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1 to immerse oneself in something
figurative use sumergirse en algoEnglish-spanish dictionary > to immerse oneself in something
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2 immerse
i'mə:s(to put completely under the surface of a liquid: She immersed the vegetables in boiling water.) sumergir, hundir- immersion heater
tr[ɪ'mɜːs]1 sumergir (in, en), hundir (in, en)\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto be immersed in something figurative use estar absorto,-a en algoto immerse oneself in something figurative use sumergirse en algo1) submerge: sumergir2)to immerse oneself in : enfrascarse env.• sumergir v.• sumir v.ɪ'mɜːrs, ɪ'mɜːs
1.
a) ( submerge)to immerse something/somebody (IN something) — sumergir* algo/a alguien (en algo)
b) (absorb, involve)to be immersed IN something — estar* absorto or enfrascado en algo
2.
v reflto immerse oneself IN something: he immersed himself in his work — se metió de lleno or se sumergió en su trabajo
[ɪ'mɜːs]VT (lit)to be immersed in sth — (fig) estar metido de lleno or inmerso en algo
he was totally immersed in his work — estaba metido de lleno or inmerso en su trabajo
she was immersed in the newspaper — estaba absorta or inmersa en la lectura del periódico
to immerse o.s. in sth — (fig) sumergirse en algo
she immersed herself in the history and culture of the place — se metió de lleno or se sumergió en la historia y la cultura del lugar
* * *[ɪ'mɜːrs, ɪ'mɜːs]
1.
a) ( submerge)to immerse something/somebody (IN something) — sumergir* algo/a alguien (en algo)
b) (absorb, involve)to be immersed IN something — estar* absorto or enfrascado en algo
2.
v reflto immerse oneself IN something: he immersed himself in his work — se metió de lleno or se sumergió en su trabajo
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3 bury
'beri1) (to place (a dead body) in a grave, the sea etc.) enterrar2) (to hide (under the ground etc): My socks are buried somewhere in this drawer.) esconder•- burial- bury the hatchet
bury vb enterrartr['berɪ]1 enterrar2 (body) sepultar, enterrar3 figurative use (outlive) enterrar\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto be buried recibir sepulturato be buried at sea recibir sepultura en el marto be buried alive ser enterrado,-a vivo,-ato bury oneself in ones' work figurative use enfrascarse en el trabajoto bury one's face in one's hands figurative use taparse el rostro con las manosto be buried in thought figurative use estar ensimismado,-a1) inter: enterrar, sepultar2) hide: esconder, ocultar3)to bury oneself in : enfrascarse env.• enterrar v.• inhumar v.• ocultar v.• sepultar v.• soterrar v.'beri
1.
buries, burying, buried transitive verb1) enterrar*, sepultar (frml)to bury somebody at sea — dar* sepultura a alguien en el mar (frml)
2) (plunge, thrust)to bury something (in something): she buried the knife in his chest le enterró or le hundió or le clavó el cuchillo en el pecho; he buried his head in his hands — ocultó la cabeza entre las manos
2.
v refla) ( immerse oneself)to bury oneself in something — \<\<in one's work/one's books\>\> enfrascarse* en algo
b) ( become lodged) \<\<bullet\>\> alojarse['berɪ]VT1) [+ body, treasure] enterrar; (fig) [+ memory, matter] echar tierra sobre2) (=conceal)to bury o.s. in the country — perderse en la campiña
3) (=engross)buried in thought — ensimismado, absorto en sus pensamientos
she buried herself in her book — se ensimismó en la lectura, se enfrascó en el libro
4) (=plunge) [+ claws, knife] clavar (in en)5) (Sport) * (=defeat) aplastar ** * *['beri]
1.
buries, burying, buried transitive verb1) enterrar*, sepultar (frml)to bury somebody at sea — dar* sepultura a alguien en el mar (frml)
2) (plunge, thrust)to bury something (in something): she buried the knife in his chest le enterró or le hundió or le clavó el cuchillo en el pecho; he buried his head in his hands — ocultó la cabeza entre las manos
2.
