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1 recuperar
v.to recover.recuperar el tiempo perdido to make up for lost timerecuperó la salud she got better, she recoveredrecuperó la libertad tras diez años en la cárcel he regained his freedom after ten years in prisonEllos rescataron el dinero They retrieved the money.* * *1 (gen) to recover, recuperate, retrieve1 (disgusto, emoción) to get over (de, -), recover (de, from)2 (enfermedad) to recover (de, from), recuperate (de, from)* * *verb1) to recover2) retrieve* * *1. VT1) (=recobrar)a) [+ bienes] to recover; [+ costes, pérdidas, inversión] to recoup, recoverno recuperamos el dinero robado — we didn't get the stolen money back, we didn't recover the stolen money más frm
b) [+ credibilidad, poder, libertad, control] to regain; [+ fuerzas] to get back, regainal verte recuperó la sonrisa — the smile came back o returned to her face when she saw you
nunca recuperó la memoria — she never got her memory back, she never regained o recovered her memory
c) [+ clase, día] to make upayer trabajaron el doble para recuperar el tiempo perdido — they worked double time yesterday to make up the time lost
d) (Inform) to retrieve2) (=reutilizar)a) [+ edificio] to restore; [+ tierras] to reclaim; [+ chatarra, vidrio] to salvageb) [del olvido] [+ artista, obra] to revive; [+ tradiciones] to restore, reviveesta exposición recupera a un gran pintor olvidado — this exhibition has revived a great but forgotten painter
3) (Educ) to retake, resittengo que recuperar una asignatura — I have to retake o resit one subject
2.See:* * *1.verbo transitivoa) <dinero/joyas/botín> to recover, get back; < pérdidas> to recoupb) < vista> to recoverrecuperar la salud — to get better, recover
recuperar la confianza en sí mismo — to regain o recover one's self-confidence
c) ( compensar)d) <examen/asignatura> to retake, make up (AmE)2.recuperarse v pronrecuperarse DE algo — de enfermedad to recover from something, recuperate from something (frml); de sorpresa/desgracia to get over something, recover from something
* * *= hit, recall, recoup, recover, retrieve, reclaim, effect + retrieval, recuperate, redeem, catch up on, resuscitate, give + a second life, turn + Nombre + (a)round, regain.Ex. FIB$3 will hit words where the stem 'FIB' is followed by no more than three characters.Ex. Word processing software available for use on mainframe computers, microcomputers and word processors was originally designed for application where it is convenient to be able to store a text, then recall this text, and re-use it with minor modifications, at a later date.Ex. If some records are acquired by only a limited number of libraries, it will be difficult to recoup the cost of creating and maintaining these records.Ex. In order to fulfil this function, the information which is stored in the library must be recovered, or retrieved, from the store.Ex. Step 1 Familiarisation: A searcher must be adequately familiar with that which he wishes to retrieve.Ex. The article ' Reclaiming our technological future' discusses the effects of electronic technology on the future development of libraries and librarians.Ex. Further, menu screens will be necessary until the user has specified the task that he wishes executed or the information that he wishes to retrieve sufficiently for execution or retrieval to be effected.Ex. Competition with superstores has forced them to recuperate sales by focusing on specific areas.Ex. Eliot somehow suggests that a mix of blood and electricity might yet redeem the petty materialism of the modern world that he had previously seen only as a wasteland.Ex. Non-book materials will need positive discrimination to catch up on the neglect in the past.Ex. An ambitious study of the interrelationships of folklore and literature, this book resuscitates the figure of the granny using oral history and fieldwork.Ex. This book will show you how to give a second life to everything from plastic containers to bubble wrap to pantyhose and more.Ex. When he was younger he really turned the library around, from a backwater, two-bit operation to the respected institution it is today.Ex. Once he regained his weight, he began to play like he did in 2006, when he won the tournament.