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1 ■ steal from
■ steal fromv. i. + prep.2 rubare a ( anche fig.); derubare: to steal a kiss from a girl, rubare un bacio a una ragazza; He is said to have stolen from the rich to give to the poor, si dice rubasse ai ricchi per dare i soldi ai poveri -
2 steal from
v.1 robar, bolsear.2 robar a, robar de, bailar a. -
3 steal from a household
Юридический термин: украсть из дома (из жилого помещения)Универсальный англо-русский словарь > steal from a household
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4 steal from a person
Юридический термин: украсть непосредственно у лица, украсть у лица (непосредственно) -
5 steal from a household
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6 steal
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7 steal
A ○ n ( bargain) the watch was a steal! cette montre était une super affaire ○ ! ; 5 dollars, that's a steal! 5 dollars, c'est donné!1 ( thieve) voler (from sb à qn) ;2 fig ( take surreptitiously) to steal a few minutes sleep/peace s'offrir en douce quelque minutes de sommeil/de paix ; to steal the credit for sth s'attribuer le mérite de qch ; to steal a glance at sth jeter un coup d'œil à qch ; to steal a kiss voler un baiser ; to steal a scene from sb Theat, Cin voler la vedette à qn.1 ( thieve) voler ; to steal from sb voler qn ; to steal from a car/house cambrioler une voiture/maison ; our luggage was stolen from the car on nous a volé nos bagages dans la voiture ;2 ( creep) lit to steal into/out of the room entrer dans/quitter la pièce subrepticement ; to steal up on sb s'approcher de qn subrepticement ; fig a sad expression stole across her face une expression triste passa furtivement sur son visage ; the light stole through the curtains la lumière filtrait à travers les rideaux.to steal a march on sb prendre qn de vitesse ; to steal the show Theat éclipser tout le monde ; she stole the show on n'a eu d'yeux que pour elle.■ steal away [person] s'esquiver (from de). -
8 steal
1. transitive verb,steal somebody's boyfriend/girlfriend — jemandem den Freund/die Freundin ausspannen (ugs.)
she was the star of the play, but the little dog stole the show — (fig.) sie war der Star des Stückes, aber der kleine Hund stahl ihr die Schau
the newcomer stole the show — ein Newcomer war der Star [des Abends]
steal the show from somebody — jemandem die Schau stehlen od. den Rang ablaufen
2) (get slyly) rauben (geh. scherzh.) [Kuss, Umarmung]; entlocken [Worte, Interview]; sich (Dat.) genehmigen (ugs. scherzh.) [Nickerchen]steal a glance [at somebody/something] — jemandem einen verstohlenen Blick zuwerfen/einen verstohlenen Blick auf etwas (Akk.) werfen
3) (fig.): (win)2. intransitive verb,stole, stolen1) stehlensteal from the till/supermarket — aus der Kasse/im Supermarkt stehlen
2) (move furtively) sich stehlensteal in/out/up — sich hinein-/hinaus-/hinaufstehlen
steal up [on somebody/something] — sich [an jemanden/etwas] heranschleichen
Phrasal Verbs:- academic.ru/111922/steal_away">steal away* * *[sti:l]past tense - stole; verb1) (to take (another person's property), especially secretly, without permission or legal right: Thieves broke into the house and stole money and jewellery; He was expelled from the school because he had been stealing (money).) stehlen2) (to obtain or take (eg a look, a nap etc) quickly or secretly: He stole a glance at her.) verstohlen3) (to move quietly: He stole quietly into the room.) sich stehlen* * *[sti:l]it's a \steal! das ist ja geschenkt! famII. vt<stole, stolen>1. (take illegally)to \steal [sb's] ideas [jds] Ideen klauen fam2. (gain artfully)to \steal sb's heart [away] jds Herz erobern3. (do surreptitiously)to \steal a glance [or look] [at sb/sth] verstohlen [zu jdm/etw] hinschauenshe stole a glance at her watch sie lugte heimlich auf ihre Armbanduhr4.