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1 conciliate
kən'silieit(to win over or regain the support, friendship etc of.) conciliar- conciliatory
tr[kən'sɪlɪeɪt]1 conciliar1 conciliarv.• conciliar v.kən'sɪlieɪttransitive verb conciliar[kǝn'sɪlɪeɪt]VT conciliar* * *[kən'sɪlieɪt]transitive verb conciliar -
2 conciliate
vt.apaciguar (appease); conciliar (reconcile) (pt & pp conciliated) -
3 conciliate opinions
v.conciliar las opiniones, conciliar opiniones. -
4 disarm
1) (to take away weapons from: He crept up from behind and managed to disarm the gunman.) desarmar2) (to get rid of weapons of war: Not until peace was made did the victors consider it safe to disarm.) desarmar3) (to make less hostile; to charm.) desarmar•- disarming
- disarmingly
tr[dɪs'ɑːm]1 (person, group, etc) desarmar; (bomb) desactivar2 figurative use (criticism) desbaratar3 (charm, win over) desarmar1 (nation) desarmarsedisarm [dɪs'ɑrm] vt: desarmarv.• desarmar v.• desguarnecer v.dɪs'ɑːrm, dɪs'ɑːm
1.
1) \<\<troops/opposition\>\> desarmar; \<\<bomb/mine\>\> desactivar; \<\<criticism\>\> desbaratar2) ( win confidence of) desarmar
2.
vi desarmarse[dɪs'ɑːm]1. VT1) (Mil) [+ troops, attacker] desarmar2) (=deactivate) [+ bomb] desactivar3) (=conciliate) [+ opponent] desarmar4) (=render ineffective) [+ criticism] echar por tierra, desbaratar; [+ opposition] desbaratar2.VI (Mil) desarmarse* * *[dɪs'ɑːrm, dɪs'ɑːm]
1.
1) \<\<troops/opposition\>\> desarmar; \<\<bomb/mine\>\> desactivar; \<\<criticism\>\> desbaratar2) ( win confidence of) desarmar
2.
vi desarmarse -
5 conciliar
conciliar ( conjugate conciliar) verbo transitivo 1 ‹ actividades› to combine 2 ‹ sueño›:
conciliar verbo transitivo to reconcile Locuciones: conciliar el sueño, to get to sleep ' conciliar' also found in these entries: Spanish: hermanarse - lograr - sueño - dormir English: reconcile - square -
6 concilio
Del verbo conciliar: ( conjugate conciliar) \ \
concilio es: \ \1ª persona singular (yo) presente indicativo
concilió es: \ \3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) pretérito indicativoMultiple Entries: conciliar concilio
conciliar ( conjugate conciliar) verbo transitivo 1 ‹ actividades› to combine 2 ‹ sueño›:
concilio sustantivo masculino council
conciliar verbo transitivo to reconcile Locuciones: conciliar el sueño, to get to sleep
concilio sustantivo masculino Rel council -
7 conciliating
adj.conciliador, concertador, conciliatorio, conciliativo, propiciador, propiciatorio.ger.gerundio del verbo CONCILIATE.
См. также в других словарях:
Conciliate — Con*cil i*ate (?; 106), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Conciliated}; p. pr & vb. n. {Conciliating}.] [L. conciliatus, p. p. of conciliare to draw or bring together, unite, from concilium council. See {Council}.] To win ower; to gain from a state of… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
conciliate — index arbitrate (adjudge), compromise (settle by mutual agreement), disarm (set at ease), intercede, mediate, mollify … Law dictionary
conciliate — 1540s, from L. conciliatus, pp. of conciliare to bring together, unite in feelings, make friendly, from concilium council (see COUNCIL (Cf. council)). Related: Conciliated; conciliating … Etymology dictionary
conciliate — *pacify, appease, placate, propitiate, mollify Analogous words: arbitrate, adjudicate (see JUDGE vb): mediate, intervene (see INTERPOSE): persuade, prevail (see INDUCE): calm, tranquilize (see corresponding adjectives at CALM): adjust,… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
conciliate — ► VERB 1) make calm and content; placate. 2) mediate in a dispute. DERIVATIVES conciliation noun conciliator noun conciliatory adjective. ORIGIN Latin conciliare combine, gain , from concilium assembly … English terms dictionary
conciliate — [kən sil′ē āt΄] vt. conciliated, conciliating [< L conciliatus, pp. of conciliare, to bring together, win over < concilium,COUNCIL] 1. to win over; soothe the anger of; make friendly; placate 2. to gain (regard, good will, etc.) by friendly … English World dictionary
conciliate — [[t]kənsɪ̱lieɪt[/t]] conciliates, conciliating, conciliated VERB If you conciliate someone, you try to end a disagreement with them. [FORMAL] [V n] His duty was to conciliate the people, not to provoke them... The President has a strong political … English dictionary
conciliate — conciliable /keuhn sil ee euh beuhl/, adj. conciliatingly, adv. conciliation, n. /keuhn sil ee ayt /, v., conciliated, conciliating. v.t. 1. to overcome the distrust or hostility of; placate; win over: to conciliate an angry competitor. 2. to win … Universalium
conciliate — UK [kənˈsɪlɪeɪt] / US [kənˈsɪlɪˌeɪt] verb [intransitive/transitive] Word forms conciliate : present tense I/you/we/they conciliate he/she/it conciliates present participle conciliating past tense conciliated past participle conciliated formal to… … English dictionary
conciliate — con|cil|i|ate [kənˈsılieıt] v [I and T] formal [Date: 1500 1600; : Latin; Origin: , past participle of conciliare to bring together, unite , from concilium; COUNCIL] to do something to make people more likely to stop arguing, especially by giving … Dictionary of contemporary English
conciliate — verb (T) formal to do something to make people more likely to stop arguing, especially by giving them something they want: Negotiators were called in to conciliate between the warring factions. conciliator noun (C) … Longman dictionary of contemporary English