----* ayudar a Alguien a recuperarse = help + Nombre + get on + Posesivo + feet.* fácil de recuperar = easily-retrievable.* recuperar de = resurrect from.* recuperar el aliento = catch + Posesivo + breath.* recuperar el conocimiento = regain + Posesivo + consciousness.* recuperar el prestigio = regain + Posesivo + prestige.* recuperar el sentido = regain + Posesivo + consciousness.* recuperar el tiempo perdido = make up for + lost time.* recuperar gastos = recoup + costs, recoup against + costs.* recuperar la confianza = boost + Posesivo + confidence, bolster + confidence.* recuperar la energía = regain + Posesivo + strength.* recuperar la fuerza = regain + Posesivo + strength, gain + strength.* recuperar la salud = regain + Posesivo + health.* recuperar las fuerzas = recoup + energy, gain + strength.* recuperar + Posesivo + antigua gloria = regain + Posesivo + former glory.* recuperar + Posesivo + antigua grandeza = regain + Posesivo + former glory.* recuperar + Posesivo + antiguo esplendor = regain + Posesivo + former glory.* recuperarse = rally + Reflexivo, find + Posesivo + feet, rebound, pick up, rally, turn + a corner, get + a second wind, get back into + the game, pick up + the pieces.* recuperarse de = reel from.* recuperarse totalmente = be up to strength.* * *1.verbo transitivoa) <dinero/joyas/botín> to recover, get back; < pérdidas> to recoupb) < vista> to recoverrecuperar la salud — to get better, recover
recuperar la confianza en sí mismo — to regain o recover one's self-confidence
c) ( compensar)d) <examen/asignatura> to retake, make up (AmE)2.recuperarse v pronrecuperarse DE algo — de enfermedad to recover from something, recuperate from something (frml); de sorpresa/desgracia to get over something, recover from something
* * *= hit, recall, recoup, recover, retrieve, reclaim, effect + retrieval, recuperate, redeem, catch up on, resuscitate, give + a second life, turn + Nombre + (a)round, regain.Ex: FIB$3 will hit words where the stem 'FIB' is followed by no more than three characters.
Ex: Word processing software available for use on mainframe computers, microcomputers and word processors was originally designed for application where it is convenient to be able to store a text, then recall this text, and re-use it with minor modifications, at a later date.Ex: If some records are acquired by only a limited number of libraries, it will be difficult to recoup the cost of creating and maintaining these records.Ex: In order to fulfil this function, the information which is stored in the library must be recovered, or retrieved, from the store.Ex: Step 1 Familiarisation: A searcher must be adequately familiar with that which he wishes to retrieve.Ex: The article ' Reclaiming our technological future' discusses the effects of electronic technology on the future development of libraries and librarians.Ex: Further, menu screens will be necessary until the user has specified the task that he wishes executed or the information that he wishes to retrieve sufficiently for execution or retrieval to be effected.Ex: Competition with superstores has forced them to recuperate sales by focusing on specific areas.Ex: Eliot somehow suggests that a mix of blood and electricity might yet redeem the petty materialism of the modern world that he had previously seen only as a wasteland.Ex: Non-book materials will need positive discrimination to catch up on the neglect in the past.Ex: An ambitious study of the interrelationships of folklore and literature, this book resuscitates the figure of the granny using oral history and fieldwork.Ex: This book will show you how to give a second life to everything from plastic containers to bubble wrap to pantyhose and more.Ex: When he was younger he really turned the library around, from a backwater, two-bit operation to the respected institution it is today.Ex: Once he regained his weight, he began to play like he did in 2006, when he won the tournament.