v refla) ( immerse oneself)to bury oneself in something — \<\<in one's work/one's books\>\> enfrascarse* en algo
b) ( become lodged) \<\<bullet\>\> alojarse -
4 lose
lu:zpast tense, past participle - lost; verb1) (to stop having; to have no longer: She has lost interest in her work; I have lost my watch; He lost hold of the rope.) perder2) (to have taken away from one (by death, accident etc): She lost her father last year; The ship was lost in the storm; He has lost his job.) perder3) (to put (something) where it cannot be found: My secretary has lost your letter.) perder4) (not to win: I always lose at cards; She lost the race.) perder5) (to waste or use more (time) than is necessary: He lost no time in informing the police of the crime.) perder•- loser- loss
- lost
- at a loss
- a bad
- good loser
- lose oneself in
- lose one's memory
- lose out
- lost in
- lost on
lose vb perdertr[lʊːz]1 (in general) perder2 (immerse) sumergir (in, en)3 (clock) atrasar1 (in general) perder2 (clock) atrasarse\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto have nothing to lose familiar no tener nada que perderto lose one's head perder la cabezato lose one's heart (to somebody) enamorarse (de alguien)to lose one's life perder la vida, perecerto lose one's way perderseto lose sight of something perder algo de vistato lose weight adelgazar, perder peso1) : perderI lost my umbrella: perdí mi paraguasto lose blood: perder sangreto lose one's voice: quedarse fónicoto have nothing to lose: no tener nada que perderto lose no time: no perder tiempoto lose weight: perder peso, adelgazarto lose one's temper: perder los estribos, enojarse, enfadarseto lose sight of: perder de vista2) : costar, hacer perderthe errors lost him his job: los errores le costaron su empleo3) : atrasarmy watch loses 5 minutes a day: mi reloj atrasa 5 minutos por día4)to lose oneself : perderse, ensimismarselose vi1) : perderwe lost to the other team: perdimos contra el otro equipo2) : atrasarsethe clock loses time: el reloj se atrasav.(§ p.,p.p.: lost) = palmar v.• perder v.luːz
1.
1) transitive verb (past & past p lost)2) ( mislay) perder*I've lost my key — he perdido or se me ha perdido la llave
to lose one's way — perderse*
3) ( be deprived of) \<\<sight/territory/right\>\> perder*4)a) ( fail to keep) \<\<customers/popularity/speed\>\> perder*we are losing our best teachers to industry — los mejores profesores se nos están yendo a trabajar a la industria
b) ( rid oneself of) \<\<inhibitions\>\> perder*to lose weight — adelgazar*, perder* peso
5)a) ( shake off) \<\<pursuer\>\> deshacerse* deb) ( lose sight of) perder* de vista6) ( confuse) confundiryou've lost me there! — no entiendo, no te sigo
7) ( cause to lose) costar*, hacer* perdertheir hesitation lost them the contract — la falta de decisión les costó or les hizo perder el contrato
8)a) ( miss) \<\<train/flight/connection\>\> perder*b) ( let pass) \<\<time/opportunity\>\> perder*9) ( fail to win) \<\<game/battle/election\>\> perder*
2.
vi1)a) ( be beaten) \<\<team/contestant/party\>\> perder*to lose TO somebody — perder* frente a alguien
b) losing pres p <team/party> perdedorto be on the losing side — ser* de los perdedores
2)a) ( suffer losses) perder*to lose on a deal — salir* perdiendo en un negocio
b) ( be less effective) perder*the poem loses in translation — el poema pierde con la traducción or al ser traducido
3) \<\<watch/clock\>\> atrasar, atrasarse
3.
v reflPhrasal Verbs:- lose out[luːz] (pt, pp lost)1. VT1) (=mislay, fail to find) perder2) (=be deprived of) perderwhat have you got to lose? — ¿qué tienes tú que perder?, ¿qué vas a perder?
