus idoneos senatores,
Suet. Vit. 2.—Hence, sēcrē-tus, a, um, P. a., severed, separated; hence, separate, apart (as an adj. not freq. till after the Aug. period; not in Cic.; syn.: sejunctus, seclusus).In gen.:B.ne ducem suum, neve secretum imperium propriave signa haberent, miscuit manipulos, etc.,
Liv. 1, 52:electa (uva defertur) in secretam corbulam,
Varr. R. R. 1, 54, 2:arva,
Verg. A. 6, 478; Varr. L. L. 9, § 57 Müll.—In partic.1.Of places or things pertaining to them, out of the way, retired, remote, lonely, solitary, secret (syn.:b.solus, remotus, arcanus): secreta petit loca, balnea vitat,
Hor. A. P. 298:locus (opp. celeber),
Quint. 11, 1, 47:montes,
Ov. M. 11, 765:silva,
id. ib. 7, 75:litora,
id. ib. 12, 196:pars domus (the gynaeceum),
id. ib. 2, 737; cf. in sup.:secretissimus locus (navis),
Petr. 100, 6: vastum ubique silentium, secreti colles, solitary, i. e. abandoned, deserted by the enemy, = deserti, Tac. Agr. 38:iter (with semita),
solitary, Hor. Ep. 1, 18, 103; cf.quies,
Mart. 7, 32, 4.—Of persons and transactions, private, secret:invadit secretissimos tumultus,
Sen. Ep. 91, 5:vacuis porticibus secretus agitat,
Tac. A. 11, 21:est aliquis ex secretis studiis fructus,
private studies, Quint. 2, 18, 4; so,studia (opp. forum),
id. 12, 6, 4:disputationes,
id. 12, 2, 7:contentio,
Plin. Ep. 7, 9, 4 et saep. —Hence,Subst.: sēcrētum, i, n., retirement, solitude, secrecy; a solitude, solitary place, retreat (syn.: solitudo, secessus); sing.:(β).cum stilus secreto gaudeat atque omnes arbitros reformidet,
Quint. 10, 7, 16:secreti longi causā,
Ov. H. 21, 21:altum abditumque secretum, Phn. Ep. 2, 17, 22: dulce,
id. ib. 3, 1, 6; Quint. 10, 3, 30; 12, 5, 2; Tac. A. 4, 57; 14, 53; id. Agr. 39 fin.; Phaedr. 3, 10, 11; 4, 23, 6; Luc. 3, 314.— Plur.:se a vulgo et scaenā in secreta removere,
Hor. S. 2, 1, 71:horrendaeque procul secreta Sibyllae,
Verg. A. 6, 10; Ov. M. 1, 594; Tac. H. 3, 63; Quint. 1, 2, 18:dulcis secretorum comes (eloquentia),
id. 1, 4, 5:cameli solitudines aut secreta certe petunt,
Plin. 10, 63, 83, § 173.— Comp.:haec pars Suevorum in secretiora Germaniae porrigitur,
into the more remote parts, Tac. G. 41. —Absol.: in secreto, in a secret place, secretly:2.tempus in secreto lbi tereret,
Liv. 26, 19, 5:reus in secreto agebatur,
Curt. 10, 4, 29.—That is removed from acquaintance (cf. abditus), hidden, concealed, secret:b.secreta ducis pectora,
Mart. 5, 5, 4:secretas advocat artes,
Ov. M. 7, 138:ars,
Petr. 3:litterae (with familiares),
Quint. 1, 1, 29:carmina (the Sibylline odes),
Luc. 1, 599:libidines,
Tac. A. 1, 4 fin.:quaedam imperii pignora,
Flor. 1, 2, 3.—With ab:nec quicquam secretum alter ab altero haberent,
Liv. 39, 10, 1.— Comp.:libertus ex secretioribus ministeriis,
Tac. Agr. 40:praemia (opp. publica largitio),
id. H. 1, 24:aliud (nomen),
Quint. 1, 4, 25:vitium stomachi,
Mart. 3, 77, 9.— Poet. for the adv. secreto:tu (Anna) secreta pyram tecto interiore Erige,
in secret, secretly, Verg. A. 4, 494; cf.:stridere secreta divisos aure susurros,
secretly in each one's ear, Hor. S. 2, 8, 78.—Hence,Subst.: sēcrētum, i, n., something secret, secret conversation; a mystery, secret:3.secretum petenti non nisi adhibito filio dedit,
Suet. Tib. 25 fin.; id. Calig. 23:illuc me persecutus secretum petit,
a secret interview, Plin. Ep. 1, 5, 11:petito secreto futura aperit,
Tac. H. 2, 4.— Piur.:crebra cum amicis secreta habere,
Tac. A. 13, 18:animi secreta proferuntur,
Plin. 14, 22, 28, § 141:nulla lex jubet amicorum secreta non eloqui,
Sen. Ben. 5, 21, 1:omnium secreta rimari,
Tac. A. 6, 3:horribile secretum,
Petr. 21, 3; Tac. H. 1, 17 fin.; id. Agr. 25; Suet. Aug. 66:uxor omnis secreti capacissima,
Plin. Ep. 1, 12, 7; Quint. 12, 9, 5 al.—Concr.:lucos ac nemora consecrant deorumque nominibus appellant secretum illud, quod solā reverentiā vident,
that mysterious being, Tac. G. 9 fin.—Plur.:introitus, aperta, secreta velut in annales referebat,
Tac. A. 4, 67; cf.:gens non astuta aperit adhuc secreta pectoris licentia joci,
id. G. 22:oratio animi secreta detegit,
Quint. 11, 1, 30; Tac. A. 1, 6; 4, 7 fin.; 6, 3; id. G. 19; Plin. Pan. 68, 6; Suet. Tib. 52; id. Oth. 3 et saep.—Concr.:(Minerva) hanc legem dederat, sua ne secreta viderent,
i. e. the mysteries, Ov. M. 2, 556; 2, 749; cf.:secretiora quaedam,
magic arts, Amm. 14, 6, 14:in secretis ejus reperti sunt duo libelli,
among his private papers, Suet. Calig. 49.—Pregn., separate from what is common, i. e. uncommon, rare, recondite (perh. only in the two foll. passages of Quint.):4.(figurae) secretae et extra vulgarem usum positae, etc.,
Quint. 9, 3, 5: interpretatio linguae secretioris, quas Graeci glôssas vocant, i. e. of the more uncommon words, id. 1, 1, 35 (for which:glossemata id est voces minus usitatas,
id. 1, 8, 15).—In Lucr., of any thing separated from what belongs to it, i. e. wanting, deprived of, without something; with abl. or gen.:* 1.nec porro secreta cibo natura animantum Propagare genus possit (corresp. to sine imbribus),
Lucr. 1, 194:(corpora) secreta teporis Sunt ac frigoris omnino calidique vaporis (corresp. to spoliata colore),
id. 2, 843. —Hence, adv., in three forms: secreto (class.), secrete (post-class.), and secretim (late Lat. and very rare).(Acc. to A.) Apart, by itself, separately:2.de quibus (hortis) suo loco dicam secretius,
Col. 11, 2, 25. —(Acc. to B. 2.) In secret, secretly; without witnesses; in private.(α).sēcrē-tō:(β). b.mirum, quid solus secum secreto ille agat,
Plaut. Am. 3, 2, 73:secreto illum adjutabo,