* ayudar a Alguien a recuperarse = help + Nombre + get on + Posesivo + feet.* fácil de recuperar = easily-retrievable.* recuperar de = resurrect from.* recuperar el aliento = catch + Posesivo + breath.* recuperar el conocimiento = regain + Posesivo + consciousness.* recuperar el prestigio = regain + Posesivo + prestige.* recuperar el sentido = regain + Posesivo + consciousness.* recuperar el tiempo perdido = make up for + lost time.* recuperar gastos = recoup + costs, recoup against + costs.* recuperar la confianza = boost + Posesivo + confidence, bolster + confidence.* recuperar la energía = regain + Posesivo + strength.* recuperar la fuerza = regain + Posesivo + strength, gain + strength.* recuperar la salud = regain + Posesivo + health.* recuperar las fuerzas = recoup + energy, gain + strength.* recuperar + Posesivo + antigua gloria = regain + Posesivo + former glory.* recuperar + Posesivo + antigua grandeza = regain + Posesivo + former glory.* recuperar + Posesivo + antiguo esplendor = regain + Posesivo + former glory.* recuperarse = rally + Reflexivo, find + Posesivo + feet, rebound, pick up, rally, turn + a corner, get + a second wind, get back into + the game, pick up + the pieces.* recuperarse de = reel from.* recuperarse totalmente = be up to strength.* * *recuperar [A1 ]vt1 ‹dinero/joyas/botín› to recover, get back; ‹pérdidas› to recouprecuperamos las joyas pero no el dinero we got the jewels back o we recovered the jewels but not the moneypor fin recuperé todos los libros que había prestado I finally got back all the books I'd lent out2 ‹vista› to recoverrecuperó la salud she got well again, she recoveredpasé unos días en cama para recuperar fuerzas I stayed in bed for a couple of days to get my strength backnunca recuperó la confianza en sí mismo he never regained o recovered his self-confidence3(compensar): recuperar el tiempo perdido to make up for lost timeel sábado recuperaremos la clase de hoy we'll make up today's lesson on Saturdaytuve que recuperar los días que estuve enfermo I had to make up (for) the days I was off sick4 ‹delincuente› to rehabilitate6 ( Inf) to undeleterecuperarse DE algo ‹de una enfermedad› to recover FROM sth, get over sth, recuperate FROM sth ( frml); ‹de una sorpresa/una desgracia› to get over sth, recover FROM sthya está recuperado del accidente he has recovered from o got(ten) over the accident* * *
recuperar ( conjugate recuperar) verbo transitivo
‹ pérdidas› to recoup
‹ confianza› to regain;
recuperarse verbo pronominal recuperarse DE algo ‹ de enfermedad› to recover from sth, recuperate from sth (frml);
‹de sorpresa/desgracia› to get over sth, recover from sth
recuperar verbo transitivo
1 (un objeto) to recover, retrieve
2 (la salud, un sentido, etc) to recover, regain: recuperar las fuerzas, to get one's strength back
3 (el tiempo) to make up
4 (una asignatura) to retake
' recuperar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
amortizar
- desempeñar
- reanimarse
- reivindicar
- fuerza
English:
catch up
- claw back
- get back
- homeland
- make up
- recapture
- reclaim
- recoup
- recover
- regain
- repossess
- retrieve
- snatch back
- take back
- win back
- even
- get
* * *♦ vt1. [recobrar] [lo perdido] to recover;[espacios naturales] to reclaim; [horas de trabajo] to make up; [conocimiento] to regain;recuperar el tiempo perdido to make up for lost time;recuperó la salud she got better, she recovered;recuperó la vista she regained her sight, she got her sight back;no recuperaron el dinero invertido they didn't get back o recoup the money they invested;recuperó la libertad tras diez años en la cárcel he regained his freedom after ten years in prison;haremos un descanso para recuperar fuerzas we'll have a break to get our strength back2. [rehabilitar] [local, edificio] to refurbish4. [reciclar] to recover5. [examen] to retake, Br to resit;tengo que recuperar la física en septiembre I have to retake physics in September6. [en baloncesto] to steal* * *v/t1 tiempo make up3 exámen retake, Brre-sit4 en baloncesto steal* * *recuperar vt1) : to recover, to get back, to retrieve2) : to recuperate3) : to make up forrecuperar el tiempo perdido: to make up for lost time* * *recuperar vb1. (en general) to recover / to get backperdí el monedero, pero al día siguiente lo recuperé I lost my purse, but I got it back the next day2. (tiempo, clases) to make up3. (examen) to pass a resit -
