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1 commune
I ['kɒmjuːn]1) (group of people) comunità f.; stor. pol. comune f.2) amm. (in continental Europe) comune m.II [kə'mjuːn]to commune with — essere in comunione con [ nature]; essere in comunione spirituale con [ person]
* * *['komju:n](a group of people living together and sharing everything they own.) comune- communal* * *commune /ˈkɒmju:n/n.(to) commune /kəˈmju:n/v. i.1 essere (o mettersi) in comunione (spirituale), unirsi in spirito (con): to commune with nature, essere in comunione con la natura● to commune with oneself, pensare fra sé; meditare; raccogliersi.* * *I ['kɒmjuːn]1) (group of people) comunità f.; stor. pol. comune f.2) amm. (in continental Europe) comune m.II [kə'mjuːn]to commune with — essere in comunione con [ nature]; essere in comunione spirituale con [ person]
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2 commune com·mune n vb
См. также в других словарях:
commune with — phr verb Commune with is used with these nouns as the object: ↑nature … Collocations dictionary
commune with somebody — comˈmune with sb/sth derived (formal) to share your emotions and feelings with sb/sth without speaking • He spent much of this time communing with nature. Main entry: ↑communederived … Useful english dictionary
commune with something — comˈmune with sb/sth derived (formal) to share your emotions and feelings with sb/sth without speaking • He spent much of this time communing with nature. Main entry: ↑communederived … Useful english dictionary
commune — commune1 [kə myo͞on′; ] for n. [ käm′yo͞on΄] vi. communed, communing [ME communen < OFr comuner, to make common, share < comun (see COMMON); also < OFr communier, to administer the sacrament < L communicare, to share (LL(Ec), to… … English World dictionary
nature — noun 1 the physical world; plants, animals, etc. ADJECTIVE ▪ Mother ▪ Mother Nature s way of dealing with overpopulation VERB + NATURE ▪ commune with ▪ He believed in spending half an hour each day to relax and commune with … Collocations dictionary
commune — com|mune1 [ˈkɔmju:n US ˈka: , kəˈmju:n] n [Date: 1600 1700; : French; Origin: Medieval Latin communia, from Latin communis; COMMON1] 1.) a group of people who live together and who share the work and their possessions ▪ a hippie commune 2.) the… … Dictionary of contemporary English
commune — communes, communing, communed (The noun is pronounced [[t]kɒ̱mjuːn[/t]]. The verb is pronounced [[t]kəmju͟ːn[/t]].) 1) N COUNT A commune is a group of people who live together and share everything. Mack lived in a commune. 2) N COUNT In France… … English dictionary
commune — v. (d; intr.) to commune with (to commune with nature) * * * [ kɒmjuːn] (d; intr.) to commune with (to commune with nature) … Combinatory dictionary
commune — commune1 communer, n. v. /keuh myoohn /; n. /kom yoohn/, v., communed, communing, n. v.i. 1. to converse or talk together, usually with profound intensity, intimacy, etc.; interchange thoughts or feelings. 2. to be in intimate communication or… … Universalium
commune — 1. noun she lives in a commune Syn: collective, cooperative, communal settlement, kibbutz 2. verb 1) we pray to commune with God Syn: communicate, speak, talk, converse, interface 2) she likes to commune with … Thesaurus of popular words
commune — I. verb (communed; communing) Etymology: Middle English, to share, receive Communion, from Anglo French communer, cummunier, from Late Latin communicare, from Latin Date: 15th century transitive verb obsolete talk over, discuss < have more to… … New Collegiate Dictionary