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1 evoke
• herättää• kiihottaa• muistella• manata• kutsua esiin* * *i'vəuk1) (to cause or produce (especially a response, reaction etc): His letter in the newspaper evoked a storm of protest.) saada aikaan2) (to bring into the mind: A piece of music can sometimes evoke (memories of) the past.) palauttaa mieleen•- evocative
См. также в других словарях:
storm — ► NOUN 1) a violent disturbance of the atmosphere with strong winds and usually rain, thunder, lightning, or snow. 2) an uproar or controversy: the book caused a storm in America. 3) a violent or noisy outburst of a specified feeling or reaction … English terms dictionary
protest — I UK [ˈprəʊtest] / US [ˈproʊˌtest] noun Word forms protest : singular protest plural protests *** 1) [countable/uncountable] a strong complaint or disagreement protest at/against: The organization has made a formal protest against the nuclear… … English dictionary
protest — pro|test1 [ prou,test ] noun *** 1. ) count or uncount a strong complaint or disagreement: protest at/against: The organization has made a formal protest against the nuclear testing. in protest: She resigned in protest against the company s… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
protest — 1 noun 1 (C, U) a strong complaint that shows you disagree with, or are angry about something that you think is wrong or unfair: a written protest alleging police brutality | I turned off the TV, despite loud protests from the kids. (+ against):… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
storm — storm1 W3 [sto:m US sto:rm] n [: Old English;] 1.) a period of very bad weather when there is a lot of rain or snow, strong winds, and often ↑lightning ▪ The storm broke (=suddenly started) at five o clock. ▪ a night time thunderstorm ▪ Twenty… … Dictionary of contemporary English
storm — 1 noun 1 (C) a period of very bad weather when there is a lot of rain, strong winds, and often lightning: crops damaged by recent heavy storms | the storm broke (=suddenly started) 2 (countable usually singular) a situation in which people… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
protest — Instructions given to a collecting bank that drafts falling due for payment are to be formally presented to the drawee by a notary, who is to formally record any default. Bloomberg Financial Dictionary * * * ▪ I. protest pro‧test 2 [prəˈtest]… … Financial and business terms
protest — pro|test1 W3 [ˈprəutest US ˈprou ] n 1.) [U and C] something that you do to show publicly that you think that something is wrong and unfair, for example taking part in big public meetings, refusing to work, or refusing to buy a company s products … Dictionary of contemporary English
storm — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun 1 period of bad weather ADJECTIVE ▪ bad, big, devastating, ferocious, fierce, great, heavy, killer (informal, esp. AmE), major … Collocations dictionary
storm — storm1 [ stɔrm ] noun ** 1. ) count an occasion when a lot of rain falls very quickly, often with very strong winds or THUNDER and LIGHTNING: A fierce storm hit the west coast of Florida early this morning. a storm breaks (=begins): A violent… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
storm — I UK [stɔː(r)m] / US [stɔrm] noun Word forms storm : singular storm plural storms ** 1) [countable] an occasion when a lot of rain falls very quickly, often with very strong winds or thunder and lightning a storm breaks (= begins): A violent… … English dictionary