▶ to \steal the limelight alles andere in den Schatten stellen▶ to \steal a march on sb jdm den Rang ablaufen▶ to \steal sb's thunder jdm den Wind aus den Segeln nehmenIII. vi<stole, stolen>1. (take things illegally) stehlenhe has been convicted of \stealing er ist des Diebstahls überführt wordenhe stole out of the room er stahl sich aus dem Zimmershe stole onto the balcony sie schlich auf den Balkonas the moon rose, moonlight stole over the scene als der Mond aufging, ergoss sich das Mondlicht über die Landschafta crafty expression stole over his face ein raffinierter Ausdruck huschte über sein Gesichtanxiety was \stealing over her sie überkam Angst* * *[stiːl] vb: pret stole, ptp stolen1. vtobject, idea, kiss, heart stehlenLabour have stolen the Tories' clothes —
2. vi1) (= thieve) stehlen2) (= move quietly etc) sich stehlen, (sich) schleichento steal into a room — sich in ein Zimmer stehlen
to steal up on sb — sich an jdn heranschleichen
the mood/feeling which was stealing over the country —
he could feel happiness stealing over him to steal home (Baseball) — er fühlte, wie ihn ein Glücksgefühl überkam ungehindert zur Ausgangsbase vorrücken
3. n (US inf= bargain) Geschenk nt (inf)a total steal — ein echtes Schnäppchen (inf)
it's a steal! — das ist (ja) geschenkt! (inf)
* * *steal [stiːl]A v/t prät stole [stəʊl], pperf stolen [ˈstəʊlən]steal sth from sb jemandem etwas stehlen;steal sb’s girlfriend fig jemandem die Freundin ausspannen umgb) etwas rauben2. fig stehlen, erlisten, erhaschen:steal a kiss from sb jemandem einen Kuss rauben;steal a look at einen verstohlenen Blick werfen auf (akk); → march1 Bes Redew, show A 3, thunder A 13. fig stehlen, plagiierenB v/i1. stehlen2. schleichen, sich stehlen ( beide:out of aus):steal away sich davonstehlenC s1. umg Diebstahl m2. at that price it’s a steal bes US umg zu dem Preis ist das fast geschenkt* * *1. transitive verb,steal somebody's boyfriend/girlfriend — jemandem den Freund/die Freundin ausspannen (ugs.)
she was the star of the play, but the little dog stole the show — (fig.) sie war der Star des Stückes, aber der kleine Hund stahl ihr die Schau
the newcomer stole the show — ein Newcomer war der Star [des Abends]
steal the show from somebody — jemandem die Schau stehlen od. den Rang ablaufen
2) (get slyly) rauben (geh. scherzh.) [Kuss, Umarmung]; entlocken [Worte, Interview]; sich (Dat.) genehmigen (ugs. scherzh.) [Nickerchen]steal a glance [at somebody/something] — jemandem einen verstohlenen Blick zuwerfen/einen verstohlenen Blick auf etwas (Akk.) werfen
3) (fig.): (win)2. intransitive verb,stole, stolen1) stehlensteal from the till/supermarket — aus der Kasse/im Supermarkt stehlen
2) (move furtively) sich stehlensteal in/out/up — sich hinein-/hinaus-/hinaufstehlen
steal up [on somebody/something] — sich [an jemanden/etwas] heranschleichen
Phrasal Verbs:* * *(from) v.bestehlen v.entwenden v.stehlen v.(§ p.,pp.: stahl, gestohlen) -
9 steal
sti:lpast tense - stole; verb1) (to take (another person's property), especially secretly, without permission or legal right: Thieves broke into the house and stole money and jewellery; He was expelled from the school because he had been stealing (money).)2) (to obtain or take (eg a look, a nap etc) quickly or secretly: He stole a glance at her.)3) (to move quietly: He stole quietly into the room.)steal vb robartr[stiːl]————————tr[stiːl]1 robar, hurtar1 (rob) robar, hurtar2 (move quietly, creep) moverse con sigilo\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto steal a glance at somebody/something echar una mirada furtiva a alguien/algoto steal a march on somebody ganarle la mano a alguien, adelantarse a alguiento steal somebody's heart robarle el corazón a alguiento steal somebody's thunder quitarle la primicia a alguiento steal the scene / steal the show acaparar la atención de todos: robar, hurtarsteal vi1) : robar, hurtar2) : ir sigilosamenteto steal away: escabullirsen.• robo s.m.v.(§ p.,p.p.: stole, stolen) = apañuscar v.• escamotear v.• garfiñar v.• gatear v.• hurtar v.• rapiñar v.• robar v.stiːl
1.