id. Truc. 2, 7, 7:secreto hoc audi,
Cic. Fam. 7, 25, 2:nescio quid secreto velle loqui te Aiebas mecum,
Hor. S. 1, 9, 67:secreto te huc seduxi,
Plaut. Aul. 2, 1, 14:facere,
id. Bacch. 5, 2, 30; 5, 2, 35; Cic. Verr. 2, 4, 45, § 100; id. Att. 7, 8, 4; Cael. ap. Cic. Fam. 8, 1, 4:secreto ab aliis,
Liv. 3, 36:secreto agere cum aliquo,
Caes. B. G. 1, 31, 1; Quint. 5, 13, 16; 9, 2, 79; Plin. Ep. 3, 20, 8; Curt. 7, 2, 13.—Comp.:(γ).secretius emittitur inflatio,
Sen. Q. N. 5, 4, 1. —sēcrētim, Amm. 29, 1, 6. -
13 secretum
sē-cerno, crēvi, crētum, 3 (old inf. secernier, Lucr. 3, 263), v. a.I.Lit., to put apart, to sunder, sever, separate (freq. and class.; not in Cæs.; cf.: sepono, sejungo, secludo); constr. with simple acc., or with ab aliquā re; less freq. ex aliquā re; poet. with abl.(α).With simple acc.:(β).quae non animalia solum Corpora sejungunt, sed terras ac mare totum Secernunt,
Lucr. 2, 729:seorsum partem utramque,
id. 3, 637:arietes, quibus sis usurus ad feturam, bimestri tempore ante secernendum,
Varr. R. R. 2, 2, 13 (cf. infra, b):stamen secernit harundo,
Ov. M. 6, 55:sparsos sine ordine flores Secernunt calathis,
separate in baskets, id. ib. 14, 267:nihil (praedae) in publicum secernendo augenti rem privatam militi favit,
setting apart for the public treasury, Liv. 7, 16; cf.:Juppiter illa piae secrevit litora genti,
hath set apart for the pious race, Hor. Epod. 16, 63:inde pares centum denos secrevit in orbes Romulus,
separated, divided, Ov. F. 3, 127.—With ab or (less freq.) with ex, and poet. with abl.:II. (α). (β).a terris altum secernere caelum,
Lucr. 5, 446:ab aëre caelum,
Ov. M. 1, 23:Europen ab Afro (medius liquor),
Hor. C. 3, 3, 47:muro denique secernantur a nobis,
Cic. Cat. 1, 13, 32:inermes ab armatis,
Liv. 41, 3:militem a populo (in spectaculis),
Suet. Aug. 44:se a bonis,
Cic. Cat. 1, 13, 32; cf.:se ab Etruscis,
Liv. 6, 10.—In the part. perf.:antequam incipiat admissura fieri, mares a feminis secretos habeant,
Varr. R. R. 2, 1, 18 (cf. supra, a); so,saepta ab aliis,
id. ib. 2, 2, 8:manus a nobis,
Lucr. 2, 912; 3, 552:sphaera ab aethereā conjunctione,
Cic. N. D. 2, 21, 55:sucus a reliquo cibo,
id. ib. 2, 55, 137:bilis ab eo cibo,
id. ib. al.:secreti ab aliis ad tribunos adducuntur,
Liv. 6, 25; 25, 30:secretis alterius ab altero criminibus,
id. 40, 8 fin.; 39, 10:se e grege imperatorum,
id. 35, 14 fin.:unum e praetextatis compluribus,
Suet. Aug. 94 med.:monile ex omni gazā,
id. Galb. 18:me gelidum nemus Nympharumque leves chori Secernunt populo,
separate, distinguish, Hor. C. 1, 1, 32.—With ab, or poet. with abl.: ut venustas et pulchritudo corporis secerni non potest a valetudine;B.sic, etc.,
Cic. Off. 1, 27, 95:animum a corpore,
id. Tusc. 1, 31, 75:tertium genus (laudationum) a praeceptis nostris,
id. de Or. 2, 84, 341; cf.:ipsam pronuntiationem ab oratore,
Quint. 1, 11, 17: dicendi facultatem a majore vitae laude, id. 2, 15, 2:sua a publicis consiliis,
Liv. 4, 57:haec a probris ac sceleribus ejus,
Suet. Ner. 19 et saep.:cur me a ceteris clarissimis viris in hoc officio secernas,
Cic. Sull. 1, 3:publica privatis, sacra profanis,
Hor. A. P. 397.—To distinguish, discern:C.blandum amicum a vero,
Cic. Lael. 25, 95:non satis acute, quae sunt secernenda, distinguit,
id. Top. 7, 31:nec natura potest justo secernere iniquum, Dividit ut bona diversis, fugienda petendis,
Hor. S. 1, 3, 113:turpi honestum,
id. ib. 1, 6, 63.—To set aside, reject:A.cum reus frugalissimum quemque secerneret,
Cic. Att. 1, 16, 3:minus idoneos senatores,
Suet. Vit. 2.—Hence, sēcrē-tus, a, um, P. a., severed, separated; hence, separate, apart (as an adj. not freq. till after the Aug. period; not in Cic.; syn.: sejunctus, seclusus).In gen.:B.ne ducem suum, neve secretum imperium propriave signa haberent, miscuit manipulos, etc.,
Liv. 1, 52:electa (uva defertur) in secretam corbulam,
Varr. R. R. 1, 54, 2:arva,
Verg. A. 6, 478; Varr. L. L. 9, § 57 Müll.—In partic.1.Of places or things pertaining to them, out of the way, retired, remote, lonely, solitary, secret (syn.:b.solus, remotus, arcanus): secreta petit loca, balnea vitat,
Hor. A. P. 298:locus (opp. celeber),
Quint. 11, 1, 47:montes,
Ov. M. 11, 765:silva,
id. ib. 7, 75:litora,
id. ib. 12, 196:pars domus (the gynaeceum),
id. ib. 2, 737; cf. in sup.:secretissimus locus (navis),
Petr. 100, 6: vastum ubique silentium, secreti colles, solitary, i. e. abandoned, deserted by the enemy, = deserti, Tac. Agr. 38:iter (with semita),
solitary, Hor. Ep. 1, 18, 103; cf.quies,
Mart. 7, 32, 4.—Of persons and transactions, private, secret:invadit secretissimos tumultus,
Sen. Ep. 91, 5:vacuis porticibus secretus agitat,
Tac. A. 11, 21:est aliquis ex secretis studiis fructus,
private studies, Quint. 2, 18, 4; so,studia (opp. forum),
id. 12, 6, 4:disputationes,
id. 12, 2, 7:contentio,
Plin. Ep. 7, 9, 4 et saep. —Hence,Subst.: sēcrētum, i, n., retirement, solitude, secrecy; a solitude, solitary place, retreat (syn.: solitudo, secessus); sing.:(β).cum stilus secreto gaudeat atque omnes arbitros reformidet,
Quint. 10, 7, 16:secreti longi causā,
Ov. H. 21, 21:altum abditumque secretum, Phn. Ep. 2, 17, 22: dulce,
id. ib. 3, 1, 6; Quint. 10, 3, 30; 12, 5, 2; Tac. A. 4, 57; 14, 53; id. Agr. 39 fin.; Phaedr. 3, 10, 11; 4, 23, 6; Luc. 3, 314.— Plur.:se a vulgo et scaenā in secreta removere,
Hor. S. 2, 1, 71:horrendaeque procul secreta Sibyllae,
Verg. A. 6, 10; Ov. M. 1, 594; Tac. H. 3, 63; Quint. 1, 2, 18:dulcis secretorum comes (eloquentia),
id. 1, 4, 5:cameli solitudines aut secreta certe petunt,