2 recobrar
v.to recover.Reclamaron mucha tierra junto al mar They reclaimed a lot of land by the sea* * *1 (gen) to recover2 (conocimiento, fuerzas, esperanzas) to regain; (aliento) to get back3 (tiempo) to make up4 MILITAR to recapture1 (recuperarse) to recover (de, from), recuperate (de, from)* * *verbto recover, regain, retrieve* * *1.VT [+ salud] to recover, get back; [+ ciudad, fugitivo] to recapture; [+ amistad] to win backrecobrar el conocimiento — to regain consciousness, come to
solo ha recobrado parte del dinero que le robaron — he has recovered only part of the money stolen from him
el país ha recobrado la calma — the country is calm again, calm has returned to the country
2.See:* * *1.verbo transitivoa) < confianza> to regain; <salud/vista> to recoverrecobrar el conocimiento or el sentido — to come to o round, to regain consciousness
b) <dinero/botín/joyas> to recover, retrievec) <ciudad/plaza fuerte> to recapture2.recobrarse v pronrecobrarse DE algo — <de enfermedad/susto> to recover from something, get over something; < de pérdidas económicas> to recoup something
* * *= recapture, recuperate, recoup, regain.Ex. The success of the shilling part-issues of the 1840s prompted the appearance of shilling magazines carrying two or three serialized novels in each monthly number, and these in turn recaptured the bulk of the serial fiction market from the part-issues during the 1860s.Ex. Competition with superstores has forced them to recuperate sales by focusing on specific areas.Ex. If some records are acquired by only a limited number of libraries, it will be difficult to recoup the cost of creating and maintaining these records.Ex. Once he regained his weight, he began to play like he did in 2006, when he won the tournament.----* recobrar el conocimiento = regain + Posesivo + consciousness.* recobrar el sentido = regain + Posesivo + consciousness.* recobrar energía = get + a second wind.* recobrar entusiasmo = develop + renewed enthusiasm.* recobrar fuerza = gather + Reflexivo.* recobrar la energía = regain + Posesivo + strength.* recobrar la fuerza = regain + Posesivo + strength.* recobrar la salud = regain + Posesivo + health.* recobrarse = pick up + the pieces.* recobrarse de un golpe = lick + Posesivo + wounds.* * *1.verbo transitivoa) < confianza> to regain; <salud/vista> to recoverrecobrar el conocimiento or el sentido — to come to o round, to regain consciousness
b) <dinero/botín/joyas> to recover, retrievec) <ciudad/plaza fuerte> to recapture2.recobrarse v pronrecobrarse DE algo — <de enfermedad/susto> to recover from something, get over something; < de pérdidas económicas> to recoup something
* * *= recapture, recuperate, recoup, regain.Ex: The success of the shilling part-issues of the 1840s prompted the appearance of shilling magazines carrying two or three serialized novels in each monthly number, and these in turn recaptured the bulk of the serial fiction market from the part-issues during the 1860s.
Ex: Competition with superstores has forced them to recuperate sales by focusing on specific areas.Ex: If some records are acquired by only a limited number of libraries, it will be difficult to recoup the cost of creating and maintaining these records.Ex: Once he regained his weight, he began to play like he did in 2006, when he won the tournament.* recobrar el conocimiento = regain + Posesivo + consciousness.* recobrar el sentido = regain + Posesivo + consciousness.* recobrar energía = get + a second wind.* recobrar entusiasmo = develop + renewed enthusiasm.* recobrar fuerza = gather + Reflexivo.* recobrar la energía = regain + Posesivo + strength.* recobrar la fuerza = regain + Posesivo + strength.* recobrar la salud = regain + Posesivo + health.