1)a) \<\<object/idea\>\> robar, hurtar (frml)b) ( sneak) (liter)to steal a glance at something/somebody — echar una mirada furtiva a algo/alguien
2) stolen past pa) <money/property> robadob) (liter) <moments/pleasures> robado, escamoteado
2.
vi1) robar, hurtar (frml)2) ( go stealthily) (+ adv compl)to steal away o off — escabullirse
they stole into the room — entraron en la habitación a hurtadillas, entraron sigilosamente en la habitación
[stiːl] (pt stole) (pp stolen)to steal up on somebody — acercarse* sigilosamente a alguien
1. VT1) (=take) [+ object] robar, hurtar frm; [+ idea] robar- steal sb's heart- steal a march on sb- steal the show- steal sb's thunder2) liter (=sneak)•
to steal a glance at sb — mirar a algn de soslayo, echar una mirada de soslayo a algn•
to steal a kiss from sb — robar un beso a algn2. VI1) (=take things) robar2) (=creep)a)• to steal into a room — entrar sigilosamente en una habitación, entrar en una habitación a hurtadillas
•
to steal out of a room — salir sigilosamente de una habitación, salir de una habitación a hurtadillas•
to steal up/ down the stairs — subir/bajar sigilosamente las escaleras, subir/bajar las escaleras a hurtadillasb) (fig)•
a smile stole across her lips — una sonrisa se escapó de sus labios•
a tear stole down her cheek — una lágrima se deslizó por su mejilla•
the light was stealing through the shutters — la luz se filtraba por las contraventanas3.N* (=bargain)it's a steal — es una ganga * or un regalo *
* * *[stiːl]
1.
1)a) \<\<object/idea\>\> robar, hurtar (frml)b) ( sneak) (liter)to steal a glance at something/somebody — echar una mirada furtiva a algo/alguien
2) stolen past pa) <money/property> robadob) (liter) <moments/pleasures> robado, escamoteado
2.
vi1) robar, hurtar (frml)2) ( go stealthily) (+ adv compl)to steal away o off — escabullirse
they stole into the room — entraron en la habitación a hurtadillas, entraron sigilosamente en la habitación
to steal up on somebody — acercarse* sigilosamente a alguien
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10 steal
I [stiːl] II 1. [stiːl]2.to steal a glance at sth. — guardare furtivamente qcs.
1) (thieve) rubare, commettere un furtoto steal from sb. — rubare a qcn.
2) (creep)to steal up on sb. — avvicinarsi furtivamente a qcn
•••to steal a march on sb. — battere qcn. sul tempo
to steal the show — teatr. rubare la scena; fig. monopolizzare l'attenzione
* * *[sti:l]past tense - stole; verb1) (to take (another person's property), especially secretly, without permission or legal right: Thieves broke into the house and stole money and jewellery; He was expelled from the school because he had been stealing (money).) rubare2) (to obtain or take (eg a look, a nap etc) quickly or secretly: He stole a glance at her.) (ottenere furtivamente)3) (to move quietly: He stole quietly into the room.) (muoversi furtivamente)* * *steal /sti:l/n. (fam.)1 furto♦ (to) steal /sti:l/A v. t.1 rubare ( anche fig.); portare via; sottrarre; trafugare: My bag has been stolen, mi hanno rubato la borsa; to steal a secret formula, rubare una formula segreta2 (fig.) rubare; accattivarsi; ottenere (o procurarsi) con arti (o con l'astuzia): to steal a kiss, rubare un bacio; to steal sb. 's heart, accattivarsi l'affetto (o la simpatia) di q.B v. i.1 rubare; fare il ladro2 muoversi furtivamente; andare alla chetichella● ( baseball) to steal a base, rubare una base □ (fig.) to steal a march on sb., battere q. sul tempo □ to steal oneself out of st., perdere qc. per aver rubato □ (fam.) to steal the scene (o the show), attirare l'attenzione di tutti su di sé; monopolizzare l'attenzione; far il mattatore □ (fam.) to steal sb. 's thunder, rubare un'idea (o un'invenzione, una notizia) a q.; battere sul tempo q. □ ( Bibbia) Thou shalt not steal, non rubare! □ Time steals on, il tempo passa senza che ce ne accorgiamo.* * *I [stiːl] II 1. [stiːl]2.to steal a glance at sth. — guardare furtivamente qcs.