Plin. 10, 63, 83, § 173.— Comp.:haec pars Suevorum in secretiora Germaniae porrigitur,
into the more remote parts, Tac. G. 41. —Absol.: in secreto, in a secret place, secretly:2.tempus in secreto lbi tereret,
Liv. 26, 19, 5:reus in secreto agebatur,
Curt. 10, 4, 29.—That is removed from acquaintance (cf. abditus), hidden, concealed, secret:b.secreta ducis pectora,
Mart. 5, 5, 4:secretas advocat artes,
Ov. M. 7, 138:ars,
Petr. 3:litterae (with familiares),
Quint. 1, 1, 29:carmina (the Sibylline odes),
Luc. 1, 599:libidines,
Tac. A. 1, 4 fin.:quaedam imperii pignora,
Flor. 1, 2, 3.—With ab:nec quicquam secretum alter ab altero haberent,
Liv. 39, 10, 1.— Comp.:libertus ex secretioribus ministeriis,
Tac. Agr. 40:praemia (opp. publica largitio),
id. H. 1, 24:aliud (nomen),
Quint. 1, 4, 25:vitium stomachi,
Mart. 3, 77, 9.— Poet. for the adv. secreto:tu (Anna) secreta pyram tecto interiore Erige,
in secret, secretly, Verg. A. 4, 494; cf.:stridere secreta divisos aure susurros,
secretly in each one's ear, Hor. S. 2, 8, 78.—Hence,Subst.: sēcrētum, i, n., something secret, secret conversation; a mystery, secret:3.secretum petenti non nisi adhibito filio dedit,
Suet. Tib. 25 fin.; id. Calig. 23:illuc me persecutus secretum petit,
a secret interview, Plin. Ep. 1, 5, 11:petito secreto futura aperit,
Tac. H. 2, 4.— Piur.:crebra cum amicis secreta habere,
Tac. A. 13, 18:animi secreta proferuntur,
Plin. 14, 22, 28, § 141:nulla lex jubet amicorum secreta non eloqui,
Sen. Ben. 5, 21, 1:omnium secreta rimari,
Tac. A. 6, 3:horribile secretum,
Petr. 21, 3; Tac. H. 1, 17 fin.; id. Agr. 25; Suet. Aug. 66:uxor omnis secreti capacissima,
Plin. Ep. 1, 12, 7; Quint. 12, 9, 5 al.—Concr.:lucos ac nemora consecrant deorumque nominibus appellant secretum illud, quod solā reverentiā vident,
that mysterious being, Tac. G. 9 fin.—Plur.:introitus, aperta, secreta velut in annales referebat,
Tac. A. 4, 67; cf.:gens non astuta aperit adhuc secreta pectoris licentia joci,
id. G. 22:oratio animi secreta detegit,
Quint. 11, 1, 30; Tac. A. 1, 6; 4, 7 fin.; 6, 3; id. G. 19; Plin. Pan. 68, 6; Suet. Tib. 52; id. Oth. 3 et saep.—Concr.:(Minerva) hanc legem dederat, sua ne secreta viderent,
i. e. the mysteries, Ov. M. 2, 556; 2, 749; cf.:secretiora quaedam,
magic arts, Amm. 14, 6, 14:in secretis ejus reperti sunt duo libelli,
among his private papers, Suet. Calig. 49.—Pregn., separate from what is common, i. e. uncommon, rare, recondite (perh. only in the two foll. passages of Quint.):4.(figurae) secretae et extra vulgarem usum positae, etc.,
Quint. 9, 3, 5: interpretatio linguae secretioris, quas Graeci glôssas vocant, i. e. of the more uncommon words, id. 1, 1, 35 (for which:glossemata id est voces minus usitatas,
id. 1, 8, 15).—In Lucr., of any thing separated from what belongs to it, i. e. wanting, deprived of, without something; with abl. or gen.:* 1.nec porro secreta cibo natura animantum Propagare genus possit (corresp. to sine imbribus),
Lucr. 1, 194:(corpora) secreta teporis Sunt ac frigoris omnino calidique vaporis (corresp. to spoliata colore),
id. 2, 843. —Hence, adv., in three forms: secreto (class.), secrete (post-class.), and secretim (late Lat. and very rare).(Acc. to A.) Apart, by itself, separately:2.de quibus (hortis) suo loco dicam secretius,
Col. 11, 2, 25. —(Acc. to B. 2.) In secret, secretly; without witnesses; in private.(α).sēcrē-tō:(β). b.mirum, quid solus secum secreto ille agat,
Plaut. Am. 3, 2, 73:secreto illum adjutabo,
id. Truc. 2, 7, 7:secreto hoc audi,
Cic. Fam. 7, 25, 2:nescio quid secreto velle loqui te Aiebas mecum,
Hor. S. 1, 9, 67:secreto te huc seduxi,
Plaut. Aul. 2, 1, 14:facere,
id. Bacch. 5, 2, 30; 5, 2, 35; Cic. Verr. 2, 4, 45, § 100; id. Att. 7, 8, 4; Cael. ap. Cic. Fam. 8, 1, 4:secreto ab aliis,
Liv. 3, 36:secreto agere cum aliquo,
Caes. B. G. 1, 31, 1; Quint. 5, 13, 16; 9, 2, 79; Plin. Ep. 3, 20, 8; Curt. 7, 2, 13.—Comp.:(γ).secretius emittitur inflatio,
Sen. Q. N. 5, 4, 1. —sēcrētim, Amm. 29, 1, 6. -
14 distinguir
v.1 to distinguish.¿tú distingues estas dos camisas? can you tell the difference between these two shirts?me es imposible distinguirlos I can't tell them apartdistinguir algo de algo to tell something from somethingElla distingue los colores She distinguishes the colors.Ella distingue a los gemelos She distinguishes the twins.El rector distinguió al profesor The rector distinguished the professor.Ella distinguió She distinguished.2 to distinguish, to characterize.distinguir algo/a alguien de to distinguish something/somebody from, to set something/somebody apart from3 to honor.hoy nos distingue con su presencia Don… today we are honored to have with us Mr…4 to make out.¿distingues algo? can you see anything?, can you make anything out? (al mirar)5 to differentiate, to know the difference.* * *(gu changes to g before a and o)Present Indicativedistingo, distingues, distingue, distinguimos, distinguís, distinguen.Present SubjunctiveImperative* * *verb1) to differentiate, distinguish2) honor* * *1. VT1) (=diferenciar)a) (=ver la diferencia entre) to distinguishno resulta fácil distinguir a los mellizos — it is not easy to tell the twins apart, it's not easy to distinguish between the twins
he puesto una etiqueta en la maleta para distinguirla — I've put a label on the suitcase to be able to tell it apart from o distinguish it from the others
lo sabría distinguir entre un millón — I would know it o recognize it anywhere
¿sabes distinguir un violín de una viola? — can you tell o distinguish a violin from a viola?
