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1 direct
I 1. [daɪ'rekt, dɪ-]1) (without intermediary) [control, link, participation, sunlight] direttoin direct contact with — (touching) a diretto contatto con; (communicating) in diretto contatto con
2) (without detour) [access, flight] direttoto be a direct descendant of — essere un discendente diretto di, discendere in linea diretta da
4) (straightforward) [answer, method] diretto; [ person] diretto, franco5) ling. [speech, question] diretto2.1) (without intermediary) [speak, dial] direttamenteto pay sth. direct into sb.'s account — accreditare qcs. direttamente sul conto di qcn
2) (without detour) [come, go] direttamenteII 1. [daɪ'rekt, dɪ-]1) fig. (address, aim) indirizzare, rivolgere [appeal, criticism] (at a); orientare [ campaign] (at verso); dirigere [effort, resource] (to, towards verso)to direct sb.'s attention to — richiamare l'attenzione di qcn. su
2) (control) dirigere [company, project, traffic]4) cinem. rad. telev. dirigere, realizzare [ film]; teatr. dirigere, mettere in scena [ play]; dirigere [actor, opera]5) (instruct)to direct sb. to do — ordinare a qcn. di fare
to direct that sth. (should) be done — ordinare che sia fatto qcs.
"to be taken as directed" — farm. "seguire attentamente le modalità d'uso"
6) (show route)2.to direct sb. to sth. — indicare a qcn. la strada per qcs
verbo intransitivo cinem. rad. telev. dirigere, curare la regia; teatr. dirigere, curare la realizzazione* * *[di'rekt] 1. adjective1) (straight; following the quickest and shortest way: Is this the most direct route?) diretto2) ((of manner etc) straightforward and honest: a direct answer.) franco3) (occurring as an immediate result: His dismissal was a direct result of his rudeness to the manager.) diretto4) (exact; complete: Her opinions are the direct opposite of his.) esatto5) (in an unbroken line of descent from father to son etc: He is a direct descendant of Napoleon.) diretto2. verb1) (to point, aim or turn in a particular direction: He directed my attention towards the notice.) dirigere2) (to show the way to: She directed him to the station.) indirizzare3) (to order or instruct: We will do as you direct.) ordinare4) (to control or organize: A policeman was directing the traffic; to direct a film.) dirigere•- directional
- directive
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- director
- directory* * *I 1. [daɪ'rekt, dɪ-]1) (without intermediary) [control, link, participation, sunlight] direttoin direct contact with — (touching) a diretto contatto con; (communicating) in diretto contatto con
2) (without detour) [access, flight] direttoto be a direct descendant of — essere un discendente diretto di, discendere in linea diretta da
4) (straightforward) [answer, method] diretto; [ person] diretto, franco5) ling. [speech, question] diretto2.1) (without intermediary) [speak, dial] direttamenteto pay sth. direct into sb.'s account — accreditare qcs. direttamente sul conto di qcn
2) (without detour) [come, go] direttamenteII 1. [daɪ'rekt, dɪ-]1) fig. (address, aim) indirizzare, rivolgere [appeal, criticism] (at a); orientare [ campaign] (at verso); dirigere [effort, resource] (to, towards verso)to direct sb.'s attention to — richiamare l'attenzione di qcn. su
2) (control) dirigere [company, project, traffic]4) cinem. rad. telev. dirigere, realizzare [ film]; teatr. dirigere, mettere in scena [ play]; dirigere [actor, opera]5) (instruct)to direct sb. to do — ordinare a qcn. di fare
to direct that sth. (should) be done — ordinare che sia fatto qcs.
"to be taken as directed" — farm. "seguire attentamente le modalità d'uso"
6) (show route)2.to direct sb. to sth. — indicare a qcn. la strada per qcs
verbo intransitivo cinem. rad. telev. dirigere, curare la regia; teatr. dirigere, curare la realizzazione -
2 direct ***** di·rect
[daɪ'rɛkt]1. adj(gen) diretto (-a), (answer) chiaro (-a), (refusal) esplicito (-a), (manner, person) franco (-a), diretto (-a)direct object Gram — complemento oggetto
2. advyou can go direct, without changing at Crewe — si può andarci direttamente senza cambiare a Crewe
3. vt1)(aim: remark, gaze, attention)
to direct at/to — dirigere a, rivolgere a(address: letter)
to direct sth to — indirizzare qc a2) (control: traffic, business, actors) dirigere, (play, film, programme) curare la regia di, dirigere3)(
frm: instruct) to direct sb to do sth — dare direttive a qn di fare qc
См. также в других словарях:
route — route1 [ rut, raut ] noun count *** 1. ) a way that buses, trains, ships, or airplanes travel regularly: the West Coast route a bus/shipping/trading route a ) the roads or paths that you use when you go from one place to another: It s a good idea … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
route — I UK [ruːt] / US [rut, raʊt] noun [countable] Word forms route : singular route plural routes *** 1) a) a way that buses, trains, ships, or planes travel regularly the West Coast route a bus/shipping/trading route b) the roads or paths that you… … English dictionary
direct — di|rect1 W1S2 [dıˈrekt, ˌdaıˈrekt] adj ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(without involving others)¦ 2¦(from one place to another)¦ 3¦(exact)¦ 4¦(behaviour/attitude)¦ 5 direct descendant 6 direct hit 7 direct heat/sunlight ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ [Date: 1300 1400; : Latin; Origin:… … Dictionary of contemporary English
route — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun ADJECTIVE ▪ fast, quick, short ▪ The shortest route home is along the shore. ▪ convenient, easy ▪ best … Collocations dictionary
direct — 1 /di rekt, daI rekt/ adjective 1 WITHOUT ANYTHING BETWEEN done without any other people, actions, processes etc coming between: Can we have direct access to the information on file? | She has direct control over the business. | I m not in direct … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
route*/*/ — [ruːt] noun [C] I 1) the roads or paths that you use when you go from one place to another The tunnel is the route taken by most drivers.[/ex] The most direct route from the house to the school is through the town centre.[/ex] 2) a way of doing… … Dictionary for writing and speaking English
route — [[t]ru͟ːt[/t]] ♦♦ routes, routing, routed (Pronounced [[t]ru͟ːt[/t]]u> or [[t]ra͟ʊt[/t]]u> in American English.) 1) N COUNT A route is a way from one place to another. ...the most direct route to the town centre... All escape routes were… … English dictionary
route — route1 W2 [ru:t US ru:t, raut] n [Date: 1100 1200; : Old French; Origin: Vulgar Latin rupta (via) broken way , from Latin ruptus broken ] 1.) a way from one place to another route to/from ▪ What s the best route to Cambridge? … Dictionary of contemporary English
direct — 1. adjective 1) the most direct route Syn: straight, undeviating, unswerving; shortest, quickest 2) a direct flight Syn: nonstop, unbroken, uninterrupted, through 3) he is very direct … Thesaurus of popular words
direct — 1. adjective 1) the most direct route Syn: straight, short, quick 2) a direct flight Syn: non stop, through, unbroken, uninterrupted 3) he is very direct … Synonyms and antonyms dictionary
The Moose's Tooth — Elevation 10,335 ft (3,150 m) Location Location … Wikipedia