he lost £1,000 on that deal — perdió 1.000 libras en ese trato
breath 1., 1), voice 1., 1)•
to lose the use of an arm — perder el uso de un brazo3) (=fail to keep) perder•
she's lost her figure/her looks — ha perdido la línea/su belleza- lose itinterest 1., 1), rag I, 1., 1), sight 1., 2), temper 1., 1)4) (=fail to win) [+ game, war, election] perder5) (=miss)to lose one's way — (lit) perderse; (fig) perder el rumbo
6) (=waste) perder•
there was not a moment to lose — no había ni un momento que perder•
I wouldn't lose any sleep over it! — ¡no pierdas el sueño por ello!, ¡no te preocupes por ello!•
to lose no time in doing sth, she lost no time in making up her mind — se decidió enseguida, no le costó nada decidirseI lost no time in telling him exactly what I thought of him — no vacilé en decirle exactamente lo que pensaba de él
7) * (=get rid of) [+ unwanted companion] deshacerse de; [+ pursuers] zafarse de•
to lose weight — perder peso, adelgazarI lost two kilos — perdí or adelgacé dos kilos
8) (=fall behind) [watch, clock] atrasarse9) (=cause loss of)it lost him the job/the match — le costó el puesto/el partido, le hizo perder el puesto/el partido
that deal lost me £5,000 — ese negocio me costó or me hizo perder 5.000 libras
10) * (=confuse) confundiryou've lost me there — ahora sí que me has confundido, ahora sí que no te entiendo
11)to lose o.s. in sth — (a book, music, memories) ensimismarse en algo
2. VI1) [player, team] perder•
you can't lose — no tienes pérdida, tienes que forzosamente salir ganando2) [watch, clock] atrasarse- lose out* * *[luːz]
1.
1) transitive verb (past & past p lost)2) ( mislay) perder*I've lost my key — he perdido or se me ha perdido la llave
to lose one's way — perderse*
3) ( be deprived of) \<\<sight/territory/right\>\> perder*4)a) ( fail to keep) \<\<customers/popularity/speed\>\> perder*we are losing our best teachers to industry — los mejores profesores se nos están yendo a trabajar a la industria
b) ( rid oneself of) \<\<inhibitions\>\> perder*to lose weight — adelgazar*, perder* peso
5)a) ( shake off) \<\<pursuer\>\> deshacerse* deb) ( lose sight of) perder* de vista6) ( confuse) confundiryou've lost me there! — no entiendo, no te sigo
7) ( cause to lose) costar*, hacer* perdertheir hesitation lost them the contract — la falta de decisión les costó or les hizo perder el contrato
8)a) ( miss) \<\<train/flight/connection\>\> perder*b) ( let pass) \<\<time/opportunity\>\> perder*9) ( fail to win) \<\<game/battle/election\>\> perder*
2.
vi1)a) ( be beaten) \<\<team/contestant/party\>\> perder*to lose TO somebody — perder* frente a alguien
b) losing pres p <team/party> perdedorto be on the losing side — ser* de los perdedores
2)a) ( suffer losses) perder*to lose on a deal — salir* perdiendo en un negocio
b) ( be less effective) perder*the poem loses in translation — el poema pierde con la traducción or al ser traducido
3) \<\<watch/clock\>\> atrasar, atrasarse
3.
v reflPhrasal Verbs:- lose out -
5 soak
1. transitive verbsoak oneself in the sun — sich in der Sonne aalen (ugs.)