b) (=hacer diferente) to set apartlo que nos distingue de los animales — what distinguishes us from the animals, what sets us apart from the animals
c) (=hacer una distinción entre) to distinguish2) (=ver) [+ objeto, sonido] to make outya distingo la costa — I can see o make out the coast now
3) (=honrar) [+ amigo, alumno] to honour, honor (EEUU)4) (=elegir) to single out2.VI (=ver la diferencia) to tell the difference ( entre between)(=hacer una distinción) to make a distinction ( entre between)lo mismo le da un vino malo que uno bueno, no distingue — it's all the same to him whether it's a bad wine or a good one, he can't tell the difference
no era capaz de distinguir entre lo bueno y lo malo — he couldn't tell the difference o distinguish between good and bad
en su discurso, distinguió entre el viejo y el nuevo liberalismo — in his speech he made a distinction between the old and the new liberalism
3.See:* * *1.verbo transitivo1)a) ( diferenciar) to distinguishdistinguir una cosa de otra — to tell o distinguish one thing from another
es muy difícil distinguirlos — it's very difficult to tell them apart o to tell one from the other
b) ( caracterizar) to characterize2) ( percibir) to make outse distinguía claramente el ruido de las olas — we/he/they could clearly make out the sound of the waves
3) (con medalla, honor) to honor*2.distinguirse v pron ( destacarse)distinguirse por algo: se distinguió por su valentía he distinguished himself by his bravery; nuestros productos se distinguen por su calidad our products are distinguished by their quality; distinguirse en algo — to distinguish oneself in something
* * *= delineate, discern, distinguish, draw + distinction, segregate, sift, single out, sort out + Nombre + from + Nombre, mark out, tell + apart, set + Nombre + apart, tease apart, decouple, discern, make out.Ex. PRECIS relies upon citation order (sometimes with the support of prepositions) to record syntactical relationships, and to delineate two similar subjects.Ex. Such variations also make it difficult for a cataloguer inserting a new heading for local use to discern the principles which should be heeded in the construction of such a heading.Ex. In order to distinguish between all these subjects it is inevitable that longer notations are used.Ex. You have failed to draw the correct distinction between a discipline and a phenomenon studied by a discipline.Ex. In summary, the advantages of the electronic catalog is the ability to segregate the fast searches from the slowest.Ex. Thus many non-relevant documents have been retrieved and examined in the process of sifting relevant and non-relevant documents.Ex. Conference proceedings are singled out for special attention because they are an important category of material in relation to abstracting and indexing publications.Ex. Ward's study is likely to remain a standard reference source for years to come, but trying to sort out the generalities from the particularities is a very difficult business.Ex. To infuse into that basic form an element of linguistic liveliness and wit, which marks out the best adult reviewers, is to ask far more than most children can hope to achieve.Ex. No two paper moulds of the hand-press period were ever precisely identical, and individual moulds can be identified by their paper images; even the two moulds of a pair, which were deliberately made to look alike, can be told apart by the paper made in them.Ex. What sets them apart is, primarily, the commercial considerations that directly affect the publishers' gatekeeper role but only indirectly affect that of the librarians.Ex. The author and his colleagues embarked on a series of studies to tease apart hereditary and environmental factors thought to be implicated in schizophrenia.Ex. The physical library will probably become less viable over time and so it is important to decouple the information professional from the library unit.Ex. Such variations also make it difficult for a cataloguer inserting a new heading for local use to discern the principles which should be heeded in the construction of such a heading.Ex. She could just make out that he was standing against the wall near the door, ready to jump anyone who came out the door.----* distinguir a + Nombre + de + Nombre = mark out + Nombre + from + Nombre.* distinguir de = mark + Nombre + off from.* distinguir entre... y... = draw + the line between... and..., make + distinction between... and..., discern + Nombre + from + Nombre.* distinguirse = make + Posesivo + mark, be distinguishable.* no distinguir entre... y... = make + little distinction between... and....* que distingue entre mayúscula y minúscula = case-sensitive.* que no ayuda a distinguir = nondistinctive.* * *1.verbo transitivo1)a) ( diferenciar) to distinguishdistinguir una cosa de otra — to tell o distinguish one thing from another
es muy difícil distinguirlos — it's very difficult to tell them apart o to tell one from the other
b) ( caracterizar) to characterize2) ( percibir) to make outse distinguía claramente el ruido de las olas — we/he/they could clearly make out the sound of the waves
3) (con medalla, honor) to honor*2.distinguirse v pron ( destacarse)distinguirse por algo: se distinguió por su valentía he distinguished himself by his bravery; nuestros productos se distinguen por su calidad our products are distinguished by their quality; distinguirse en algo — to distinguish oneself in something
* * *= delineate, discern, distinguish, draw + distinction, segregate, sift, single out, sort out + Nombre + from + Nombre, mark out, tell + apart, set + Nombre + apart, tease apart, decouple, discern, make out.Ex: PRECIS relies upon citation order (sometimes with the support of prepositions) to record syntactical relationships, and to delineate two similar subjects.
Ex: Such variations also make it difficult for a cataloguer inserting a new heading for local use to discern the principles which should be heeded in the construction of such a heading.Ex: In order to distinguish between all these subjects it is inevitable that longer notations are used.Ex: You have failed to draw the correct distinction between a discipline and a phenomenon studied by a discipline.Ex: In summary, the advantages of the electronic catalog is the ability to segregate the fast searches from the slowest.Ex: Thus many non-relevant documents have been retrieved and examined in the process of sifting relevant and non-relevant documents.Ex: Conference proceedings are singled out for special attention because they are an important category of material in relation to abstracting and indexing publications.Ex: Ward's study is likely to remain a standard reference source for years to come, but trying to sort out the generalities from the particularities is a very difficult business.Ex: To infuse into that basic form an element of linguistic liveliness and wit, which marks out the best adult reviewers, is to ask far more than most children can hope to achieve.Ex: No two paper moulds of the hand-press period were ever precisely identical, and individual moulds can be identified by their paper images; even the two moulds of a pair, which were deliberately made to look alike, can be told apart by the paper made in them.Ex: What sets them apart is, primarily, the commercial considerations that directly affect the publishers' gatekeeper role but only indirectly affect that of the librarians.Ex: The author and his colleagues embarked on a series of studies to tease apart hereditary and environmental factors thought to be implicated in schizophrenia.Ex: The physical library will probably become less viable over time and so it is important to decouple the information professional from the library unit.Ex: Such variations also make it difficult for a cataloguer inserting a new heading for local use to discern the principles which should be heeded in the construction of such a heading.Ex: She could just make out that he was standing against the wall near the door, ready to jump anyone who came out the door.* distinguir a + Nombre + de + Nombre = mark out + Nombre + from + Nombre.* distinguir de = mark + Nombre + off from.* distinguir entre... y... = draw + the line between... and..., make + distinction between... and..., discern + Nombre + from + Nombre.* distinguirse = make + Posesivo + mark, be distinguishable.* no distinguir entre... y... = make + little distinction between... and....* que distingue entre mayúscula y minúscula = case-sensitive.* que no ayuda a distinguir = nondistinctive.* * *distinguir [I2 ]vtA1 (diferenciar) to distinguishno sabe distinguir una nota de otra she can't tell o distinguish one note from anotherhe aprendido a distinguir los diferentes compositores I've learnt to distinguish (between) o recognize the different composersson tan parecidos que es muy difícil distinguirlos they look so much alike it's very difficult to tell them apart o to tell one from the other o to distinguish between themyo la distinguiría entre mil I'd recognize o know her anywhere, I could pick her out in a crowd2 (caracterizar) to characterizeB (percibir) to make outa lo lejos se distingue la catedral the cathedral can be seen in the distanceentre los matorrales pudo distinguir algo que se movía she could make out o see something moving in the bushesse distinguía claramente el ruido de las olas the sound of the waves could be clearly heard, we/he/they could clearly hear o make out the sound of the wavesC (con una medalla, un honor) to honor*■ distinguirvi(discernir): hay que saber distinguir para apreciar la diferencia you have to be discerning to appreciate the difference(destacarse) distinguirse POR algo:se distinguió por su talento musical he became famous o renowned for his musical talentse distinguió por su valor en el combate he distinguished himself by his bravery in battlenuestros productos se distinguen por su calidad our products stand out for their quality, our products are distinguished by o for their qualitydistinguirse EN algo to distinguish oneself IN sth, to make a name for oneself IN sth* * *
distinguir ( conjugate distinguir) verbo transitivo
1
2 ( percibir) ‹figura/sonido› to make out
3 (con medalla, honor) to honor( conjugate honor)
distinguirse verbo pronominal ( destacarse): distinguirse por algo [ persona] to distinguish oneself by sth;
[ producto] to be distinguished by sth
distinguir verbo transitivo
1 (reconocer) to recognize
2 (apreciar la diferencia) to distinguish: no soy capaz de distinguir a Juan de su hermano gemelo, I can't tell Juan from his twin brother
3 (conferir un privilegio, honor) to honour, US honor
4 (verse, apreciarse) to make out
' distinguir' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
discriminar
- caracterizar
English:
differentiate
- discern
- distinction
- distinguish
- make out
- pick out
- separate
- single out
- tell
- tell apart
- define
- discriminate
- know
- make
- mark
- pick
- right
- set
* * *♦ vt1. [diferenciar] to distinguish, to tell the difference between;¿tú distingues estas dos camisas? can you tell the difference between these two shirts?;me es imposible distinguirlos I can't tell them apart;Kant distingue varios tipos de “razón” Kant distinguishes between several kinds of “reason”;distinguir algo de algo to tell sth from sth;por teléfono no distingo tu voz de la de tu madre I can't tell your voice from your mother's on the telephone;no distinguen el verde del azul they can't tell green from blue2. [caracterizar] to distinguish, to characterize;distinguir algo/a alguien de to distinguish sth/sb from, to set sth/sb apart from;esto lo distingue del resto de los mamíferos this distinguishes it from other mammals;¿qué es lo que distingue a un gorila? what are the main characteristics of a gorilla?;el grado de adherencia distingue los diversos tipos de neumático the different types of tyre are distinguished by their road-holding capacity;su amabilidad la distingue de las demás her kindness sets her apart from the rest3. [premiar] to honour;ha sido distinguido con numerosos premios he has been honoured with numerous prizes;hoy nos distingue con su presencia Don… today we are honoured to have with us Mr…4. [vislumbrar, escuchar] to make out;¿distingues algo? [al mirar] can you see anything?, can you make anything out?;desde aquí no distingo si es ella o no I can't see if it's her or not from here;podía distinguir su voz I could make out her voice♦ vito differentiate, to know the difference ( entre between);el público distingue entre un buen y un mal tenor the audience can tell o knows the difference between a good and a bad tenor;estudiando mucho uno aprende a distinguir after a lot of study one learns how to discriminate* * *v/t1 distinguish (de from)2 ( divisar) make out;distinguir algo lejano make out sth in the distancehonour* * *distinguir {26} vt1) : to distinguish2) : to honor* * *distinguir vblos gemelos son difíciles de distinguir the twins are hard to tell apart / it's hard to tell the twins apart -
15 desprender
v.1 to remove, to detach (lo que estaba fijo).2 to give off.3 to unfasten, to remove, to detach, to make loose.Ella desprendió el broche She unfastened the brooch.4 to emit, to emanate, to give off.El leño podrido desprende luz The rotting log emits light.* * *1 (separar) to detach, remove2 (soltar) to release3 (emanar) to give off1 (soltarse) to come off, come away2 (emanar) to emanate, be given off3 (renunciar) to part with, give away4 figurado (liberarse) to rid oneself (de, of), free oneself (de, from)5 (deducirse) to follow, be inferred, be implied■ de aquí se desprende que no quiere volver a verte from this it follows that she doesn't want to see you again* * *verb1) to detach, loosen2) give, emit•- desprenderse* * *1. VT1) (=soltar) [+ gas, olor] to give off; [+ piel, pelo] to shed2) (=separar)2.See:* * *1.verbo transitivolos golpes desprendieron parte del revoque — part of the plaster came away o off with all the banging
2) <gases/chispas/olor> to give off2.desprenderse v pronse desprendió del soporte — it came away from o (frml) detached itself from the support
2)a) (renunciar, entregar)b) (apartarse, separarse)3) ( deshacerse)desprenderse de algo/alguien — to get rid of something/somebody
4) ( inferirse)de lo que se desprende que... — what can be gathered from it is that...