* recobrarse = pick up + the pieces.* recobrarse de un golpe = lick + Posesivo + wounds.* * *recobrar [A1 ]vt1 ‹confianza› to regain; ‹salud› to recovernunca recobró la confianza en sí mismo he never regained his self-confidencecuando recobró la vista when she recovered her sightcuando recobré el conocimiento or el sentido when I came to o round, when I regained consciousnesstuvo que sentarse un rato para recobrar las fuerzas/el aliento she had to sit down for a while to get her strength/breath backla ciudad recobró ayer la normalidad the city returned to normal yesterday2 ‹dinero/botín/joyas› to recover, retrieve3 ‹ciudad/plaza fuerte› to recapture, retake1 (recuperarse) recobrarse DE algo ‹de una enfermedad› to recover FROM sth, get over sth, recuperate FROM sth ( frml); ‹de un susto› to recover FROM sth, get over sth* * *
recobrar ( conjugate recobrar) verbo transitivo
‹salud/vista› to recover;
recobrarse verbo pronominal recobrarse DE algo ‹de enfermedad/susto› to recover from sth, get over sth;
‹ de pérdidas económicas› to recoup sth
recobrar verbo transitivo
1 (un objeto) to recover, retrieve
2 (la salud, un sentido, etc) to recover, regain: espera, tengo que recobrar el aliento, wait, I have to get my breath back
' recobrar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
conciencia
- conocimiento
- habla
- reanimarse
- sanar
- sentida
- sentido
- reanimar
English:
recover
- regain
- repossess
- compose
- get
- rally
- strength
* * *♦ vt[recuperar] to recover;recobrar el tiempo perdido to make up for lost time;recobrar el juicio to regain one's sanity;la región ha recobrado la calma tras los disturbios peace has returned to the area after the disturbances* * *v/t recover;recobrar el conocimiento regain consciousness, come around;recobrar las fuerzas get one’s strength back* * *recobrar vt: to recover, to regain* * *recobrar vb to recover -
3 reponer
v.1 to replace.Ellos reponen el queso They replace the cheese.Ellos repusieron el dinero They replaced the money.2 to rerun (Cine & Teatro).3 to fill in for, to replace.Ellos repusieron a María They filled in for Mary.4 to reimburse.Ellos repusieron el préstamo They reimbursed the loan.5 to reinstate.Ellos repusieron el reglamento They reinstated the rules.* * *1 (devolver) to put back, replace, restore2 (reemplazar) to replace4 (replicar) to reply, retort1 (salud, susto) to recover* * *( pp repuesto)1. VT1) [+ productos, surtido] to replenish2) (=devolver) [+ objeto dañado] to replace, pay for, pay for the replacement of3) [en un cargo] to reinstate4) (=recuperar)5) (Teat) to revive, put on again; (TV) to repeat2.See:* * *1.verbo transitivo1)a) ( reemplazar) < existencias> to replace; < dinero> to put back, repayb) <funcionario/trabajador> to reinstatec) < obra> to put... on again, revive; < serie> to repeat, rerun; < película> to show... again2) ( replicar) to reply2.reponerse v pron to recover* * *= replenish, rerun [re-run], re-release [rerelease].Ex. The supply would need to be replenished when the multiple copies had been used, so a master would be kept - usually for offset litho reproduction or for cutting a stencil on an electronic scanner.Ex. Sometimes it is necessary to rerun the setup process, either to install a new database driver or change other configuration settings.Ex. He is planning to re-release some of the most famous songs from his back catalogue in an attempt to reignite his career.----* reponer fuerzas = gather + energy.* reponerse = rally + Reflexivo, rally, pick up + the pieces.* * *1.verbo transitivo1)a) ( reemplazar) < existencias> to replace; < dinero> to put back, repayb) <funcionario/trabajador> to reinstatec) < obra> to put... on again, revive; < serie> to repeat, rerun; < película> to show... again2) ( replicar) to reply2.reponerse v pron to recover* * *= replenish, rerun [re-run], re-release [rerelease].Ex: The supply would need to be replenished when the multiple copies had been used, so a master would be kept - usually for offset litho reproduction or for cutting a stencil on an electronic scanner.