2) (wet) nass machen; durchnässen; durchtränken [Erde]soak somebody from head to foot — jemanden von Kopf bis Fuß durchnässen
2. intransitive verba rag soaked in petrol — ein mit Benzin getränkter Lappen
1) (steep)put something in something to soak — etwas in etwas (Dat.) einweichen
lie soaking in the bath — [Person:] sich im Bad durchweichen lassen
2) (drain) [Feuchtigkeit, Nässe:] sickern3. noungive something a [good] soak — etwas [gründlich] einweichen
Phrasal Verbs:- academic.ru/91807/soak_in">soak in- soak into- soak through- soak up* * *[səuk]2) (to make very wet: That shower has completely soaked my clothes.) durchtränken3) ((with in, into, through etc) (of a liquid) to penetrate: The blood from his wound has soaked right through the bandage.) sickern•- soaked- -soaked
- soaking
- soaking wet
- soak up* * *[səʊk, AM soʊk]I. nthere's nothing like a good long \soak in the bath ( hum) es geht doch nichts über ein genüssliches langes BadII. vt1. (immerse)to \soak dry beans/stains getrocknete Bohnen/Flecken einweichento \soak a fruit in brandy eine Frucht in Brandy einlegen2. (make wet)▪ to \soak sb/sth jdn/etw durchnässen4. (study)5. COMPUTto \soak a program/device ein Programm nt/ein Gerät nt ununterbrochen laufen lassenIII. vi1. (immerse) einweichen lassento leave sth to \soak [overnight] etw [über Nacht] einweichen [lassen]* * *[səʊk]1. vt1) (= wet) durchnässen2) (= steep) einweichen (in in +dat)to soak oneself in sth (fig) — sich in etw (acc) vertiefen
3) (inf) the rich etc schröpfento soak sb for sth — jdn um etw angehen
2. vi1)(= steep)
leave it to soak — weichen Sie es ein; (in dye) lassen Sie die Farbe einziehento soak in a bath — sich einweichen (inf)
2)(= penetrate)
rain has soaked through the ceiling — der Regen ist durch die Decke gesickert3. n1)(= act of soaking)
give the washing a good soak —the garden needs a soak — der Garten muss gründlich bewässert werden
* * *soak [səʊk]A v/t1. sich vollsaugen, durchtränkt werden:soaking wet tropfnass2. sickern:soak in (through) ein-(durch)sickern4. umg saufenB v/t1. etwas einweichen2. durchtränken, -nässen, -feuchten:soaked in blood blutgetränkt, -triefend;in mit)4. soak in einsaugen:a) aufsaugen,b) fig Profit etc schlucken,c) fig Wissen etc in sich aufnehmen5. soak o.s. in fig sich ganz versenken in (akk)6. umg saufen:soak o.s. sich volllaufen lassen;soaked voll7. US sla) jemanden verdreschen8. sl jemanden schröpfen, ausnehmenC s1. Einweichen n, Durchtränken n:give sth a soak etwas einweichen2. TECH Imprägnieren n3. Einweichflüssigkeit f4. umga) Säufer(in)b) Sauferei f5. Br umg Dusche f umg, Regenguss m* * *1. transitive verb1) (steep) einweichen [Wäsche in Lauge]; eintauchen [Brot in Milch]2) (wet) nass machen; durchnässen; durchtränken [Erde]2. intransitive verb1) (steep)put something in something to soak — etwas in etwas (Dat.) einweichen
lie soaking in the bath — [Person:] sich im Bad durchweichen lassen
2) (drain) [Feuchtigkeit, Nässe:] sickern3. noungive something a [good] soak — etwas [gründlich] einweichen
Phrasal Verbs:- soak in- soak up* * *n.Durchtränken n.Dusche -n f.Regenguss m.Sauferei -en f.Säufer - m. (in) v.imprägnieren (mit) v. v.durchdringen v.durchfeuchten v.durchnässen v.durchsickern v.durchtränken v.durchtränkt werden ausdr.einsickern v.einweichen v.etwas einweichen ausdr.jemanden schröpfen ausdr.jemanden verdreschen ausdr.langsam eindringen ausdr.saufen v.(§ p.,pp.: soff, gesoffen)sich vollsaugen v.sickern v.tränken v.weichen (in Wasser) v. -
6 plunge
1. verb1) (to throw oneself down (into deep water etc); to dive: He plunged into the river.) lanzarse, zambullirse, tirarse de cabeza2) (to push (something) violently or suddenly into: He plunged a knife into the meat.) clavar, meter
2. noun(an act of plunging; a dive: He took a plunge into the pool.) zambullida, chapuzón- plunger- take the plunge
plunge vb1. zambullir / sumergir2. caer / precipitarsethe car went off the road and plunged into the sea el coche se salió de la carretera y se precipitó al martr[plʌnʤ]1 (dive) zambullida, chapuzón nombre masculino2 (fall) caída, descenso2 (drop - prices etc) caer en picado, desplomarse3 SMALLMARITIME/SMALL cabecear\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto take the plunge dar el paso decisivo1) immerse: sumergir2) thrust: hundir, clavarplunge vi1) dive: zambullirse (en el agua)2) : meterse precipitadamente o violentamentethey plunged into war: se enfrascaron en una guerrahe plunged into depression: cayó en la depresión3) descend: descender en picadathe road plunges dizzily: la calle desciende vertiginosamenteplunge n1) dive: zambullida f2) drop: descenso m abruptothe plunge in prices: el desplome de los preciosn.• derrumbamiento s.m.• zambullida s.f.• zampuzo s.m.v.• arrojar v.• hundir v.• sumergir v.• zambullir v.
