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1 dimettere
dismiss (da from)da ospedali discharge, release (da from)da carceri release (da from)* * *dimettere v.tr.1 to discharge; (dir.) to release, to discharge: fu dimesso ieri dall'ospedale, he was discharged from hospital yesterday; l'imputato fu riconosciuto innocente e dimesso, the defendant was found innocent and released2 ( da una carica) to dismiss, to discharge: fu dimesso dal suo ufficio, he was dismissed from his position◘ dimettersi v.rifl. to resign.* * *1. [di'mettere]vb irreg vt2. vr (dimettersi)dimettersi (da) — to resign, hand o give in one's notice
* * *[di'mettere] 1.verbo transitivo1) (destituire) to discharge, to dismiss [ministro, ambasciatore]2) (fare uscire) to discharge [ paziente]2.verbo pronominale dimettersi [ministro, funzionario, impiegato] to resign, to quit* ( dal posto di as)* * *dimettere/di'mettere/ [60]1 (destituire) to discharge, to dismiss [ministro, ambasciatore]2 (fare uscire) to discharge [ paziente]II dimettersi verbo pronominale[ministro, funzionario, impiegato] to resign, to quit* ( dal posto di as). -
2 saldare
"to weld;Verschweissen;unir por soldagem"* * *weldossa setfattura pay (off)* * *saldare v.tr.1 (metall.) to weld; ( brasare) to solder, to braze: saldare all'arco elettrico, to arc-weld; saldare a punti, to spot-weld; saldare a scintillio, to flash-weld; saldare ad argento, to silver-solder; saldare a ottone, to braze, to hard-solder; saldare a stagno, to solder, to soft-solder2 (fig.) ( collegare) to link up with (sthg.), to fit in with (sthg.), to dovetail into (sthg.), to tie up with (sthg.): il terzo atto della commedia non è ben saldato con il resto, the third act of the play does not link up well with (o does not fit in well with o does not dovetail well into) the rest of the play3 (comm.) to pay* (off), to settle, to square up, to quit, to balance, to liquidate: saldare un conto, una fattura, to pay (o to settle) a bill, an invoice; saldare il conto del sarto, to pay the tailor's bill (o to settle up with the tailor o to square up with the tailor); saldare i conti, to settle (o to balance) one's accounts; saldare un debito, to settle (o to quit o to discharge) a debt; saldare i creditori, to settle with creditors4 ( ossa, fratture ecc.) to join.◘ saldarsi v.intr.pron.1 (metall.) to weld; to solder3 (fig.) ( collegarsi) to tie up, to link, to fit: questi fatti non si saldano bene tra di loro, these facts don't tie up (o don't link up) very well; le loro due versioni non si saldano bene, their two versions don't tie up very well (o don't fit very well together).* * *[sal'dare]1. vt2) (conto) to settle, pay, (fattura, debito) to paysaldare un conto (con qn) — to settle an account (with sb), fig to settle a score (with sb)
2. vip (saldarsi)(ferita) to heal* * *[sal'dare] 1.verbo transitivo1) tecn. to solder, to weld2) med. to join [ frattura]3) fig. (collegare) to join, to link2.saldare in contanti, tramite assegno — to pay cash, by cheque
verbo pronominale saldarsi1) tecn. [ metalli] to solder, to weld2) med. [ ossa] to set*, to knit* (together)••saldare i conti con qcn. — to get even with sb
* * *saldare/sal'dare/ [1]1 tecn. to solder, to weld2 med. to join [ frattura]3 fig. (collegare) to join, to link4 comm. to pay*, to settle [ conto]; to pay* (off), to clear [ debito]; saldare in contanti, tramite assegno to pay cash, by chequeII saldarsi verbo pronominale1 tecn. [ metalli] to solder, to weld2 med. [ ossa] to set*, to knit* (together)saldare i conti con qcn. to get even with sb.
См. также в других словарях:
quit — I. adjective Etymology: Middle English quite, quit, from Anglo French Date: 13th century released from obligation, charge, or penalty; especially free II. verb (quit; also quitted; quitting) Etymology: Middle English quiten, quitten, from … New Collegiate Dictionary
quit — I (discontinue) verb abandon, abdicate, abjure, abort, acknowledge defeat, admit defeat, apostatize, arrest, back out, become inactive, break off, bring to an end, call a halt, capitulate, cause a stoppage, cause to halt, cease, cease progress,… … Law dictionary
Quit — Quit, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Quit} or {Quitted}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Quitting}.] [OE. quiten, OF. quiter, quitier, cuitier, F. quitter, to acquit, quit, LL. quietare, fr. L. quietare to calm, to quiet, fr. quietus quiet. See {Quiet}, a., and cf.… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Quit — Quit, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Quit} or {Quitted}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Quitting}.] [OE. quiten, OF. quiter, quitier, cuitier, F. quitter, to acquit, quit, LL. quietare, fr. L. quietare to calm, to quiet, fr. quietus quiet. See {Quiet}, a., and cf.… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
quit — [kwit] vt. QUIT or sometimes quitted, quitting, quit [ME quiten < OFr quiter < ML quittus, quietus, free: see QUIET] 1. to free (oneself) of 2. to discharge (a debt or obligation); repay 3. to stop having, using, or doing (something); give… … English World dictionary
quit|tance — «KWIHT uhns», noun. 1. a release from debt or obligation. 2. the paper certifying this; receipt: »He then folded the quittance, and put it under his cap (Scott). 3. the act of getting back at somebody; repayment; reprisal. SYNONYM( … Useful english dictionary
quit — quit1 quittable, adj. /kwit/, v., quit or quitted, quitting, adj. v.t. 1. to stop, cease, or discontinue: She quit what she was doing to help me paint the house. 2. to depart from; leave (a place or person): They quit the city for the seashore… … Universalium
quit — [[t]kwɪt[/t]] v. quit quit•ted, quit•ting, 1) to stop, cease, or discontinue 2) to depart from; leave (a place or person) 3) to resign; relinquish: He quit his claim to the throne[/ex] 4) to release one s hold of (something grasped) 5) to free or … From formal English to slang
quit — {{11}}quit (adj.) early 13c., free, clear, from O.Fr. quite free, clear, from L. quietus free (in M.L. free from war, debts, etc. ), also calm, resting (see QUIET (Cf. quiet)). {{12}}quit (v.) c.1200, to repay, discharge (a debt. etc.), from O.Fr … Etymology dictionary
quit — verb /kwɪt/ a) To pay (a debt, fine etc.). twyes smote I hym doune, thenne he promysed to quyte me on my best frynde, and so he wounded my sone [...]. b) To conduct oneself, acquit oneself, to behave (in a specified way). Vnthankfull wretch (said … Wiktionary
To quit cost — Quit Quit, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Quit} or {Quitted}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Quitting}.] [OE. quiten, OF. quiter, quitier, cuitier, F. quitter, to acquit, quit, LL. quietare, fr. L. quietare to calm, to quiet, fr. quietus quiet. See {Quiet}, a., and cf.… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English