1) (thieve) rubare, commettere un furtoto steal from sb. — rubare a qcn.
2) (creep)to steal up on sb. — avvicinarsi furtivamente a qcn
•••to steal a march on sb. — battere qcn. sul tempo
to steal the show — teatr. rubare la scena; fig. monopolizzare l'attenzione
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11 steal
------------------------------------------------------------[English Word] steal[Swahili Word] -bebesha[Part of Speech] verb[Class] causative[Derived Language] Swahili[Derived Word] -beba------------------------------------------------------------[English Word] steal[Swahili Word] -chopoa[Part of Speech] verb------------------------------------------------------------[English Word] steal[Swahili Word] -iba[Part of Speech] verb[Related Words] jizi, kijivi, mwivi, wivi[English Example] a poor man does not pick up things, if he does, they say he stole them (proverb)[Swahili Example] maskini haokoti, akiokota, huambiwa kaiba (methali)------------------------------------------------------------[English Word] steal[Swahili Word] -kwapua[Part of Speech] verb[Derived Word] mkwepuzi N------------------------------------------------------------[English Word] steal[Swahili Word] -kwepua[Part of Speech] verb[Derived Word] mkwepuzi N------------------------------------------------------------[English Word] steal[Swahili Word] -nyang'anya[Part of Speech] verb------------------------------------------------------------[English Word] steal[Swahili Word] -opoa[Part of Speech] verb[English Example] Give me the stolen ones[Swahili Example] nepi za kuopoa [Ma][Terminology] slang------------------------------------------------------------[English Word] steal[Swahili Word] -poka[Part of Speech] verb------------------------------------------------------------[English Word] steal[Swahili Word] -pora[Part of Speech] verb------------------------------------------------------------[English Word] steal[Swahili Word] -umua[Part of Speech] verb------------------------------------------------------------[English Word] steal along[Swahili Word] -nyata[Part of Speech] verb[English Example] creep up on a person[Swahili Example] nyata mtu------------------------------------------------------------[English Word] steal from[Swahili Word] -chomolea[Part of Speech] verb------------------------------------------------------------[English Word] steal from[Swahili Word] -futa[Part of Speech] verb------------------------------------------------------------[English Word] steal from each other[Swahili Word] -pokana[Part of Speech] verb------------------------------------------------------------[English Word] steal from someone[Swahili Word] -ibia[Part of Speech] verb[Class] applicative[Derived Language] Swahili[Derived Word] -iba------------------------------------------------------------[English Word] steal in[Swahili Word] -jipenyeza[Part of Speech] verb------------------------------------------------------------[English Word] steal up on[Swahili Word] -nyemelea[Part of Speech] verb------------------------------------------------------------[English Word] steal up to[Swahili Word] -nyemelea[Part of Speech] verb[English Example] (s)he left from inside that car and stealed upto to his/her home.[Swahili Example] akatoka mle garini na kunyemelea kwao [Sul]------------------------------------------------------------ -
12 steal (stole)
سَرَقَ \ pilfer: to steal (small things) from shops, one’s place of work, etc.. pinch: to steal. rob: to steal from (a person, building or enclosed place): He robbed me of my watch (by force, or while I slept, etc.). They robbed the bank. The lawyer robbed the old lady (he charged her too much, or took her money by a trick). steal (stole): to take secretly and unlawfully: Thieves steal things. -
13 steal