* * *1.verbo transitivolos golpes desprendieron parte del revoque — part of the plaster came away o off with all the banging
2) <gases/chispas/olor> to give off2.desprenderse v pronse desprendió del soporte — it came away from o (frml) detached itself from the support
2)a) (renunciar, entregar)b) (apartarse, separarse)3) ( deshacerse)desprenderse de algo/alguien — to get rid of something/somebody
4) ( inferirse)de lo que se desprende que... — what can be gathered from it is that...
* * *desprender11 = dislodge.Ex: Images of homosexuality and lesbianism are used as a confrontational political tool to dislodge male hegemony within the current cultural context.
* carne + desprenderse del hueso = meat + fall off + the bone.* desprenderse = drop off, fall from, fall out, flake off, follow, snap off, fall, come + undone, come + loose, come off.* desprenderse de = divest of, drop away from, throw away, part with, come out of, fall off of.* desprender semillas = go to + seed.* se desprende que = it follows that.desprender22 = give off, spout.Ex: Once the fronds have given off their spores, they die and can be cut back.
Ex: The weather cleared enough that we could get in to the volcanic islands (still spouting plumes of smoke) by copter in safety.* * *desprender [E1 ]vtA (soltar, separar) to detachlogró desprenderlo del eje he succeeded in detaching it from the shaftlos golpes han desprendido parte del revoque part of the plaster has come away o off with all the bangingel rótulo estaba medio desprendido the sign was hanging off its hinges/coming looseB ‹gases/chispas/olor› to give offC ( RPl) (desabrochar) ‹botón› to undoA «botón» to come off; «retina» to become detachedse desprendieron varias tejas several tiles came off (the roof)se desprendió del soporte it came away from o ( frml) detached itself from the supportB1 (renunciar, entregar) desprenderse DE algo to part WITH sthno me voy a desprender de este cuadro I'm not going to part with this pictureno piensa desprenderse del bebé she has no intention of giving up the baby2 (apartarse, separarse) desprenderse DE algo to let go OF sthno se desprende de su osito he won't let go of his teddybearno se me desprende del lado she won't leave my side for a minuteC (deshacerse) desprenderse DE algo/algn to get rid OF sth/sbno consigue desprenderse de sus prejuicios he doesn't seem able to shake off his prejudicesse desprendió de todos los documentos comprometedores he got rid of all the compromising documentsD (surgir) desprenderse DE algo to emerge FROM stheste resultado se desprende de las encuestas realizadas this result emerges from o comes out of the surveys that were carried outlo que se desprende del informe es que … what can be gathered o inferred from the report is that …, what emerges from the report is that …* * *
desprender ( conjugate desprender) verbo transitivo (soltar, separar) ‹ teja› to dislodge;
‹ etiqueta› to detach
desprenderse verbo pronominal
1 [ teja] to come loose;
[ botón] to come off;
[ retina] to become detached;
desprenderse de algo to come away from sth
2 (renunciar, entregar) desprenderse de algo ‹ de posesiones› to part with sth
desprender verbo transitivo
1 (despegar) to remove, detach
2 (emanar un olor, humo) to give off
' desprender' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
desprenderse
- desprendido
- soltar
* * *♦ vt1. [lo que estaba fijo] to remove, to detach;desprenda la pegatina y envíenosla remove the sticker and send it to us;el viento ha desprendido esta contraventana the wind has pulled this shutter off;desprendió los alfileres del vestido she took the pins out of the dress2. [olor, luz, calor] to give off3. RP [desabrochar] to undo* * *v/t1 detach, separate2 olor give off* * *desprender vt1) soltar: to detach, to loosen, to unfasten2) emitir: to emit, to give off* * *desprender vb -
16 menceraikan
divorce, separate, separate from, parse, analyze* * *divorce (one's spouse); separate something from something else; separate from each other; parse, analyze (linguage) -
17 tendencia
f.1 tendency.tener tendencia a hacer algo to have a tendency to do somethingtendencia a la depresión tendency to get depressed2 trend (corriente).las últimas tendencias de la moda the latest fashion trends3 bias.* * *1 (inclinación) tendency, inclination, predisposition, leaning; (movimiento) trend\tener tendencia a hacer algo to tend to do something, have a tendency to do somethingtendencia del mercado market trends plural* * *noun f.1) tendency2) trend* * *SF tendency, trendla tendencia hacia el socialismo — the tendency o trend towards socialism
tener tendencia a hacer algo — to have a tendency o to tend to do sth
tengo tendencia a engordar — I have a tendency o I tend to put on weight
tendencia al alza, tendencia alcista — upward trend
tendencia imperante — dominant trend, prevailing tendency
* * *femenino tendencytendencias homosexuales — homosexual tendencies o leanings
tendencia a la baja/al alza — downward/upward trend
tendencia a + inf — tendency to + inf
* * *= bias [biases, -pl.], penchant, push towards, stream, tendency, tide, trend, strand, push, streak, leaning, stripe.Ex. The place of publication may also warn of biases in approach or differences in terminology that arise in the text.Ex. Our penchant to organize is perhaps as close to a biological imperative as any form of human behavior is likely to come.Ex. In the frenetic push towards international cooperation among research libraries, the library needs of the nonscholar are easily overlooked.Ex. If no such standards can be observed then, it would seem, romantic fiction along with westerns and detective stories must be regarded as some sort of cul-de-sac and rather stagnant backwater quite separate from the main stream of 'literature'.Ex. In this case we find a tendency to ignore the author's identity as found in the document, and to prefer instead a real name to a pseudonym.Ex. What has happened is that yet another institution has so overlapped with our own that we are being swept along on the tide of the technological revolution.Ex. Current trends favour cataloguing practices which can be applied to a variety of library materials.Ex. This article gives a brief history of the two main strands in the development of bibliotherapy, or healing through books, in the USA.Ex. The key issue to note here is that the global push to describe and document Indigenous knowledge is gaining momentum.Ex. The secret of his success is an obsessive streak in his personality combined with business aggression.Ex. Finally, this new philosophy did not conflict with the librarian's elitist leanings.Ex. The field of computational linguistics is exciting insomuch as it permits linguists of different stripes to model language behaviour.----* análisis de tendencias = trend analysis.* de acuerdo con la tendencia hacia = in the trend towards.* de tendencia socialista = socialistic.* en la tendencia principal de = in the mainstream of.* existir la tendencia a = there + be + a tendency (to/for).* informe de tendencias = trends report.* proyección de tendencias = trend projection.* tendencia actual = current trend.* tendencia alcista = bouyancy.* tendencia al olvido = forgetfulness.* tendencia de agrupamiento = clustering tendency.* tendencia de clustering = clustering tendency.* tendencia de la época, la = trend of the times, the.* tendencia demográfica = population trend.* tendencia inflacionista = inflationary spiral, inflationary trend, deflationary spiral.* tendencia natural = in-built tendency.* tendencia opuesta = countertendency.* tendencia social = social trend, social trend.* tener una tendencia hacia = have + a tendency to.* * *femenino tendencytendencias homosexuales — homosexual tendencies o leanings
tendencia a la baja/al alza — downward/upward trend
tendencia a + inf — tendency to + inf
* * *= bias [biases, -pl.], penchant, push towards, stream, tendency, tide, trend, strand, push, streak, leaning, stripe.Ex: The place of publication may also warn of biases in approach or differences in terminology that arise in the text.
