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21 rifle
I ['raɪfl] II ['raɪfl]verbo transitivo svaligiare [ house]; rovistare, frugare in [drawer, safe]* * *1. noun(a gun with a long barrel, fired from the shoulder: The soldiers are being taught to shoot with rifles.) fucile, carabina2. verb1) (to search (through something): The thief rifled through the drawers.) frugare, rovistare2) (to steal: The document had been rifled.) rubare•* * *rifle /ˈraɪfl/n.1 fucile; carabina● rifle bracket, portafucile ( per motocicletta, ecc.) □ rifle green, verde scuro ( dalla divisa dei fucilieri) □ (mil.) rifle grenade, granata per fucile □ rifle range, poligono di tiro □ rifle shot, colpo di fucile, fucilata □ within rifle range (o shot), a tiro di fucile □ He's a good rifle shot (o a good shot with a rifle), è un bravo tiratore ( col fucile).(to) rifle (1) /ˈraɪfl/v. t.1 (= to rifle through), frugare; rovistare in: The thief rifled through the drawers, il ladro ha rovistato nei cassetti3 ( sport, fam.) sparare: ( calcio) to rifle an unstoppable shot from twenty yards, sparare un tiro imparabile da 18 metri.(to) rifle (2) /ˈraɪfl/v. t.rigare ( la canna di un'arma da fuoco): rifled bore, anima rigata; a rifled gun barrel, una canna di fucile ad anima rigata.* * *I ['raɪfl] II ['raɪfl]verbo transitivo svaligiare [ house]; rovistare, frugare in [drawer, safe] -
22 filch
[fɪltʃ]verbo transitivo colloq. rubare, rubacchiare ( from a)* * *[fil ](to steal something, especially of little value: Who has filched my pen?) rubare* * *[fɪltʃ]verbo transitivo colloq. rubare, rubacchiare ( from a) -
23 ♦ scene
♦ scene /si:n/n.1 scena ( anche teatr.); luogo; teatro (fig.): Othello, Act I, scene II, Otello, atto I, scena II; the balcony scene in «Romeo and Juliet», la scena del balcone in «Giulietta e Romeo»; the final scene, l'ultima scena; distressing scenes, scene strazianti; The scene is laid in Rome, la scena è posta a Roma; on (o at) the scene of the disaster, sul luogo del disastro; Waterloo was the scene of a famous battle, Waterloo fu teatro d'una famosa battaglia; the scene of the crime, la scena del delitto; to film (o to shoot) a scene, girare una scena3 scenata; scena: Now don't make a scene, via, non fare una scenata!; ugly scene, scena molto spiacevole4 [u] (fam.) ambiente; mondo: the drug scene, l'ambiente (o il mondo) della droga; I need a change of scene, ho bisogno di cambiare ambiente● scene bay = scene dock ► sotto □ (teatr.) scene-cloth, sipario; tela □ (teatr., cinem.) scene designer, scenografo □ (teatr.) scene dock, magazzino degli scenari □ (GB) scene-of-crime officer, primo poliziotto sul luogo del reato; poliziotto che svolge le prime indagini sul luogo del reato □ scene-painter, pittore di scene; scenografo □ scene-painting, scenografia □ (teatr.) scene-shifter, macchinista □ (teatr.) scene-shifting, cambiamento di scena □ (teatr.) scenes painted by X.Y., scenografia di X.Y. □ (fam. USA) a bad scene, un'esperienza (o un episodio) spiacevole □ ( spesso fig.) behind the scenes, dietro le scene; dietro le quinte □ ( spesso fig.) to come on the scene, entrare in scena; comparire □ to keep behind the scenes, stare dietro le quinte; (fig.) tenersi in disparte □ (fam. USA) to make the scene, fare la propria comparsa; essere presente, esserci □ ( di cronista, inviato, ecc.) on the scene, sul luogo ( di un avvenimento) □ (fig.) to quit the scene, uscire di scena □ to set the scene, (teatr.) montare la scena; (fig.) ricostruire (o descrivere) un ambiente; ( anche) creare le premesse (per qc.) □ (fig.) to steal the scene from sb., rubare la scena a q. -
24 pick someone's pocket
(to steal something from a person's pocket: My wallet has gone - someone has picked my pocket!) borseggiare -
25 pilfer
['pɪlfə(r)] 1.verbo transitivo rubacchiare2.verbo intransitivo rubacchiare, fare piccoli furti* * *['pilfə](to steal (small things): He pilfered enough pieces of wood from the factory to make a chair.) rubacchiare- pilferer* * *['pɪlfə(r)] 1.verbo transitivo rubacchiare2.verbo intransitivo rubacchiare, fare piccoli furti -
26 wrong
I [rɒŋ] [AE rɔːŋ]1) (incorrect) (ill-chosen) sbagliato; (containing errors) sbagliato, errato, inesattoto take the wrong road — sbagliare strada, imboccare la strada sbagliata
to give the wrong answer — sbagliare risposta, dare la risposta sbagliata
you've got the wrong number — (on phone) ha sbagliato numero
2) (reprehensible, unjust)it is wrong for sb. to do — non è giusto che qcn. faccia
there's nothing wrong with o in sth. non c'è niente di sbagliato o di male in qcs.; what's wrong with trying? che male c'è a provare? che c'è di male nel provare? (so) what's wrong with that? — cosa c'è di sbagliato o di male?