[sti:l] v գողանալ, թռցնել. գողություն անել. steal a watch ժամացույց գողանալ. steal from a person անձից գողանալ. steal a few hours of sleep փխբ. մի քանի ժամ փախցնել քնելու համար. steal a glance գաղտագողի նայել. steal a march բոլորից առաջ անցնել. steal the show բոլորին ստվերի տակ թողնել/գե րազանցել. գաղտագողի անցնել (շարժվել). steal across the room գաղտագողի սենյակով անցնել. steal away թաքուն անհայտանալ, ծլկել. steal into/out of աննկատելի ներս մտնել/դուրս սահել, ծլկել. steal past կողքից աննկատելի անցնել -
14 steal
1) крадіжка; вкрадена річ, (в)крадене майно2) красти, займатися крадіжками, викрадати; робити ( щось) непомітно•- steal a ride
- steal corpses
- steal from a household
- steal information
- steal out
- steal radioactive materials
- steal up -
15 steal
سَلَبَ (فِعْل) \ loot: to take goods and possessions from a place as loot: The violent crowd began looting shops and houses. plunder: to steal openly and violently, esp. in wartime. rob: to steal from (a person, building or enclosed place): He robbed me of my watch (by force, or while I slept, etc.). They robbed the bank. steal: to take secretly and unlawfully: Thieves steal things. -
16 steal
1) разг. кража | красть; украсть, совершить кражу; похищать имущество2) разг. украденная вещь; краденое имущество3) амер. жарг. подлог, обман; коррупция•to steal feloniously — украсть по признакам фелонии, совершить кражу, являющуюся фелонией;
to steal from a person — украсть ( непосредственно) у лица
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17 steal
(a) (money, property) voler;∎ to steal sth from sb voler qch à qn;∎ he stole money from her purse il a volé de l'argent dans son porte-monnaie;∎ I've had my purse stolen on m'a volé mon porte-monnaie;∎ several paintings have been stolen from the museum plusieurs tableaux ont été volés au musée;∎ they've stolen my idea! ils ont volé mon idée!∎ to steal sb's heart séduire qn;∎ to steal a kiss voler un baiser;∎ to steal all the credit for sth s'attribuer tout le mérite de qch;∎ may I steal a few moments of your precious time? pouvez-vous m'accorder quelques instants de votre temps si précieux?;∎ to steal a glance at sb jeter un regard furtif à qn;∎ British to steal a march on sb prendre qn de vitesse, couper l'herbe sous le pied à qn;∎ to steal the show from sb ravir la vedette à qn;∎ he really stole the show with that act of his! son numéro a été le clou du spectacle!;∎ to steal sb's thunder éclipser qn(a) (commit theft) voler;∎ he was caught stealing il a été pris en train de voler;∎ Bible thou shalt not steal tu ne voleras point∎ to steal in/out entrer/sortir à pas furtifs ou feutrés;∎ to steal into a room se glisser ou se faufiler dans une pièce;∎ she stole up on me from behind elle s'est approchée de moi par derrière sans faire de bruit;∎ figurative literary shadows began to steal across the courtyard des ombres commencèrent à envahir la cour;∎ literary a strange sadness stole over me une étrange tristesse m'envahit3 noun∎ it was a steal c'était une bonne affairepartir furtivement, s'esquiver -
18 from
from1) (used before the place, thing, person, time etc that is the point at which an action, journey, period of time etc begins: from Europe to Asia; from Monday to Friday; a letter from her father.) de2) (used to indicate that from which something or someone comes: a quotation from Shakespeare.) de3) (used to indicate separation: Take it from him.) de4) (used to indicate a cause or reason: He is suffering from a cold.) defrom prep1. de2. de / desde3. de / con / a partir detr[frɒm]1 (starting at) de; (train, plane) procedente de■ what time does he get home from work? ¿a qué hora llega del trabajo?2 (origin, source) de, desde■ where are you from? ¿de dónde eres?3 (number, price, etc) de, desde, a partir de■ prices start from $10 precios a partir de 10 dólares■ it's reduced from £25 to £20 está rebajado de 25 a 20 libras4 (time) de, desde■ we work from 9.00 until 5.00 trabajamos de 9.00 a 5.005 (sent or given by) de■ this is Mr Singh from the Council es el Sr. Singh del Ayuntamiento6 (using, out of) de, con7 (distance) de8 (indicating separation, removal, etc) de; (subtraction) a9 (because of) por, a causa de10 (considering, according to) según, por■ from the look of him, I'd