I
1. plʌndʒa) (immerse, thrust)to plunge something INTO something — \<\<into liquid\>\> sumergir* or meter algo en algo
she plunged the knife into his heart — le hundió or le clavó el cuchillo en el corazón
b) (into state, condition)
2.
vi2)a) ( slope downward steeply) \<\<road/path\>\> descender* bruscamenteb) ( drop) \<\<price/temperature/popularity\>\> caer* en picada or (Esp) en picado, desplomarse
II
a) ( in water) zambullida f, chapuzón mto take the plunge — ( take a risk) arriesgarse*, jugarse* el todo por el todo; ( get married) casarse, dar* el paso
b) ( fall) caída fc) (of price, value) caída f; ( of temperature) descenso m[plʌndʒ]shares took a plunge — las acciones cayeron en picada or (Esp) en picado
1. N1) (=dive) (from bank etc) salto m ; (under water) zambullida f ; (by professional diver) inmersión f ; (=bathe) baño m2) (fig) [of currency etc] caída f repentina, desplome m- take the plunge3) * (=rash investment) inversión f arriesgada2. VT1) (=immerse) sumergir, hundir ( into en)2) (=thrust) arrojar3) (fig)New York was suddenly plunged into darkness — Nueva York se encontró de repente sumida en la oscuridad
3. VI1) (=dive) arrojarse, tirarse; (into water) lanzarse, zambullirse2) (=fall) caer, hundirse; [road, cliff] precipitarsehe plunged from a fifth storey window — (=threw himself) se arrojó desde una ventana del quinto piso; (=fell) cayó desde una ventana del quinto piso
the aircraft plunged into the sea off Dover — el avión cayó al or se precipitó en el mar a la altura de Dover
3) [ship] cabecear; [horse] corcovear4) [share prices, currency etc] desplomarse5) (fig) (=rush) lanzarse, precipitarsehe plunged into a monologue on Plato — se puso a soltar or emprendió un monólogo sobre Platón
4.CPDplunge pool N — (in sauna) piscina f de contraste
* * *
I
1. [plʌndʒ]a) (immerse, thrust)to plunge something INTO something — \<\<into liquid\>\> sumergir* or meter algo en algo
she plunged the knife into his heart — le hundió or le clavó el cuchillo en el corazón
b) (into state, condition)
2.
vi2)a) ( slope downward steeply) \<\<road/path\>\> descender* bruscamenteb) ( drop) \<\<price/temperature/popularity\>\> caer* en picada or (Esp) en picado, desplomarse
II
a) ( in water) zambullida f, chapuzón mto take the plunge — ( take a risk) arriesgarse*, jugarse* el todo por el todo; ( get married) casarse, dar* el paso
b) ( fall) caída fc) (of price, value) caída f; ( of temperature) descenso mshares took a plunge — las acciones cayeron en picada or (Esp) en picado
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7 submerge
1. transitive verb1) (place under water)submerge something [in the water] — etwas eintauchen od. ins Wasser tauchen
2) (inundate) [Wasser:] überschwemmen2. intransitive verbabtauchen (Seemannsspr.)* * *[səb'mə:‹](to cover with, or sink under, water or other liquid: I watched the submarine submerging.) untertauchen- academic.ru/71659/submerged">submerged- submergence
- submersion* * *sub·merge[səbˈmɜ:ʤ, AM -ˈmɜ:rʤ]I. vt2. (override)▪ to \submerge sth etw vereinnahmenwork on the dictionary began to \submerge his other interests die Arbeit an dem Wörterbuch ließ ihn seine anderen Interessen allmählich vernachlässigen3. (immerse)4. (inundate)▪ to \submerge sth etw überschwemmen [o überfluten] [o unter Wasser setzenII. vi abtauchen, untertauchen* * *[səb'mɜːdZ]1. vtuntertauchen; (= flood) überschwemmento submerge oneself in sth (fig) — ganz in etw (acc) versinken
2. vi(diver, submarine) tauchen* * *A v/t2. überschwemmen, unter Wasser setzen3. figa) unterdrückenb) übertönenB v/i1. untertauchen, -sinken* * *1. transitive verbsubmerge something [in the water] — etwas eintauchen od. ins Wasser tauchen
2) (inundate) [Wasser:] überschwemmen2. intransitive verbabtauchen (Seemannsspr.)* * *v.tauchen (U-Boot) v.untertauchen v. -
8 plunge
I [plʌndʒ]1) (from height) tuffo m.to take a plunge — (dive) tuffarsi
2) econ. brusca caduta f., crollo m. (in di)••II 1. [plʌndʒ]to plunge sth. into sth. — affondare qcs. in qcs.