Ex: Our penchant to organize is perhaps as close to a biological imperative as any form of human behavior is likely to come.Ex: In the frenetic push towards international cooperation among research libraries, the library needs of the nonscholar are easily overlooked.Ex: If no such standards can be observed then, it would seem, romantic fiction along with westerns and detective stories must be regarded as some sort of cul-de-sac and rather stagnant backwater quite separate from the main stream of 'literature'.Ex: In this case we find a tendency to ignore the author's identity as found in the document, and to prefer instead a real name to a pseudonym.Ex: What has happened is that yet another institution has so overlapped with our own that we are being swept along on the tide of the technological revolution.Ex: Current trends favour cataloguing practices which can be applied to a variety of library materials.Ex: This article gives a brief history of the two main strands in the development of bibliotherapy, or healing through books, in the USA.Ex: The key issue to note here is that the global push to describe and document Indigenous knowledge is gaining momentum.Ex: The secret of his success is an obsessive streak in his personality combined with business aggression.Ex: Finally, this new philosophy did not conflict with the librarian's elitist leanings.Ex: The field of computational linguistics is exciting insomuch as it permits linguists of different stripes to model language behaviour.* análisis de tendencias = trend analysis.* de acuerdo con la tendencia hacia = in the trend towards.* de tendencia socialista = socialistic.* en la tendencia principal de = in the mainstream of.* existir la tendencia a = there + be + a tendency (to/for).* informe de tendencias = trends report.* proyección de tendencias = trend projection.* tendencia actual = current trend.* tendencia alcista = bouyancy.* tendencia al olvido = forgetfulness.* tendencia de agrupamiento = clustering tendency.* tendencia de clustering = clustering tendency.* tendencia de la época, la = trend of the times, the.* tendencia demográfica = population trend.* tendencia inflacionista = inflationary spiral, inflationary trend, deflationary spiral.* tendencia natural = in-built tendency.* tendencia opuesta = countertendency.* tendencia social = social trend, social trend.* tener una tendencia hacia = have + a tendency to.* * *tendencysus tendencias homosexuales his homosexual tendencies o leaningsun grupo de tendencia marxista a group with Marxist tendencies o leaningspara frenar esta tendencia expansiva to slow down this tendency o trend toward(s) expansiontendencia A algo trend TOWARD(S) sthtendencia a la baja/al alza downward/upward trendtendencia A + INF tendency to + INFtiene tendencia a exagerar she has a tendency to exaggerate, she tends to exaggerate* * *
tendencia sustantivo femenino
tendency;◊ tendencias homosexuales homosexual tendencies o leanings;
tendencia a algo trend toward(s) sth;
tiene tendencia a exagerar she has a tendency to exaggerate;
existe una tendencia a la centralización there is a trend toward centralization
tendencia sustantivo femenino
1 (propensión) tendency: tiene tendencia a sentirse culpable, he is prone to feeling guilty
2 Pol tendency, leaning
3 (del mercado, moda, etc) trend
' tendencia' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
corriente
- frenar
- imperante
- inclinarse
- malicia
- novelera
- novelero
- orientación
- rumbo
- alcista
- ascendente
- baja
- contener
- cuenta
- dictar
- dominante
- dominar
- golpista
- inclinación
- pronunciado
- tónica
English:
bent
- bias
- buoyancy
- counter
- craze
- dispose to
- downward
- inclination
- incline
- inclined
- movement
- propensity
- run
- self-destructiveness
- strand
- tend
- tendency
- thievishness
- trend
- liable
- orientation
- sulky
* * *tendencia nf1. [inclinación] tendency;un diario de marcada tendencia conservadora a very conservative newspaper;tener tendencia a hacer algo to tend o have a tendency to do sth;tiene tendencia a meterse en líos she tends to get herself into trouble;tiene tendencia a la depresión he has a tendency to depression2. [corriente] trend;las últimas tendencias de la moda the latest fashion trends;hay tendencias reformistas dentro del partido there are reformist tendencies within the party;tendencia al alza/a la baja upward/downward trendEcon tendencias del mercado market trends* * *f1 tendency;tener tendencia a have a tendency to2 ( corriente) trend;tendencia al alza/a la baja upward/downward trend* * *tendencia nf1) propensión: tendency, inclination2) : trend* * *2. (de moda) trend -
18 alejar
v.1 to move away.La policía alejó el carro destrozado The police moved away the wrecked car2 to drive away, to drive off, to chase away, to fend off.Las comedias alejan la tristeza Comedies drive the sadness away.3 to separate, to distance, to estrange.Los pleitos alejan a las familias Fighting separates families.* * *1 (llevar lejos) to remove, move away2 figurado (ahuyentar) to keep away1 to go/move away* * *verb- alejarse* * *1. VT1) (=distanciar) to move away (de from)2) (=hacer abandonar) [de lugar] to keep away (de from)[de puesto] to remove (de from)alejar a algn de algn — (=distanciar) to keep sb away from sb; (=causar ruptura) to cause a rift between sb and sb
3) (=desviar) [+ atención] to distract; [+ sospechas] to remove; [+ amenaza, peligro] to removetratan de alejar nuestra atención de los problemas — they are trying to distract our attention from the problems
2.See:* * *1.verbo transitivoa) (poner lejos, más lejos) to move... (further) awayalejar algo/a alguien de algo/alguien — to move something/somebody away from something/somebody
aleja la ropa/al niño del fuego — move the clothes/child away from the fire
b) ( distanciar)c) ( ahuyenta) <dudas/temores> dispel2.alejarse de algo/alguien: aléjate de allí! get away from there!; no se alejen demasiado don't go too far; el huracán se aleja de nuestra zona the hurricane is moving away from our region; nada hará que me aleje de ti nothing will take me away from you; alejarse del buen camino to wander from the straight and narrow; se alejó de sus padres he drifted apart from his parents; necesito alejarme de todo — I need to get away from everything
* * *= drive away, estrange (from), chase away.Ex. Moreover, the shady image of video libraries drove away discerning customers.Ex. These objects remain useful and functional, though estranged from their usual context.Ex. Any recommendations on how to chase away the Monday blues?.----* alejar de = lead far from, draw + Nombre + away from, wean away from.* alejarse = march off, walk away, retreat, stray (from/outside), distance, get away.* alejarse de = move away from, drift away from, wander from, turn away from, cut + Reflexivo + off from, become + detached from, pull away (from), step away from.* alejarse de la realidad = stray from + reality.* alejarse deprisa = hurry away, hurry off.* * *1.verbo transitivoa) (poner lejos, más lejos) to move... (further) awayalejar algo/a alguien de algo/alguien — to move something/somebody away from something/somebody
aleja la ropa/al niño del fuego — move the clothes/child away from the fire
b) ( distanciar)c) ( ahuyenta) <dudas/temores> dispel2.alejarse de algo/alguien: aléjate de allí! get away from there!; no se alejen demasiado don't go too far; el huracán se aleja de nuestra zona the hurricane is moving away from our region; nada hará que me aleje de ti nothing will take me away from you; alejarse del buen camino to wander from the straight and narrow; se alejó de sus padres he drifted apart from his parents; necesito alejarme de todo — I need to get away from everything
* * *= drive away, estrange (from), chase away.Ex: Moreover, the shady image of video libraries drove away discerning customers.