3) (mistaken)to be wrong — [ person] avere torto, sbagliarsi
I might be wrong — potrei sbagliarmi, posso anche sbagliarmi
to be wrong about — sbagliarsi su [person, situation, details]
am I wrong in thinking that...? — ho torto a pensare che...? sbaglio se penso che...?
what's wrong with you? — (to person suffering) che cos'hai? che cosa c'è che non va? (to person behaving oddly) che ti prende? che ti succede?
••to be wrong in the head — colloq. avere qualche rotella in meno
to get on the wrong side of sb. — inimicarsi qcn.
II [rɒŋ] [AE rɔːŋ]to go down the wrong way — [food, drink] andare di traverso
to get [sth.] wrong — sbagliarsi con, capire male, fraintendere [date, time, details]; sbagliare [ calculations]
to go wrong — [ person] finire su una brutta strada; [ machine] guastarsi, incepparsi; [ plan] fallire, andare male, andare a rotoli
you won't go far wrong if... — non sbagli di molto se...
you can't go wrong — (in choice of route) non ti puoi sbagliare; (are bound to succeed) non puoi non farcela
••III [rɒŋ] [AE rɔːŋ]1) U (evil)2) (injustice) torto m., ingiustizia f.3) dir. illecito m.••IV [rɒŋ] [AE rɔːŋ]to be in the wrong — essere dalla parte del torto, avere torto
verbo transitivo fare torto a, trattare ingiustamente, offendere [person, family]* * *[roŋ] 1. adjective1) (having an error or mistake(s); incorrect: The child gave the wrong answer; We went in the wrong direction.) sbagliato2) (incorrect in one's answer(s), opinion(s) etc; mistaken: I thought Singapore was south of the Equator, but I was quite wrong.) (che sbaglia)3) (not good, not morally correct etc: It is wrong to steal.) sbagliato4) (not suitable: He's the wrong man for the job.) sbagliato5) (not right; not normal: There's something wrong with this engine; What's wrong with that child - why is she crying?) (che non va)2. adverb(incorrectly: I think I may have spelt her name wrong.) male3. noun(that which is not morally correct: He does not know right from wrong.) male4. verb(to insult or hurt unjustly: You wrong me by suggesting that I'm lying.) offendere, fare torto- wrongful- wrongfully
- wrongfulness
- wrongly
- wrongdoer
- wrongdoing
- do someone wrong
- do wrong
- do wrong
- go wrong
- in the wrong* * *I [rɒŋ] [AE rɔːŋ]1) (incorrect) (ill-chosen) sbagliato; (containing errors) sbagliato, errato, inesattoto take the wrong road — sbagliare strada, imboccare la strada sbagliata
to give the wrong answer — sbagliare risposta, dare la risposta sbagliata
you've got the wrong number — (on phone) ha sbagliato numero
2) (reprehensible, unjust)it is wrong for sb. to do — non è giusto che qcn. faccia
there's nothing wrong with o in sth. non c'è niente di sbagliato o di male in qcs.; what's wrong with trying? che male c'è a provare? che c'è di male nel provare? (so) what's wrong with that? — cosa c'è di sbagliato o di male?
3) (mistaken)to be wrong — [ person] avere torto, sbagliarsi
I might be wrong — potrei sbagliarmi, posso anche sbagliarmi
to be wrong about — sbagliarsi su [person, situation, details]
am I wrong in thinking that...? — ho torto a pensare che...? sbaglio se penso che...?
what's wrong with you? — (to person suffering) che cos'hai? che cosa c'è che non va? (to person behaving oddly) che ti prende? che ti succede?
••to be wrong in the head — colloq. avere qualche rotella in meno
to get on the wrong side of sb. — inimicarsi qcn.
II [rɒŋ] [AE rɔːŋ]to go down the wrong way — [food, drink] andare di traverso
to get [sth.] wrong — sbagliarsi con, capire male, fraintendere [date, time, details]; sbagliare [ calculations]
to go wrong — [ person] finire su una brutta strada; [ machine] guastarsi, incepparsi; [ plan] fallire, andare male, andare a rotoli
you won't go far wrong if... — non sbagli di molto se...
you can't go wrong — (in choice of route) non ti puoi sbagliare; (are bound to succeed) non puoi non farcela
••III [rɒŋ] [AE rɔːŋ]1) U (evil)2) (injustice) torto m., ingiustizia f.3) dir. illecito m.••IV [rɒŋ] [AE rɔːŋ]to be in the wrong — essere dalla parte del torto, avere torto
verbo transitivo fare torto a, trattare ingiustamente, offendere [person, family]
- 1
- 2
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