2.to be plunged into — fig. sprofondare in [ crisis]; essere coinvolto in [ strike]; essere sommerso da [ debt]; essere avvolto da [ darkness]
1) [ person] (dive) tuffarsi; (fall) cadere; [ plane] picchiare, scendere in picchiata; [ road] scendere ripidamente; [ cliff] cadere a picco; fig. [rate, value] crollare2) fig. (embark on)to plunge into — intraprendere [activity, career]; entrare in [chaos, crisis]
•* * *1. verb1) (to throw oneself down (into deep water etc); to dive: He plunged into the river.) tuffarsi2) (to push (something) violently or suddenly into: He plunged a knife into the meat.) conficcare2. noun(an act of plunging; a dive: He took a plunge into the pool.) tuffo, immersione- plunger- take the plunge* * *plunge /plʌndʒ/n.2 (fam.) nuotata5 (comm.: di prezzi, quotazioni, ecc.) caduta a picco (o verticale); crollo; tonfo (fam.): the plunge in prices, la caduta a picco dei prezzi6 (fam.) investimento poco prudente; speculazione avventata7 (geol.) angolo d'inclinazione● plunge pool, (geogr.) buca ( sotto una cascata); ( anche) piccola piscina; vasca idromassaggio □ (fig.) to take the plunge, saltare il fosso; decidersi; buttarsi (fam.); fare il gran passo.♦ (to) plunge /plʌndʒ/A v. t.1 immergere ( anche fig.); tuffare: to plunge one's face into the water, immergere il viso nell'acqua2 (fig.) gettare; precipitare; spingere: to plunge a room into darkness, gettare una stanza nell'oscurità; to plunge the nation into war, (far) precipitare la nazione nella guerraB v. i.1 immergersi ( anche fig.); tuffarsi: to plunge into water, tuffarsi nell'acqua; I plunged into his latest novel, mi immersi nella lettura del suo ultimo romanzo2 ( sport) tuffarsi (rif. al portiere, ecc.): ( rugby) to plunge over the Redskins' line, tuffarsi oltre la linea di meta dei Redskin3 (fig.) gettarsi; buttarsi; lanciarsi; precipitarsi; entrare improvvisamente; salire (o scendere) a precipizio: to plunge into the thick of the jungle, gettarsi nel folto della giungla; to plunge down a steep slope, buttarsi giù per un ripido pendio; to plunge into a room, precipitarsi in una stanza; (fig.) to plunge into a discussion, lanciarsi in una discussione; to plunge upstairs [downstairs], salire [scendere] le scale a precipizio5 (comm.: di prezzi, quotazioni, monete, ecc.) calare all'improvviso; cadere a picco (o verticalmente); crollare; fare un tonfo (fam.)7 giocare grosso; puntare forte● to plunge into debt, ingolfarsi nei debiti □ (econ.) to plunge into recession, cadere (o precipitare) in recessione □ to be plunged in thought, essere immerso nei pensieri.* * *I [plʌndʒ]1) (from height) tuffo m.to take a plunge — (dive) tuffarsi
2) econ. brusca caduta f., crollo m. (in di)••II 1. [plʌndʒ]to plunge sth. into sth. — affondare qcs. in qcs.
