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1 speculate
حَدّسَ \ speculate: to consider; form guesses: I have been speculating on the reasons for his disappearance. \ ضَارَبَ (ماليًّا) \ speculate: buy things (esp. foreign money, or shares in a business) only because of hopes to get richer by selling them again soon for a much higher price: He speculates in land. -
2 speculate
تَأَمَّلَ \ contemplate: look at quietly and seriously. meditate: to think deeply. muse: to think deeply: She sat musing for hours, without noticing the people around her. reflect: to think deeply, consider: Reflect carefully before you answer. speculate: to consider; form guesses: I have been speculating on the reasons for his disappearance. -
3 speculate
تَفَكَّرَ \ speculate: to consider; form guesses: I have been speculating on the reasons for his disappearance. think: to use one’s mind: Think before you speak. -
4 speculate
[ˈspekjuleɪt] verbto make guesses:He's only speculating – he doesn't know
يَتَحَزَّر، يَتَكَهَّن، يَتأمَّلThere's no point in speculating about what's going to happen.
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5 играть на бирже
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6 спекулировать
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7 грати на біржі
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8 kurgula
speculate -
9 dohadovat se
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10 geta sér til um
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11 especular
• speculate -
12 tehdä uhkarohkeita kauppoja
• speculate -
13 teoretisati
• speculate -
14 teoretisati
• speculate -
15 spekulovat
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16 spėlionė
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17 spėlioti
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18 строить догадки
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19 обдумывать что-л.
Русско-Английский новый экономический словарь > обдумывать что-л.
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20 размышлять
См. также в других словарях:
speculate — spec‧u‧late [ˈspekjleɪt] verb 1. [intransitive] FINANCE to buy goods, shares, property etc in the hope that their value will increase so that you can sell them at a higher price and make a profit, often quickly: speculate in • Investors may… … Financial and business terms
Speculate — Spec u*late, v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Speculated}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Speculating}.] [L. speculatus, p. p. of speculari to spy out, observe, fr. specula a lookout, fr. specere to look. See {Spy}.] 1. To consider by turning a subject in the mind, and… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
speculate — spec·u·late / spe kyə ˌlāt/ vb lat·ed, lat·ing vi 1: to theorize on the basis of insufficient evidence ◇ A jury is not permitted to speculate on a matter about which insufficient evidence has been presented in reaching its verdict. 2: to assume a … Law dictionary
Speculate — Spec u*late, v. t. To consider attentively; as, to speculate the nature of a thing. [R.] Sir W. Hamilton. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
speculate — [v1] think about deeply and theorize beat one’s brains*, brainstorm*, build castles in air*, call it, call the turn, cerebrate, chew over*, cogitate, conjecture, consider, contemplate, deliberate, dope*, dope out*, excogitate, figure, figure out* … New thesaurus
speculate — (v.) 1590s, back formation from SPECULATION (Cf. speculation). Related: Speculated; speculating … Etymology dictionary
speculate — reason, reflect, *think, cogitate, deliberate Analogous words: *ponder, meditate, muse, ruminate: *consider, weigh, study, contemplate, excogitate … New Dictionary of Synonyms
speculate — ► VERB 1) form a theory or conjecture without firm evidence. 2) invest in stocks, property, or other ventures in the hope of financial gain but with the risk of loss. DERIVATIVES speculation noun speculator noun. ORIGIN Latin speculari observe ,… … English terms dictionary
speculate — [spek′yə lāt΄] vi. speculated, speculating [< L speculatus, pp. of speculari, to view < specula, watchtower < specere, to see: see SPY] 1. to think about the various aspects of a given subject; meditate; ponder; esp., to conjecture 2. to … English World dictionary
speculate — v. 1) (D; intr.) ( to meditate, think ) to speculate about, on (to speculate about what might have been) 2) (D; intr.) ( to conduct business by taking risks ) to speculate in; on (to speculate in oil shares; to speculate in gold; to speculate on… … Combinatory dictionary
speculate — verb ADVERB ▪ openly, publicly ▪ Commentators are openly speculating on whether the accusation is false. ▪ widely ▪ wildly ▪ The British press speculated … Collocations dictionary