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1 supplant
tr[sə'plɑːnt]1 suplantar, reemplazar, sustituirsupplant [sə'plænt] vt: suplantarv.• desbancar v.• suplantar v.sə'plænttransitive verb sustituir*, reemplazar*[sǝ'plɑːnt]VT suplantar, reemplazar* * *[sə'plænt]transitive verb sustituir*, reemplazar* -
2 supplant
vt.1 desbancar.2 suplantar, substituir, desbancar, tomar el lugar de.(pt & pp supplanted) -
3 reemplazar
reemplazar ( conjugate reemplazar) verbo transitivo ‹ persona› ( durante período limitado) to substitute for, stand in for; ( durante más tiempo) to replace; ‹aparato/pieza› to replace; reemplazar algo/a algn POR or CON algo/algn to replace sth/sb with o by sth/sb
reemplazar verbo transitivo
1 to replace: reemplazaremos la pieza vieja por esta otra, we'll replace the old part with this other one
2 (por tiempo limitado) to substitute for ' reemplazar' also found in these entries: Spanish: suplir - cambiar - reponer English: replace - search - displace - substitute - supersede - supplant -
4 suplantar
suplantar ( conjugate suplantar) verbo transitivo ‹ persona› to impersonate, pass oneself off as
suplantar verbo transitivo
1 (sustituir) to replace
2 frml supplant
3 (hacerse pasar por otro) to impersonate ' suplantar' also found in these entries: Spanish: desplazar English: supersede -
5 sustituir
sustituir ( conjugate sustituir) verbo transitivo sustituir A algo to replace sth; sustituir algo/a algn POR algo/algn to replace sth/sb with sth/sb ‹ deportista› to come on as a substitute for
sustituir verbo transitivo
1 to replace: sustituyeron el azúcar por miel, they replaced the sugar with honey o they substituted honey for the sugar (a una persona) to replace
2 (temporalmente) to stand in for ' sustituir' also found in these entries: Spanish: nariz - suplir - suplantar - relevar English: cover - displace - do - far - fear - fill in - it - place - replace - sit in - stand in - substitute - take over - try - fill - stand - supersede - supplant - take -
6 displace
vt.1 desplazar (shift)2 sustituir (supplant)3 desalojar, remover.4 degradar. (pt & pp displaced) -
7 supplanting
adj.suplantador.s.suplantación, la acción y efecto de suplantar.ger.gerundio del verbo SUPPLANT.
См. также в других словарях:
Supplant — Sup*plant , v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Supplanted}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Supplanting}.] [F. supplanter, L. supplantare to trip up one s heels, to throw down; sub under + planta the sole of the foot, also, a sucker, slip, sprout. Cf. {Plant}, n.] 1. To trip … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
supplant — I verb abolish, act for, bring low, cashier, cause the downfall of, depose, deracinate, dethrone, discharge, dismiss, displace, drive away, drive out, eject, eradicate, expel, extirpate, fire, force out, oust, overthrow, overpower, remove,… … Law dictionary
supplant — c.1300, to trip up, overthrow, defeat, dispossess, from O.Fr. supplanter to trip up, overthrow, from L. supplantare trip up, overthrow, from sub under + planta sole of the foot (see PLANT (Cf. plant) (n.)). Meaning replace one thing with another… … Etymology dictionary
supplant — *displace, *replace, supersede Analogous words: *eject, oust, dismiss, expel: uproot, eradicate, extirpate, *exterminate … New Dictionary of Synonyms
supplant — [v] displace, replace back up, bounce, cast out, crowd, cut out, eject, expel, fill in, force, force out, front for, oust, outplace, overthrow, remove, ring, ring in, sit in, stand in, substitute, succeed, supersede, swap places with, take out,… … New thesaurus
supplant — ► VERB ▪ supersede and replace. DERIVATIVES supplanter noun. ORIGIN Latin supplantare trip up … English terms dictionary
supplant — [sə plant′, səplänt′] vt. [ME supplanten < OFr supplanter < L supplantare, to put under the sole of the foot, trip up < sub , under (see SUB ) + planta, sole of the foot: see PLANT] 1. to take the place of; supersede, esp. through force… … English World dictionary
supplant — UK [səˈplɑːnt] / US [səˈplænt] verb [transitive] Word forms supplant : present tense I/you/we/they supplant he/she/it supplants present participle supplanting past tense supplanted past participle supplanted formal to replace something or someone … English dictionary
supplant — transitive verb Etymology: Middle English, from Anglo French supplanter, from Latin supplantare to trip up, cause to stumble, from sub + planta sole of the foot more at place Date: 14th century 1. to supersede (another) especially by force or… … New Collegiate Dictionary
supplant — verb /səˈplɑːnt,səˈplænt/ To take the place of; to replace, to supersede. Will online dictionaries ever supplant paper dictionaries? Syn: dethrone, oust, replace, supersede, take over, uproot, wrench … Wiktionary
supplant — sup|plant [ sə plænt ] verb transitive FORMAL to replace something or someone, often as a result of being more powerful: Their concern is that central decision making will supplant local government … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English