2.to be plunged into — fig. sprofondare in [ crisis]; essere coinvolto in [ strike]; essere sommerso da [ debt]; essere avvolto da [ darkness]
1) [ person] (dive) tuffarsi; (fall) cadere; [ plane] picchiare, scendere in picchiata; [ road] scendere ripidamente; [ cliff] cadere a picco; fig. [rate, value] crollare2) fig. (embark on)to plunge into — intraprendere [activity, career]; entrare in [chaos, crisis]
• -
9 plunge
1. transitive verb2) (fig.)plunged in thought — in Gedanken versunken
2. intransitive verbbe plunged into darkness — in Dunkelheit getaucht sein (geh.)
1)3. nounplunge into something — (lit. or fig.) in etwas (Akk.) stürzen
Sprung, dertake the plunge — (fig. coll.) den Sprung wagen
* * *1. verb1) (to throw oneself down (into deep water etc); to dive: He plunged into the river.) tauchen2. noun(an act of plunging; a dive: He took a plunge into the pool.) der (Kopf-)Sprung- academic.ru/56302/plunger">plunger- take the plunge* * *[plʌnʤ]I. nto make a \plunge tauchena sixty-foot \plunge into the sea sechzig Fuß unter der Meeresoberfläche2. (swim)\plunge [in the pool] Schwimmen [im Pool] nt kein plthere has been a \plunge in the value of the dollar today der Wert des Dollar ist heute dramatisch gefallenthe \plunge of the dollar der Sturz des Dollara \plunge in profits dramatisch sinkende Profitea \plunge in value dramatischer Wertverlust4.II. vi1. (fall) stürzenthe Niagara Falls \plunges 55.5 metres die Niagarafälle stürzen 55,5 m in die Tiefewe \plunged into the sea wir sprangen ins Meerto \plunge to one's death in den Tod stürzen3. (dash) stürzenshe \plunged forward sie warf sich nach vorneIII. vt1. (immerse)2. (thrust)to \plunge a dagger/knife/needle into sb jdn mit einem Dolch/einem Messer/einer Nadel stechen3. (suddenly cause)the blackout plunged the town into darkness der Stromausfall tauchte die Stadt in Dunkelheit* * *[plʌndZ]1. vt1) (= thrust) stecken; (into water etc) tauchenhe plunged the knife into his victim's back — er jagte seinem Opfer das Messer in den Rücken
to plunge one's hand into sth — seine Hand tief in etw (acc) (hinein)stecken
2) (fig)to plunge the country into war/debt — das Land in einen Krieg/in Schulden stürzen
the room was plunged into darkness — das Zimmer war in Dunkelheit getaucht
we were plunged into darkness —
2. vi1) (= dive) tauchen; (goalkeeper) sich werfen, hechten2) (= rush esp downward) stürzenhe plunged into/through the crowd — er stürzte sich in/wühlte sich durch die Massen
3) (share prices, currency etc) stürzen, stark fallensales have plunged by 24% — die Verkaufszahlen sind um 24% gefallen
4) (fig) (into debate, studies, preparations, debt) sich stürzen (into in +acc); (into recession) stürzen (into in +acc)6) (neckline) fallen7) (= speculate rashly) sich verspekulieren3. vr(into studies, job etc) sich stürzen (into in +acc)4. nhe enjoys a quick plunge before breakfast — vor dem Frühstück schwimmt er gern eine Runde
2) (= downward movement) Sturz mhis plunge into debt began when his business collapsed — nach dem Bankrott seines Geschäftes stürzte er sich in Schulden
shares took a plunge after the government's announcement — nach der Ankündigung der Regierung kam es zu einem Kurssturz
a plunge in the value of the pound — ein Kurssturz m des Pfunds
4) (= rash investment) Fehlspekulation f* * *plunge [plʌndʒ]A v/t1. (ein)tauchen (in, into in akk) (auch fig):plunge o.s. into debts,B v/i1. (ein)tauchen (in, into in akk)2. stürzen, stürmen ( beide:into in akk)5. sich nach vorn werfen (Pferd etc)7. stürzen (Preise, Kurse etc)8. umg hasardieren, alles auf eine Karte setzenC s1. (Ein)Tauchen ntake the plunge fig den (Ab)Sprung wagen4. Sprung-, Tauchbecken n* * *1. transitive verb1) (thrust violently) stecken; (into liquid) tauchen2) (fig.)2. intransitive verb1)plunge into something — (lit. or fig.) in etwas (Akk.) stürzen
