-
1 abdykować
(-uję, -ujesz); vi (im)perf* * *ipf. l. pf.1. abdicate; renounce l. relinquish the throne ( na czyjąś rzecz to sb).2. abdykować z urzędu form. resign from l. relinquish an office.The New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > abdykować
-
2 tron
m (G tronu) 1. (fotel) throne- siedzieć na tronie to sit on a throne2. przen. (władza królewska) the throne- mieć dziedziczne prawo do tronu to be heir to the throne- zrzec się tronu to abdicate the throne- gdy umarł Aleksander, tron po nim objął Mikołaj when Alexander died, Nicholas succeeded to the throne- był wierny tronowi he remained loyal to the throne- wstąpić na tron a. zasiąść na tronie to ascend to the throne- zrzucić a. strącić kogoś z tronu to dethrone a. depose sb3. pot., żart. (sedes) throne* * *( fotel) throne; ( władza królewska) (the) thronenastępca tronu — heir (to the throne), the Crown Prince
* * *mi1. ( ozdobny fotel) throne.2. (= władza monarsza) (the) throne; następca tronu heir (to the throne); objąć tron come to/ascend/suceed to the throne; zrzec się tronu abdicate, give up the throne; zrzucić z tronu dethrone, depose.The New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > tron
-
3 abdyk|ować
pf, impf vi to abdicate (the throne)- abdykować na rzecz kogoś to abdicate in favour of sbThe New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > abdyk|ować
-
4 abdykacj|a
f (G pl abdykacji) (króla, monarchy) abdication U- cesarz został zmuszony do abdykacji the emperor was forced to abdicateThe New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > abdykacj|a
-
5 korzyś|ć
f (G pl korzyści) 1. (pożytek) benefit- korzyści płynące z czegoś the benefits of sth- przynieść komuś/czemuś korzyść to benefit sb/sth- wyjść komuś na korzyść to work to sb’s advantage a. benefit- wyciągnąć z czegoś korzyść dla siebie to benefit from sth- jaką będę miał z tego korzyść? what do I get out of it?- być z korzyścią dla kogoś/czegoś to be of benefit to sb/sth- abdykować na czyjąś korzyść to abdicate in favour of sb- zasądzić całą sumę na czyjąś korzyść to award the entire sum to sb- ograniczyć coś na korzyść czegoś to reduce sth in favour of sth- świadczyć a. przemawiać na czyjąś korzyść to reflect well on a. speak well of sb- porównanie wypadło na naszą korzyść the comparison worked to our advantage- argumenty przemawiające na korzyść tej hipotezy arguments in support of the hypothesis- zmienić się na korzyść [osoba] to change for the better2. (zysk) profit, benefit- czerpać korzyści z czegoś to profit a. benefit from sth- odnosić korzyści materialne z czegoś to profit from sth, to derive material benefit a. gain from sth- przynosić duże korzyści to be very profitable- interes nie przynosi spodziewanych korzyści the business is not as profitable as expected- sprzedać coś z korzyścią to sell sth at a profitThe New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > korzyś|ć
См. также в других словарях:
Abdicate — Ab di*cate, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Abdicated}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Abdicating}.] [L. abdicatus, p. p. of abdicare; ab + dicare to proclaim, akin to dicere to say. See {Diction}.] 1. To surrender or relinquish, as sovereign power; to withdraw… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Abdicate — Ab di*cate, v. i. To relinquish or renounce a throne, or other high office or dignity. [1913 Webster] Though a king may abdicate for his own person, he cannot abdicate for the monarchy. Burke. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
abdicate — abdicate, renounce, resign are synonymous when they are used in the sense of to give up formally or definitely a position of trust, honor, or glory, or its concomitant authority or prerogatives. Abdicate is the precise word to use when that which … New Dictionary of Synonyms
abdicate — I verb abandon, back out, be relieved, cede, demit, drop, forego, forfeit, give the reins to, give up, hand over, hold off, leave, let go, make way for, quit one s hold, relinquish, resign, retire, stand aside, surrender, unclench, vacate office … Law dictionary
abdicate — (v.) 1540s, to disown, disinherit (children), from L. abdicatus, pp. of abdicare to disown, disavow, reject (specifically abdicare magistratu renounce office ), from ab away (see AB (Cf. ab )) + dicare proclaim, from stem of dicere to speak, to… … Etymology dictionary
abdicate — [v] give up a right, position, or power abandon, abjure, abnegate, bag it*, bail out*, cede, demit, drop, forgo, give up, leave, leave high and dry*, leave holding the bag*, leave in the lurch*, opt out*, quit, quitclaim, relinquish, renounce,… … New thesaurus
abdicate — ► VERB 1) (of a monarch) renounce the throne. 2) fail to fulfil or undertake (a duty). DERIVATIVES abdication noun. ORIGIN Latin abdicare renounce … English terms dictionary
abdicate — [ab′di kāt΄] vt., vi. abdicated, abdicating [< L abdicatus, pp. of abdicare, to deny, renounce < ab , off + dicare, to proclaim, akin to dicere, to say: see DICTION] 1. to give up formally (a high office, throne, authority, etc.) 2. to… … English World dictionary
abdicate — UK [ˈæbdɪkeɪt] / US [ˈæbdɪˌkeɪt] verb Word forms abdicate : present tense I/you/we/they abdicate he/she/it abdicates present participle abdicating past tense abdicated past participle abdicated 1) [intransitive/transitive] if a king or queen… … English dictionary
abdicate — verb ( cated; cating) Etymology: Latin abdicatus, past participle of abdicare, from ab + dicare to proclaim more at diction Date: 1541 transitive verb 1. to cast off ; discard … New Collegiate Dictionary
abdicate — verb /ˈæbdɪkeɪt/ a) To surrender, renounce or relinquish, as sovereign power; to withdraw definitely from filling or exercising, as a high office, station, dignity; as, to abdicate the throne, the crown, the papacy. Note: The word abdicate was… … Wiktionary