say he's a tramp por su aspecto, diría que es indigente11 (indicating difference) de; (when distinguishing) entre■ how different is Catalan from Spanish? ¿en qué se diferencia el catalán del español?12 (indicating position) desde■ from above, you can see the whole stadium desde encima, se puede ver todo el estadiofrom ['frʌm, 'frɑm] prepfrom Cali to Bogota: de Cali a Bogotáwhere are you from?: ¿de dónde eres?from that time onward: desde entoncesfrom tomorrow: a partir de mañanaa letter from my friend: una carta de mi amigaa quote from Shakespeare: una cita de Shakespeare10 feet from the entrance: a 10 pies de la entradared from crying: rojos de llorarhe died from the cold: murió del frío5) off, out of: deshe took it from the drawer: lo sacó del cajónfrom above: desde arribafrom among: de entreprep.• a partir de prep.• de prep.• de parte de prep.• desde prep.• según prep.frɑːm, frɒm, weak form frəm1)a) ( indicating starting point) desde; ( indicating origin) deT-shirts from $15 — camisetas desde or a partir de $l5
b) ( indicating distance)2)a) ( after)from today — a partir de hoy, desde hoy
50 years/an hour from now — dentro de 50 años/una hora
b) ( before)3) ( indicating source) dethat's enough from you! — basta!, cállate!
have you heard from her? — ¿has tenido noticias suyas?
we heard from Sam that... — nos enteramos por Sam de que...
4)from... to...; they flew from New York to Lima volaron de Nueva York a Lima; they stretch from Derbyshire to the borders of Scotland se extienden desde el condado de Derbyshire hasta el sur de Escocia; from door to door de puerta en puerta; we work from nine to five trabajamos de nueve a cinco; I'll be in Europe from June 20 to 29 voy a estar en Europa desde el 20 hasta el 29 de junio; from $50 to $100 — entre 50 y 100 dólares
5) ( as a result of) defrom experience I would say that... — según mi experiencia diría que...
6)a) (out of, off) defrom the cupboard/shelf — del armario/estante
b) ( Math)7) (with preps & advs)from above/below — desde arriba/abajo
[frɒm]PREP1) (indicating starting place) de, desdewhere are you from? — ¿de dónde eres?
where has he come from? — ¿de dónde ha venido?
the train from Madrid — el tren de Madrid, el tren procedente de Madrid
from A to Z — de A a Z, desde A hasta Z
2) (indicating time) de, desdefrom one o'clock to or until two — desde la una hasta las dos
from a child, from childhood — desde niño
3) (indicating distance) de, desde4) (indicating sender etc) dea telephone call from Mr Smith — una llamada de parte del Sr. Smith
5) (indicating source) deto drink from a stream/from the bottle — beber de un arroyo/de la botella
where did you get that from? — ¿de dónde has sacado or sacaste eso?
take the gun from him! — ¡quítale el revólver!
one of the best performances we have seen from him — uno de los mejores papeles que le hayamos visto
6) (indicating price, number etc) desde, a partir dewe have shirts from £8 (upwards) — tenemos camisas desde or a partir de 8 libras
prices range from £10 to £50 — los precios varían entre 10 y 50 libras
the interest rate increased from 6% to 10% — la tasa de interés ha subido del 6 al 10 por ciento
to know good from bad — saber distinguir entre el bien y el mal, saber distinguir el bien del mal
9) (=because of, on the basis of) porfrom what he says — por lo que dice, según lo que dice
10) (=away from)to escape from sth/sb — escapar de algo/algn
11) (with prep, adv)from beneath or underneath — desde abajo
from inside/outside the house — desde dentro/fuera de la casa
* * *[frɑːm, frɒm], weak form [frəm]1)a) ( indicating starting point) desde; ( indicating origin) deT-shirts from $15 — camisetas desde or a partir de $l5
b) ( indicating distance)2)a) ( after)from today — a partir de hoy, desde hoy
50 years/an hour from now — dentro de 50 años/una hora
b) ( before)3) ( indicating source) dethat's enough from you! — basta!, cállate!
have you heard from her? — ¿has tenido noticias suyas?
we heard from Sam that... — nos enteramos por Sam de que...
