-
1 negotiate
ni'ɡəuʃieit1) (to bargain or discuss a subject in order to agree.) negociar2) (to arrange (a treaty, payment etc), usually after a long discussion.) negociar3) (to get past (an obstacle or difficulty).) salvar•- negotiation
negotiate vb negociartr[nɪ'gəʊʃɪeɪt]1 negociar2 (obstacle) salvar1 negociar: negociarnegotiate vt1) : negociar, gestionarto negotiate a treaty: negociar un trato2) : salvar, franquearthey negotiated the obstacles: salvaron los obstáculosto negotiate a turn: tomar una curvav.• agenciar v.• gestionar v.• negociar v.• tramitar v.nɪ'gəʊʃieɪt
1.
intransitive verb (confer, talk) negociar
2.
vt1) ( obtain by discussion) \<\<contracteaty\>\> negociar; \<\<loan\>\> gestionar, tramitar2) (pass, deal with) \<\<obstacle\>\> sortear, salvar; \<\<difficulty\>\> superarthey negotiated the rocky path — salvaron or pasaron el camino rocoso
3) ( Fin) \<\<bill/draft\>\> negociar[nɪ'ɡǝʊʃɪeɪt]1. VT1) (=arrange) [+ treaty] negociar; [+ loan, deal] negociar, gestionar2) (=get round, over) [+ bend] tomar; [+ hill] subir; [+ obstacle] salvar, franquear; [+ river, stream] pasar, cruzar2.VI negociarto negotiate for peace — negociar para obtener la paz, entablar negociaciones de paz
* * *[nɪ'gəʊʃieɪt]
1.
intransitive verb (confer, talk) negociar
2.
vt1) ( obtain by discussion) \<\<contract/treaty\>\> negociar; \<\<loan\>\> gestionar, tramitar2) (pass, deal with) \<\<obstacle\>\> sortear, salvar; \<\<difficulty\>\> superarthey negotiated the rocky path — salvaron or pasaron el camino rocoso
3) ( Fin) \<\<bill/draft\>\> negociar
См. также в других словарях:
turn — I n. change of direction direction 1) to make, negotiate a turn (to negotiate a difficult turn) 2) to take a turn (the conversation took an interesting turn) 3) a left; right; sharp turn; U turn (to make a U turn) 4) a turn to (a turn to the… … Combinatory dictionary
negotiate — verb ( ated; ating) Etymology: Latin negotiatus, past participle of negotiari to carry on business, from negotium business, from neg not + otium leisure more at negate Date: 1599 intransitive verb to confer with another so as to arrive at the… … New Collegiate Dictionary
turn — [n1] revolution, curving about face, angle, bend, bias, bow, branch, change, changeabout, circle, circuit, circulation, circumvolution, corner, curve, cycle, departure, detour, deviation, direction, drift, flection, flexure, fork, gyration, gyre … New thesaurus
negotiate — verb 1 try to reach an agreement ADVERB ▪ carefully ▪ a carefully negotiated series of concessions ▪ successfully ▪ effectively ▪ individually … Collocations dictionary
turn — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun 1 act of turning sb/sth around ADJECTIVE ▪ complete, full, half, quarter ▪ It slowly spun for three complete turns. ▪ a full turn of the handle to the right … Collocations dictionary
turn — 1. verb 1) the wheels were still turning Syn: go around, revolve, rotate, spin, roll, circle, wheel, whirl, twirl, gyrate, swivel, pivot 2) I turned and headed back Syn … Thesaurus of popular words
turn over — Synonyms and related words: abalienate, alien, alienate, amortize, assign, barter, be lost, bequeath, break, brood over, capsize, careen, carry over, cede, chaw, chew over, circulate, close out, come across with, communicate, con over, confer,… … Moby Thesaurus
negotiate — Synonyms and related words: abalienate, act between, adjust, advise with, agree, alien, alienate, amortize, arbitrate, arrange, assign, bargain, barter, beat down, bequeath, bid, bid for, bounce, bound, buck, buckjump, call in, capriole, cede,… … Moby Thesaurus
negotiate a curve — make a turn (in a vehicle) … English contemporary dictionary
Handbrake turn — The handbrake turn is a driving technique used to deliberately slide a car sideways, either for the purpose of negotiating a very tight bend quickly, or for turning around well within the vehicle s own turning circle.The driver starts by using… … Wikipedia
Countersteering — For the similar technique used in automobiles, see Opposite lock. Graphs showing the lean and steer angle response of an otherwise uncontrolled typical bike, traveling at a forward speed in its stable range (in this case 6 m/s), to a steer torque … Wikipedia