Ex: Sometimes it is necessary to rerun the setup process, either to install a new database driver or change other configuration settings.Ex: He is planning to re-release some of the most famous songs from his back catalogue in an attempt to reignite his career.* reponer fuerzas = gather + energy.* reponerse = rally + Reflexivo, rally, pick up + the pieces.* * *vtA1 (reemplazar) ‹existencias› to replace; ‹dinero› to put back, repaytendrás que reponer los vasos que rompas/el café que uses you'll have to replace any glasses you break/any coffee you useun descanso para reponer fuerzas a rest to get our strength back2 ‹funcionario/trabajador› to reinstateha sido repuesto en su cargo he has been reinstated in his job3 ‹obra› to put … on again, revive; ‹serie› to repeat, rerun; ‹película› to show … againB (replicar) to replya lo que repuso que no tendría inconveniente to which she replied that she could have no objectionsto recoverestá totalmente repuesto he has made a complete recovery, he is o has completely recoveredreponerse DE algo to recover FROM sthreponerse de un susto/una enfermedad to recover from o get over a shock/an illness* * *
reponer ( conjugate reponer) verbo transitivo
‹ dinero› to put back, repay;
‹ serie› to repeat, rerun;
‹ película› to show … again
reponerse verbo pronominal
to recover
reponer verbo transitivo
1 (una cosa) to put back, replace
reponer existencias, to restock
reponer fuerzas, to get one's strength back
2 (a una persona en un puesto) to reinstate
3 (a una afirmación) to reply
4 (una obra: de teatro) to put on again, revive
(: cinematográfica) to rerun
(: de TV) to repeat
' reponer' also found in these entries:
English:
repeat
- rerun
- restock
- series
- replace
- replenish
* * *♦ vt1. [sustituir] [existencias, trabajador] to replace;repuso el dinero en la caja he put the money back in the till, he returned the money to the till2. [restituir] [en un cargo] to reinstate;repusieron al secretario en su cargo the secretary was reinstated in his post3. [película] to rerun;[obra] to revive; [serie] to repeat, to rerun4. [replicar] to reply;repuso que le parecía muy bien he replied that he thought it was a very good idea* * *<part repuesto > v/t1 existencias replacereponer una película rerun the original version of a movie3:reponer fuerzas get one’s strength back* * *reponer {60} vt1) : to replace, to put back2) : to reinstate3) : to reply* * *reponer vb1. (en general) to replace -
4 sanar
v.1 to cure (person).2 to get better (person).3 to heal, to cure, to make whole.El médico curó a Ilse The doctor cured Ilse.* * *1 to heal, cure1 (enfermo) to recover, get better2 (herida) to heal* * *1.VT [+ herida] to heal; [+ persona] to cure (de of)2.VI [herida] to heal; [persona] to recover* * *1. 2.sanar vt to cure* * *= heal.Ex. The article is entitled 'Books can help heal! Innovative techniques of bibliotherapy'.* * *1. 2.sanar vt to cure* * *= heal.Ex: The article is entitled 'Books can help heal! Innovative techniques of bibliotherapy'.
* * *sanar [A1 ]vi1 «enfermo» to get well, get better, recover2 «herida» to heal■ sanarvtto cure* * *
sanar ( conjugate sanar) verbo intransitivo [ enfermo] to get well, recover;
[ herida] to heal;
sanar de algo to recover from sth
sanar
I vtr (curar a un enfermo) to cure
II verbo intransitivo
1 (recobrar la salud) to recover [de, from], become healthy, get well
2 (una herida) to heal
* * *♦ vt[persona] to cure; [herida] to heal♦ vi[persona] to get better; [herida] to heal* * *I v/t cure* * *sanar vt: to heal, to curesanar vi: to get well, to recover* * *sanar vb1. (enfermo) to get better / to recoverse tendrá que quedar en el hospital hasta que sane he'll have to stay in hospital until he gets better2. (herida) to heal -
5 sobreponer
v.1 to put on top (poner encima).2 to superimpose, to superpose.* * *1 to put on top (en, of), superimpose (en, on)1 figurado (al dolor etc) to overcome (a, -)2 figurado (animarse) to pull oneself together* * *( pp sobrepuesto)1. VT1) (=poner encima de) to put on top (en of)superimpose (en on)2) (=añadir) to add (en to)3) (=anteponer)2.See:* * *1.verbo transitivo to superimpose2.sobreponerse A algo — to get over something, recover from something
* * *= caption, superadd.Ex. Later, slide reference numbers are captioned onto the video recording at each point where a slide used so that the physical slide itself can be easily found by viewers of the tape.Ex. Locke claimed that God superadded various powers to matter, including motion, the perfections of peach trees and elephants, and gravity.* * *1.verbo transitivo to superimpose2.sobreponerse A algo — to get over something, recover from something
* * *= caption, superadd.Ex: Later, slide reference numbers are captioned onto the video recording at each point where a slide used so that the physical slide itself can be easily found by viewers of the tape.