4)from... to...; they flew from New York to Lima volaron de Nueva York a Lima; they stretch from Derbyshire to the borders of Scotland se extienden desde el condado de Derbyshire hasta el sur de Escocia; from door to door de puerta en puerta; we work from nine to five trabajamos de nueve a cinco; I'll be in Europe from June 20 to 29 voy a estar en Europa desde el 20 hasta el 29 de junio; from $50 to $100 — entre 50 y 100 dólares
5) ( as a result of) defrom experience I would say that... — según mi experiencia diría que...
6)a) (out of, off) defrom the cupboard/shelf — del armario/estante
b) ( Math)7) (with preps & advs)from above/below — desde arriba/abajo
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19 steal
1. Iit is wrong to steal воровать дурно /нельзя, грешно/; too proud to beg but not ashamed to steal слишком гордый, чтобы просить, но не стыдящийся красть2. IIsteal somewhere when it struck 12 he stole in когда пробило двенадцать, он крадучись /украдкой, тихо/ вошел; the night is stealing in незаметно надвигается ночь; somehow such thoughts always steal in почему-то всегда вкрадываются /лезут/ подобные /такие/ мысли; he stole out and hid он тайком выбрался наружу и спрятался; steal upstairs тайком /втихомолку/ пробраться наверх3. IIIsteal smth. steal money (smb.'s purse, smb.'s jewelry, smb.'s suitcase, a handkerchief, fruit, etc.) (украсть деньги и т.д.; someone has stolen my watch кто-то украл у меня часы; I stole a few hours' sleep я урвал несколько часов, чтобы поспать; steal a kiss сорвать поцелуй; steal smb.'s heart похитить чье-л. сердце; steal smb.'s affections добиться чьей-л. привязанности; steal a glance украдкой взглянуть, украдкой бросить взгляд; steal а пар вздремнуть украдкой; steal a ride проехать зайцем id steal the show затмить всех4. IVsteal smth. in some manner steal smth. shamelessly (cunningly, successfully, etc.) бесстыдно и т.д. (украсть что-л.5. XIbe stolen my rings have been stolen у меня украли кольца; be stolen from smth., smb. my papers were stolen from my pocket у меня выкрали документы из кармана; your money was stolen from me у меня украли ваши деньги6. XVIsteal to /towards/ smth. steal to the door (towards the window, towards the house, etc.) красться /подкрадываться/ к двери и т.д.; steal into smth. steal into a shelter (into a hole, into a house, into the room on tiptoe, etc.) красться /прокрадываться/ в убежище и т.д.; doubt stole into my heart мне в душу закралось сомнение; fear (terror, etc.) stole into her heart в ее душу проник /ее душу охватил/ страх и т.д.; steal out of smth. steal out of the room (out of the house, out of the hole, etc.) украдкой выбраться /выйти/ из комнаты и т.д., steal out of sight незаметно скрыться /исчезнуть/ из виду; steal across smth. steal across the room крадучись пересечь комнату; clouds stole across the face of the moon тучи постепенно закрывали /наползали на/ луну; steal over smth. a smile stole over his face улыбка тронула его лицо /мелькнула на его лице/; steal over smb. a vague apprehension (a lonely feeling, a strange drowsiness, a feeling of disgust, a sense of happiness, etc.) steals over me чувство беспокойства и т.д. постепенно овладевает мною /охватывает меня/; he felt sleep stealing over him он почувствовал, как им овладевает /как он погружается в/ сон; steal up (on) smb. disease was stealing upon him к нему подкрадывалась болезнь; winter has stolen (up)on us imperceptibly незаметно подкралась зима; steal down (up) smth. a tear stole down her cheek по ее щеке медленно скатилась слеза; а mist stole up the valley в долине поднимался туман, туман окутывал долину; steal through smth. the light steals through the chinks свет пробивается сквозь щели7. XXI11) steal smth. from smb., smth. steal a watch from him (everything from us, some books from that shop, etc.) украсть /стащить/ часы у него и т.д.; steal smth. at smb., smth. steal a look /а glance/ at her (at the picture, etc.) украдкой бросить взгляд на нее и т.д.2) || steal a way into smb.'s heart влезть [незаметно] кому-л. в душу -