Ex: These objects remain useful and functional, though estranged from their usual context.Ex: Any recommendations on how to chase away the Monday blues?.* alejar de = lead far from, draw + Nombre + away from, wean away from.* alejarse = march off, walk away, retreat, stray (from/outside), distance, get away.* alejarse de = move away from, drift away from, wander from, turn away from, cut + Reflexivo + off from, become + detached from, pull away (from), step away from.* alejarse de la realidad = stray from + reality.* alejarse deprisa = hurry away, hurry off.* * *alejar [A1 ]vtlo alejó para que no lo tocara he moved ( o put etc) it further away so that I wouldn't touch italejar algo/a algn DE algo/algn:aleja esas sospechas de tu mente banish those suspicions from your mindaleja al niño de la barandilla get the child away from the banisterla policía trataba de alejar a la multitud del lugar del incendio the police tried to move the crowd away from the scene of the fireaquella discusión lo alejó de su padre durante varios años that quarrel distanced him from his father for several years, that quarrel caused a rift between him and his father that lasted several years■ alejarseto move ( o walk etc) away alejarse DE algo/algn:¡aléjate de allí! get away from there!no se alejen de la orilla don't go too far from the shorela borrasca se aleja de nuestra zona the area of low pressure is moving away from our regionnada hará que me aleje de ti nothing will take me away from youno te alejes nunca del buen camino don't stray from the path of virtuequiere alejarse de la política por un tiempo she wants to get out of o away from politics for a whilese fue alejando cada vez más de sus padres he gradually drifted apart from his parents* * *
alejar ( conjugate alejar) verbo transitivoa) (poner lejos, más lejos) to move … (further) away;
alejar algo/a algn de algo/algn to move sth/sb away from sth/sbb) ( distanciar) alejar a algn de algn to distance sb from sb
alejarse verbo pronominal
to move away;
( caminando) to walk away;
se alejó de su familia he drifted apart from his family;
necesito alejarme de todo I need to get away from everything
alejar verbo transitivo to move further away
' alejar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
apartar
- separar
English:
estrange
- keep back
- move away
- remove
* * *♦ vt1. [separar] to move away;aleja las plantas de la ventana move the plants away from the window;la policía alejó a los curiosos the police moved the onlookers on;nuestro objetivo es alejarlo del mundo de las drogas our aim is to get him away from the drug culture2. [ahuyentar] [sospechas, temores] to allay;las nuevas cifras alejan el fantasma de la crisis the new figures mean that the spectre of a recession has receded* * *v/t1 move away2 pensamiento banish;debes tratar de alejar de ti esa idea absurda you must try to get that absurd idea out of your head* * *alejar vt1) : to remove, to move away2) : to estrange, to alienate* * * -
19 abschließen
(unreg., trennb., hat -ge-)I v/t2. bes. TECH. seal; luftdicht / hermetisch abschließen make s.th. airtight / seal s.th. hermetically; abgeschlossen II 13. (beenden) end, (bring to a) close, conclude, wind up ( mit on oder with); (abrunden) top off; endgültig: settle; (fertigstellen) complete; Ausbildung, Lehre etc.: finish, complete; abgeschlossen II 24. WIRTS. (Bücher) close, balance; (Konten, Rechnungen) settle5. (vereinbaren): einen Handel abschließen make a bargain, close ( oder do oder make oder secure) a deal; einen Vertrag abschließen conclude ( oder sign oder sign) a treaty; eine Versicherung abschließen take out ( oder effect förm.) insurance ( oder an insurance policy); eine Wette abschließen make a bet ( mit with) ( über + Akk on oder that something happens etc.); Rennsport: place a bet ( auf on); einen Vergleich abschließen make a comparisonII v/i2. abgeschlossen haben mit be done (Am. through) with; mit dem Leben abschließen prepare to die, come to terms with the fact that one has to die; er hat mit dem Leben abgeschlossen he’s ready to die; lit. he’s prepared to meet his Maker; ich hatte schon mit dem Leben abgeschlossen in Gefahrensituation: I thought to myself, ‚This is the end’3. WIRTS. (sich einigen) close the deal; sign (the contract); (Bilanz ziehen) close; mit jemandem abschließen auch come to terms with s.o.; mit Gewinn / Verlust abschließen close on ( oder show) a profit / with a loss* * *(beenden) to finalize; to conclude; to complete; to close;(zuschließen) to lock; to lock up* * *ạb|schlie|ßen sep1. vtetw luftdicht abschließen — to put an airtight seal on sth
2) (= beenden) Sitzung, Vortrag etc to conclude, to bring to a close; (mit Verzierung) to finish off; Kursus to completesein Studium abschließen — to take one's degree, to graduate
einen Vertrag abschließen (Pol) — to conclude a treaty; (Jur, Comm) to conclude a contract
4) (COMM = abrechnen) Bücher to balance; Konto to settle, to balance; Geschäftsjahr to close; Inventur to complete; Rechnung to make up2. vr(= sich isolieren) to cut oneself off, to shut oneself awaySee:→ auch abgeschlossen3. vi1) (= zuschließen) to lock upsieh mal nach, ob auch abgeschlossen ist — will you see if everything's locked?
4) (= Schluss machen) to finish, to endmit allem/dem Leben abschließen — to finish with everything/life
mit der Vergangenheit abschließen — to break with the past
* * *1) (to complete or settle (a business deal).) close2) (to keep away (from); to make separate (from): He shut himself off from the rest of the world.) shut off3) (to lock whatever should be locked: He locked up and left the shop about 5.30 p.m.) lock up4) lock* * *ab|schlie·ßenI. vt1. (verschließen)▪ etw \abschließen to lock sthein Auto/einen Schrank/eine Tür \abschließen to lock a car/cupboard/door2. (isolieren)▪ etw \abschließen to seal sthein Einmachglas/einen Raum \abschließen to seal a jar/roomhermetisch abgeschlossen hermetically sealedluftdicht \abschließen to put an airtight seal on sth3. (beenden)mit einer Diplomprüfung \abschließen to graduateein abgeschlossenes Studium completed studieseine Diskussion \abschließen to end a discussion▪ etw [mit jdm] \abschließen to agree to sth [with sb]ein Geschäft \abschließen to close a deal, seal an agreementeine Versicherung \abschließen to take out insurance [or an insurance policy]einen Vertrag \abschließen to sign [or conclude] a contractein abgeschlossener Vertrag a signed contracteine Wette \abschließen to place a bet5. ÖKON▪ etw \abschließen to settle sthein Geschäftsbuch \abschließen to close the accountsII. vi1. (zuschließen) to lock upvergiss das A\abschließen nicht! don't forget to lock up!2. (einen Vertrag schließen)▪ [mit jdm] \abschließen to agree a contract [or [the] terms] [with sb]3. (mit etw enden)der Kurs schließt mit einer schriftlichen Prüfung ab there is a written exam at the end of the course4. FIN, ÖKON▪ mit etw/jdm \abschließen to finish [or be through] with sb/sth, to put sb/sth behind oneselfer hatte mit dem Leben abgeschlossen he no longer wanted to livemit der Schauspielerei habe ich endgültig abgeschlossen I will never act again6. (zum Schluss kommen) to close, endsie schloss ihre Rede mit einem Zitat von Morgenstern ab she ended [or concluded] her speech with a quotation from Morgenstern* * *1.unregelmäßiges transitives Verb1) auch itr. (zuschließen) lock <door, gate, cupboard>; lock [up] < house, flat, room, park>2) (verschließen) seal3) (begrenzen) border5) (vereinbaren) strike <bargain, deal>; make < purchase>; enter into < agreement>2.Geschäfte abschließen — conclude deals; (im Handel) do business; s. auch Versicherung 2); Wette
unregelmäßiges intransitives Verbabschließend sagte er... — in conclusion he said...