Ex: Locke claimed that God superadded various powers to matter, including motion, the perfections of peach trees and elephants, and gravity.* * *sobreponer [ E22 ]vtto superimpose1 (recuperarse) to pull oneself together sobreponerse A algo to get over sth, recover FROM sthtodavía no se ha sobrepuesto a aquella desgracia he still hasn't got(ten) over o recovered from his misfortune2 ( Chi) ‹abrigo/chaqueta› to wrap … around one's shoulders* * *
sobreponer verbo transitivo (superponer) to superimpose
' sobreponer' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
sobrepuesto
English:
superimpose
* * *♦ vt1. [poner encima] to put on top* * *<part sobrepuesto> v/t superimpose* * *sobreponer {60} vt1) superponer: to superimpose2) anteponer: to put first, to give priority to -
6 guérir
guérir [geʀiʀ]➭ TABLE 21. transitive verb2. intransitive verba. [malade, maladie] to get better ; [blessure] to healb. [chagrin, passion] to go3. reflexive verb► se guérir [malade, maladie] to get better• se guérir par les plantes to cure o.s. by taking herbs• se guérir d'une habitude to cure o.s. of a habit* * *geʀiʀ
1.
1) Médecine to cure [personne, maladie]; to heal [blessure]2) fig
2.
verbe intransitif Médecine [personne, animal] to recover, to get well; [blessure] to heal; [entorse, rhume] to get better
3.
se guérir verbe pronominal figse guérir de — to overcome [timidité]
* * *ɡeʀiʀ1. vt1) [personne, maladie] to cure2) [membre, plaie] to heal2. vi1) [personne] to recoverIl est maintenant complètement guéri. — He's now completely recovered.
2) [plaie, chagrin] to heal* * *guérir verb table: finirA vtr1 Méd [médecin, traitement, cure] to cure [personne, maladie, fièvre] (de of; avec with; par by); to heal [blessure]; cela soulage mais ne guérit pas it brings relief but it does not act as a cure;B vi Méd [personne, animal] to recover, to get well; [blessure] to heal; [entorse] to get better; [rhume] to get better, to clear up; guérir de qch to recover from sth; je suis guéri (de rhume, maladie bénigne) I'm better; ( de maladie grave) I've made a complete recovery; fig never again!C se guérir vpr1 Méd [personne] to cure oneself; [maladie] to be cured;[gerir] verbe transitif[blessure] to heal2. (figuré)————————[gerir] verbe intransitifelle est guérie de sa rougeole she's cured of ou recovered from her measlesma mère est guérie my mother's better ou recovered2. (figuré)il est guéri de sa timidité he is cured of ou he has got over his shynessl'amour, il en est guéri! you won't catch him falling in love again!————————se guérir verbe pronominal————————se guérir verbe pronominal intransitif1. [maladie]2. [personne] -
7 ausschlafen
(unreg., trennb., hat -ge-)I v/i und v/refl get a good night’s sleep; sonntags etc.: have a lie-in (Am. sleep-in); hast du jetzt ausgeschlafen? have you had enough sleep?, have you slept for as long as you wanted?; ausgeschlafen* * *to sleep off* * *aus|schla|fen sep1. vtRausch etc to sleep off2. virto have a good sleep* * *1) (to stay in bed late in the morning: I like to lie in until nine on a Saturday.) lie in2) (to recover from (something) by sleeping: She's in bed sleeping off the effects of the party.) sleep off* * *aus|schla·fenI. vtseinen Rausch \ausschlafen to sleep off one's drinkII. vi, vr* * *1.unregelmäßiges intransitives, reflexives Verb have a good or proper sleep2.unregelmäßiges transitives Verb* * *ausschlafen (irr, trennb, hat -ge-)A. v/i & v/r get a good night’s sleep; sonntags etc: have a lie-in (US sleep-in);hast du jetzt ausgeschlafen? have you had enough sleep?, have you slept for as long as you wanted?; → ausgeschlafenB. v/t:seinen Rausch etcausschlafen sleep (it) off* * *1.unregelmäßiges intransitives, reflexives Verb have a good or proper sleep2.unregelmäßiges transitives Verb* * *v.to sleep late expr. -
8 sleep off
to recover from (something) by sleeping:يَشْفى بواسِطَة النَّوْمShe's in bed sleeping off the effects of the party.