20 steal
[sti:l] n1) ( take illegally)2) ( gain artfully)to \steal sb's heart [away] jds Herz nt erobern;3) ( do surreptitiously)she stole a glance at her watch sie lugte heimlich auf ihre ArmbanduhrPHRASES:to \steal the limelight alles andere in den Schatten stellen;to \steal a march on sb jdm den Rang ablaufen;to \steal sb's thunder jdm den Wind aus den Segeln nehmen vi <stole, stolen>1) ( take things illegally) stehlen;he has been convicted of \stealing er ist des Diebstahls überführt wordenhe stole out of the room er stahl sich aus dem Zimmer;she stole onto the balcony sie schlich auf den Balkon;to \steal over sth über etw akk gleiten;as the moon rose, moonlight stole over the scene als der Mond aufging, ergoss sich das Mondlicht über die Landschaft;a crafty expression stole over his face ein raffinierter Ausdruck huschte über sein Gesicht;anxiety was \stealing over her sie überkam Angst
См. также в других словарях:
steal from — phr verb Steal from is used with these nouns as the object: ↑site … Collocations dictionary
steal — I UK [stiːl] / US [stɪl] verb Word forms steal : present tense I/you/we/they steal he/she/it steals present participle stealing past tense stole UK [stəʊl] / US [stoʊl] past participle stolen UK [ˈstəʊlən] / US [ˈstoʊlən] *** Other ways of saying … English dictionary
steal — steal1 W3S3 [sti:l] v past tense stole [stəul US stoul] past participle stolen [ˈstəulən US ˈstou ] ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(take something)¦ 2¦(use ideas)¦ 3¦(move somewhere)¦ 4 steal the show/limelight/scene 5 steal a look/glance etc 6¦(sport)¦ 7 steal a… … Dictionary of contemporary English
steal — 1 /sti:l/ verb past tense stole, past participle stolen / stUln stoU / 1 TAKE STH (I, T) to take something that belongs to someone else (+ from): Some drug users steal from their own families to finance their habit. | steal sth: Sean has a long… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
Steal This Book — Infobox Book name = Steal This Book title orig = translator = image caption = Cover of Steal this Book author = Abbie Hoffman illustrator = cover artist = country = United States language = English series = subject = genre = publisher = Pirate… … Wikipedia
steal — v. 1) (D; tr.) ( to give surreptitiously ) to steal at (to steal a glance at smb.) 2) (D; intr., tr.) ( to take illegally ) to steal from (to steal from the rich; he stole money from his employer) 3) (d; intr.) ( to depart silently ) to steal… … Combinatory dictionary
steal — ▪ I. steal steal 1 [stiːl] verb stole PASTTENSE [stəʊl ǁ stoʊl] stolen PASTPART [ˈstəʊlən ǁ ˈstoʊ ] 1. [intransitive, transitive] to take something that belongs to someone, without their permission: steal from … Financial and business terms
steal — steal1 [ stil ] (past tense stole [ stoul ] ; past participle sto|len [ stoulən ] ) verb *** 1. ) intransitive or transitive to take something that belongs to someone else without permission: jailed for three years for stealing cars steal from:… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
steal*/*/ — [stiːl] (past tense stole [stəʊl] ; past participle stolen [ˈstəʊlən] ) verb 1) [I/T] to take something that belongs to someone else without permission She was caught stealing food from the supermarket.[/ex] 2) [I] to move somewhere quietly and… … Dictionary for writing and speaking English
steal´er — steal «steel», verb, stole, sto|len, steal|ing, noun. –v.t. 1. to take (something) that does not belong to one; take dishonestly: »Robbers stole the money. Who steals my purse, st … Useful english dictionary
steal — steal, *pilfer, filch, purloin, lift, pinch, snitch, swipe, cop are comparable when they mean to take another s possession without right and without his knowledge or permission. Steal, the commonest and most general of the group, can refer to any … New Dictionary of Synonyms