mit einem Gewinn/Verlust abschließen — (Kaufmannsspr.) show a profit/deficit
3)mit jemandem/etwas abgeschlossen haben — have finished with somebody/something
* * *abschließen (irr, trennb, hat -ge-)A. v/tmit on oder with); (abrunden) top off; endgültig: settle; (fertigstellen) complete; Ausbildung, Lehre etc: finish, complete; → abgeschlossen B 25. (vereinbaren):eine Wette abschließen make a bet (mit with) (auf on);einen Vergleich abschließen make a comparisonB. v/i1. end, close, conclude;(mit folgenden Worten) abschließen end ( oder wind up) (by saying)2.abgeschlossen haben mit be done (US through) with;mit dem Leben abschließen prepare to die, come to terms with the fact that one has to die;ich hatte schon mit dem Leben abgeschlossen in Gefahrensituation: I thought to myself, ‘This is the end’mit jemandem abschließen auch come to terms with sb;mit Gewinn/Verlust abschließen close on ( oder show) a profit/with a loss4.gut/schlecht abschließen leistungsmäßig: do well/badly* * *1.unregelmäßiges transitives Verb1) auch itr. (zuschließen) lock <door, gate, cupboard>; lock [up] <house, flat, room, park>2) (verschließen) seal3) (begrenzen) border4) (zum Abschluss bringen) bring to an end; conclude5) (vereinbaren) strike <bargain, deal>; make < purchase>; enter into < agreement>2.Geschäfte abschließen — conclude deals; (im Handel) do business; s. auch Versicherung 2); Wette
unregelmäßiges intransitives Verb1) (begrenzt sein) be bordered ( mit by)2) (aufhören, enden) endabschließend sagte er... — in conclusion he said...
mit einem Gewinn/Verlust abschließen — (Kaufmannsspr.) show a profit/deficit
3)mit jemandem/etwas abgeschlossen haben — have finished with somebody/something
* * *v.to close v.to conclude v.to lock v. -
20 callejón sin salida
cul-de-sac, dead end, blind alley* * *a) ( calle) dead end, blind alleyb) ( situación desesperada): el gobierno se encuentra en un callejón sin salida the government can't see its way out of its present situation* * *(n.) = blind alley, catch 22, cul-de-sac, dead end, impasse, dead end street, deadlock, standoffEx. It is of course possible to stamp 'Withdrawn' on the accessions card, but it would be better not to lead the reader up this blind alley if it can be avoided.Ex. The catch 22 aspect of this attempt to reconcile the needs of research and nonresearch libraries is that our central cataloging agency, the Library of Congress (LC), does not provide dual cataloging copy.Ex. If no such standards can be observed then, it would seem, romantic fiction along with westerns and detective stories must be regarded as some sort of cul-de-sac and rather stagnant backwater quite separate from the main stream of 'literature'.Ex. Shannon's approach proved something of a dead end.Ex. This apparent impasse between what we may want to communicate and the way we communicate is resolved by separating the content of information from its representation.Ex. The article is entitled 'The Internet: superhighways, virtual alleys and dead end streets'.Ex. By doing so, they could help break a deadlock that seems to have paralyzed cooperative effort in Britain.Ex. A 12-hour standoff ended with a man lobbing Molotov cocktails at police before taking his own life rather than vacate a home he'd lost to foreclosure.* * *a) ( calle) dead end, blind alleyb) ( situación desesperada): el gobierno se encuentra en un callejón sin salida the government can't see its way out of its present situation* * *(n.) = blind alley, catch 22, cul-de-sac, dead end, impasse, dead end street, deadlock, standoffEx: It is of course possible to stamp 'Withdrawn' on the accessions card, but it would be better not to lead the reader up this blind alley if it can be avoided.
Ex: The catch 22 aspect of this attempt to reconcile the needs of research and nonresearch libraries is that our central cataloging agency, the Library of Congress (LC), does not provide dual cataloging copy.Ex: If no such standards can be observed then, it would seem, romantic fiction along with westerns and detective stories must be regarded as some sort of cul-de-sac and rather stagnant backwater quite separate from the main stream of 'literature'.Ex: Shannon's approach proved something of a dead end.Ex: This apparent impasse between what we may want to communicate and the way we communicate is resolved by separating the content of information from its representation.Ex: The article is entitled 'The Internet: superhighways, virtual alleys and dead end streets'.Ex: By doing so, they could help break a deadlock that seems to have paralyzed cooperative effort in Britain.Ex: A 12-hour standoff ended with a man lobbing Molotov cocktails at police before taking his own life rather than vacate a home he'd lost to foreclosure.* * *blind alley; figdead end
См. также в других словарях:
split something away (from something) — ˌsplit aˈway/ˈoff (from sth) | ˌsplit sthaˈway/ˈoff (from sth) derived to separate from, or to separate sth from, a larger object or group • A rebel faction has split away from the main group. • The storm split a branch off from the main trunk.… … Useful english dictionary
split something off (from something) — ˌsplit aˈway/ˈoff (from sth) | ˌsplit sthaˈway/ˈoff (from sth) derived to separate from, or to separate sth from, a larger object or group • A rebel faction has split away from the main group. • The storm split a branch off from the main trunk.… … Useful english dictionary
break away from something — break away (from (someone/something)) 1. to escape. George s excited horse broke away and ran off into the field. 2. to separate from the control of someone or something. Scotland isn t going to suddenly break away from the rest of Great Britain … New idioms dictionary
split away (from something) — ˌsplit aˈway/ˈoff (from sth) | ˌsplit sthaˈway/ˈoff (from sth) derived to separate from, or to separate sth from, a larger object or group • A rebel faction has split away from the main group. • The storm split a branch off from the main trunk.… … Useful english dictionary
split off (from something) — ˌsplit aˈway/ˈoff (from sth) | ˌsplit sthaˈway/ˈoff (from sth) derived to separate from, or to separate sth from, a larger object or group • A rebel faction has split away from the main group. • The storm split a branch off from the main trunk.… … Useful english dictionary
break (something) loose from something — break/cut/tear (sb/sth) ˈloose from sb/sth idiom to separate yourself or sb/sth from a group of people or their influence, etc • The organization broke loose from its sponsors. • He cut himself loose from his family. Main entry: ↑looseidiom … Useful english dictionary
cut (something) loose from something — break/cut/tear (sb/sth) ˈloose from sb/sth idiom to separate yourself or sb/sth from a group of people or their influence, etc • The organization broke loose from its sponsors. • He cut himself loose from his family. Main entry: ↑looseidiom … Useful english dictionary
tear (something) loose from something — break/cut/tear (sb/sth) ˈloose from sb/sth idiom to separate yourself or sb/sth from a group of people or their influence, etc • The organization broke loose from its sponsors. • He cut himself loose from his family. Main entry: ↑looseidiom … Useful english dictionary
shut something off from something — ˌshut sb/sth ˈoff from sth derived to separate sb/sth from sth • Bosnia is shut off from the Adriatic by the mountains. Main entry: ↑shutderived … Useful english dictionary
sort something out from something — ˌsort sthˈout (from sth) derived to separate sth from a larger group • Could you sort out the toys that can be thrown away? • It was difficult to sort out the lies from the truth. related noun ↑sort out … Useful english dictionary
break (somebody) loose from something — break/cut/tear (sb/sth) ˈloose from sb/sth idiom to separate yourself or sb/sth from a group of people or their influence, etc • The organization broke loose from its sponsors. • He cut himself loose from his family. Main entry: ↑looseidiom … Useful english dictionary