2) (descend suddenly) [Straße usw.:] steil abfallen3. nounSprung, dertake the plunge — (fig. coll.) den Sprung wagen
* * *n.Talfahrt -en f. v.eintauchen v.tauchen v. -
10 soak
soak [səʊk]1. nounfaire tremper (in dans)• to be/get soaked to the skin être trempé/se faire tremper jusqu'aux os• to soak o.s. in the bath prendre un long bain* * *[səʊk] 1.1)to give something a soak — GB faire tremper quelque chose
2) (colloq) ( drunk) poivrot/-ote (colloq) m/f2.transitive verb1) ( wet) tremper2) ( immerse) faire tremper3.1) ( be immersed) tremper2) ( be absorbed)4. 5.soaked past participle adjective trempé6.to be soaked through ou soaked to the skin — être trempé jusqu'aux os
- soaked combining formPhrasal Verbs:- soak in- soak off- soak up
См. также в других словарях:
immerge — (ˈ)i(m)|mərj verb Etymology: Latin immergere more at immerse transitive verb archaic : to plunge (something) into, under, or within a fluid or other medium : immerse … Useful english dictionary
immerge — intransitive verb (immerged; immerging) Etymology: Latin immergere Date: 1706 to plunge into or immerse oneself in something … New Collegiate Dictionary
immerge — v.i.,v.t. plunge in; immerse oneself in something. ♦ immergence, n … Dictionary of difficult words
dip — vb 1 Dip, immerse, submerge, duck, souse, dunk are comparable when meaning to plunge a person or thing into or as if into liquid. Dip implies a momentary or partial plunging into a liquid or a slight or cursory entrance into a subject {the priest … New Dictionary of Synonyms
soak — verb 1》 make or become thoroughly wet by immersion in liquid. 2》 make extremely wet: the rain soaked their hair. 3》 (soak something up) absorb a liquid. ↘expose oneself to or experience something beneficial or enjoyable. ↘(soak oneself… … English new terms dictionary
soak — ► VERB 1) make or become thoroughly wet by immersion in liquid. 2) (of a liquid) penetrate or permeate completely. 3) (soak up) absorb (a liquid). 4) (soak up) expose oneself to (something beneficial or enjoyable). 5) (soak oneself in) i … English terms dictionary
Householder (Buddhism) — DisplayTranslations title=Translations of Householder bordercolor=#af4630 | borderwidth=2px headercolor=#FFD068 | headertextcolor=DarkBlue rowcolor=#FFFEE8 | rowtextcolor=purple fontsize=100% English | householder Pali | IAST|gihin, gahattha,… … Wikipedia
merge — verb combine or be combined to form a single entity. ↘blend or cause to blend gradually into something else. ↘(usu. merge something in) Law absorb (a title or estate) in another. Origin C17 (in the sense immerse oneself ): from L. mergere to dip … English new terms dictionary
merge — ► VERB 1) combine or be combined into a whole. 2) blend gradually into something else. ORIGIN originally in the sense «immerse oneself in an activity»: from Latin mergere to dip, plunge … English terms dictionary
soak — [sōk] vt. [ME soken < OE socian < base of sucan: see SUCK] 1. to make thoroughly wet; drench or saturate [soaked to the skin by the rain] 2. to submerge or keep in a liquid, as for thorough wetting, softening, for hydrotherapy, etc. 3. a)… … English World dictionary
Baptism — This article is about the Christian religious ceremony. For other uses, see Baptism (disambiguation). Baptism of Neophytes by Masaccio, 15th century, Brancacci Chapel, Florence.[ … Wikipedia