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1 give credence to (someone or something)
поверить кому-либо чему-либоThey didn't want to give credence to the man's statement so they ignored it.English-Russian small dictionary of idioms > give credence to (someone or something)
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2 give credence to (someone or something)
поверить кому-либо чему-либоThey didn't want to give credence to the man's statement so they ignored it.English-Russian small dictionary of idioms > give credence to (someone or something)
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3 give credence to
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4 give credence to
1) Общая лексика: оказать доверие (кому-л.), оказать доверие2) Дипломатический термин: доверять (кому-л.) -
5 give credence to gossip
Общая лексика: верить сплетнямУниверсальный англо-русский словарь > give credence to gossip
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6 give credence to
inanmak, güvenmek -
7 give credence to
inanmak, güvenmek -
8 give credence to
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9 give credence to
• uskoa -
10 give credence
• dôverovat -
11 give credence to
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12 give credence to
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13 give\ credence\ to\ sg
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14 to give credence to
prêter foi à; accorder du crédit àEnglish-French dictionary of law, politics, economics & finance > to give credence to
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15 to give credence to
باوركردن -
16 to give credence
izrādīt uzticību -
17 to give credence to something
creer algo -
18 to give credence to smb.
доверять кому-л.English-russian dctionary of diplomacy > to give credence to smb.
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19 to give credence to unsupportable allegations
English-russian dctionary of diplomacy > to give credence to unsupportable allegations
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20 credence
tr['kriːdəns]1 crédito\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto add/lend credence to something dar crédito a algoto give credence to something creer algocredence ['kri:dənts] n: crédito mn.• asenso s.m.• credencia s.f.• creencia s.f.• fe s.f.'kriːdṇsmass noun (frml)to give o lend credence to something — dar* crédito a algo
['kriːdǝns]N* * *['kriːdṇs]mass noun (frml)to give o lend credence to something — dar* crédito a algo
См. также в других словарях:
give credence to — index trust Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
give credence to — {v. phr.} 1. To be willing to believe that something is true. * /Larry gave credence to the rumor that Fred used to be a convict./ * /Give no credence to the rumor that our state is bankrupt; nothing could be farther from the truth./ … Dictionary of American idioms
give credence to — {v. phr.} 1. To be willing to believe that something is true. * /Larry gave credence to the rumor that Fred used to be a convict./ * /Give no credence to the rumor that our state is bankrupt; nothing could be farther from the truth./ … Dictionary of American idioms
give\ credence\ to — v. phr. 1. To be willing to believe that something is true. Larry gave credence to the rumor that Fred used to be a convict. Give no credence to the rumor that our state is bankrupt; nothing could be farther from the truth … Словарь американских идиом
give credence to something — to believe that something is true It was too silly an idea for Chrissy to give any credence to it … English dictionary
give credence to something — … Useful english dictionary
give credence to — accept as true … Useful english dictionary
credence — credence, credit, credibility 1. In general use, credence means ‘belief, trustful acceptance’, and is used mainly in the expression to give (or lend) credence to, which means ‘believe, trust’: • The radicality of these changes…had lent credence… … Modern English usage
Credence — Cre dence (kr[=e] dens), n. [LL. credentia, fr. L. credens, entis, p. pr. of credere to trust, believe: cf. OF. credence. See {Creed}, and cf. {Credent}, {Creance}.] [1913 Webster] 1. Reliance of the mind on evidence of facts derived from other… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
credence — [krēd′ ns] n. [OFr < ML credentia < L credens, prp. of credere: see CREED] 1. belief, esp. in the reports or testimony of another [to give credence to rumors] 2. credentials: now only in the phrase LETTERS OF CREDENCE 3. Eccles. a small… … English World dictionary
Credence — Cre dence, v. t. To give credence to; to believe. [Obs.] [1913 Webster] || … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English