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1 to be consigned to oblivion
ser relegado,-a al olvido -
2 consign
(to put into or deliver to; to transfer: The little boy was consigned to his grandmother's care.) confiar, encomendartr[kən'saɪn]1 SMALLCOMMERCE/SMALL (send - goods) consignar2 formal use (entrust, hand over, give up) confiar, encomendar\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto be consigned to oblivion ser relegado,-a al olvidoconsign [kən'saɪn] vt1) commit, entrust: confiar, encomendar2) transfer: consignar, transferir3) send: consignar, enviar (mercancía)v.• confiar v.• consignar v.• depositar v.• entregar v.• traspasar v.kən'saɪna) ( hand over) (frml)to consign somebody TO something: the boy was consigned to the care of his aunt — el niño fue encomendado a su tía, el niño fue confiado al cuidado de su tía
b) ( send) \<\<goods\>\> consignar[kǝn'saɪn]VT1) (Comm) (=send) enviar, consignar2) frm (=commit, entrust) confiar* * *[kən'saɪn]a) ( hand over) (frml)to consign somebody TO something: the boy was consigned to the care of his aunt — el niño fue encomendado a su tía, el niño fue confiado al cuidado de su tía
b) ( send) \<\<goods\>\> consignar -
3 relegar
relegar ( conjugate relegar) verbo transitivo: el problema quedó relegado a un segundo plano the matter was pushed into the background; relegado al olvido consigned to oblivion
relegar verbo transitivo to relegate
relegar al olvido, to consign to oblivion ' relegar' also found in these entries: Spanish: postergar - desplazar - segundo English: relegate
См. также в других словарях:
oblivion — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ political ▪ total VERB + OBLIVION ▪ fade into, fall into, pass into, sink into, slide into … Collocations dictionary
oblivion — o|bliv|i|on [əˈblıviən] n [U] [Date: 1300 1400; : Old French; Origin: Latin oblivio, from oblivisci to forget ] 1.) when something is completely forgotten or no longer important sink/slip/pass etc into oblivion ▪ Wind power presents too many… … Dictionary of contemporary English
oblivion — noun (U) 1 the state of being completely forgotten: The loser s name is consigned to oblivion. 2 the state of being unconscious or of not noticing what is happening: the oblivion of sleep … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
con´sig|na´tion — con|sign «kuhn SYN», transitive verb. 1. to hand over formally; deliver: »The thief was consigned to prison. SYNONYM(S): entrust. See syn. under commit. (Cf. ↑commit) 2. to hand over to another for care or custody: »The parents consigned the… … Useful english dictionary
con|sign´a|ble — con|sign «kuhn SYN», transitive verb. 1. to hand over formally; deliver: »The thief was consigned to prison. SYNONYM(S): entrust. See syn. under commit. (Cf. ↑commit) 2. to hand over to another for care or custody: »The parents consigned the… … Useful english dictionary
con|sign — «kuhn SYN», transitive verb. 1. to hand over formally; deliver: »The thief was consigned to prison. SYNONYM(S): entrust. See syn. under commit. (Cf. ↑commit) 2. to hand over to another for care or custody: »The parents consigned the child to its… … Useful english dictionary
consign — con·sign /kən sīn/ vt: to entrust (one s goods) to the possession of a dealer to be sold for profit or returned if unsold compare bail, entrust con·sign·ment n con·sign·or /kən sī nər, ˌkän ˌsī nȯr/ n … Law dictionary
consign — [kən sīn′] vt. [L consignare, to seal, register < com , together + signare, to sign, mark < signum,SIGN] 1. to hand over; give up or deliver [consigned to jail] 2. to put in the care of another; entrust [consign the orphan to her uncle s… … English World dictionary
forgotten — (Roget s IV) modif. Syn. not remembered, not recalled, not recollected, unremembered, unrecalled, unrecollected, unretained, obliterated, lost, lapsed, out of one s mind, clear out of one s mind, clean out of one s mind, gone out of one s head,… … English dictionary for students
lost — adj 1. forfeited, gone, no more, by the board, out the window, down the drain, long lost; missing, vanished, disappeared, lost to sight or view, out of sight. 2. forgotten, unrecalled, unremembered, unrecollect ed, unretained, out of sight out of … A Note on the Style of the synonym finder
consign — verb Etymology: Middle French consigner, from Latin consignare, from com + signum sign, mark, seal more at sign Date: 1528 transitive verb 1. to give over to another s care 2. to give, transfer, or deliver into the hands or control … New Collegiate Dictionary