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9 remettre
remettre [ʀ(ə)mεtʀ]➭ TABLE 561. transitive verba. ( = replacer) [+ objet] to put backb. [+ vêtement, chapeau] to put back onc. ( = replacer dans une situation) remettre un appareil en marche to restart a machined. [+ lettre, paquet] to deliver ; [+ clés, rançon] to hand over ; [+ récompense] to present ; [+ devoir, démission] to hand in (à to)• remettre un rendez-vous à jeudi/au 8 to postpone an appointment till Thursday/the 8th(PROV) il ne faut jamais remettre à demain or au lendemain ce qu'on peut faire le jour même(PROV) never put off till tomorrow what you can do todayf. ( = se rappeler) to remember• remettre qch en esprit or en mémoire à qn ( = rappeler) to remind sb of sth• j'ai froid, je vais remettre un tricot I'm cold, I'll go and put another jersey onh. [+ radio, chauffage] to switch on againj. ► remettre ça (inf) ( = recommencer)on remet ça ? [+ partie de cartes] shall we have another game? ; (au café) shall we have another drink?• garçon, remettez-nous ça ! the same again please! (inf)• les voilà qui remettent ça ! there they go again! (inf)2. reflexive verba. ( = recouvrer la santé) to recover• se remettre d'une maladie/d'un accident to recover from an illness/an accident• remettez-vous ! pull yourself together!b. ( = recommencer) se remettre à (faire) qch to start (doing) sth again• après leur départ il se remit à travailler or au travail after they had gone he started working againc. ( = se confier) je m'en remets à vous I'll leave it up to youd. ( = se réconcilier) se remettre avec qn to make it up with sb* * *ʀ(ə)mɛtʀ
1.
1) ( replacer)remettre quelque chose dans/sur — to put something back in/on
remettre quelque chose à cuire — ( sur la cuisinière) to put something back on the ring
2) ( donner)remettre à quelqu'un — to hand [something] over to somebody [clés, rançon]; to hand [something] in to somebody [lettre, rapport]; to present [something] to somebody [récompense, trophée]
remettre sa démission — to hand in one's resignation ( à quelqu'un to somebody)
3) ( rétablir)remettre quelque chose droit or d'aplomb — to put something straight again
4) ( différer) to postpone, to put off [visite, voyage]; to defer [jugement]5) ( faire fonctionner de nouveau) to put [something] on again, to put [something] back on [gaz, chauffage]; to play [something] again [disque, chanson]; to turn [something] on again [contact]; to switch on again [essuie-glaces, phares]6) ( remplacer)7) ( ajouter) to add some more [sel, bois, pl âtre]; to add another [bouton, clou]8) ( porter de nouveau) ( ce que l'on vient d'enlever) to put [something] back on [chaussures, manteau, bijou]; ( ce que l'on portait dans le passé)il va falloir remettre les bottes, c'est l'hiver — we'll have to start wearing our boots again, it's winter
9) Médecine to put [something] back in place [épaule, cheville]10) ( réconforter) [remontant, médicament] to make [somebody] feel better11) ( se souvenir de)remettre quelqu'un/le visage de quelqu'un — to remember somebody/sb's face
12) ( faire grâce de)13) (colloq) ( recommencer)on s'est bien amusé, quand est-ce qu'on remet ça? — that was fun, when are we going to do it again?
2.
se remettre verbe pronominal1) ( retourner)se remettre à un endroit — to go ou get back to a place
2) ( s'appliquer à nouveau)3) ( recommencer)4) ( porter sur soi à nouveau)5) ( se rétablir)se remettre de — to recover from [maladie, accident]; to get over [émotion, échec]
6) ( faire confiance)8) ( se rappeler)* * *ʀ(ə)mɛtʀ vt1) [vêtement]remettre qch — to put sth back on, to put sth on again
Elle a remis son pull. — She put her sweater back on.
2) (= replacer)Il a remis sa veste dans l'armoire. — He put his jacket back in the wardrobe.
3) (= ajouter)4)Ça va le remettre en moins de deux. — He'll be back on his feet in no time.
5)6) (= donner)remettre qch à qn [paquet, argent] — to hand sth over to sb, to give sth to sb, [prix, décoration] to present sb with sth
7) (= ajourner) [réunion, décision] to postpone, to put offJ'ai dû remettre mon rendez-vous. — I've had to put my appointment off.
remettre qch à — to postpone sth until, to put sth off until
il ne faut jamais remettre au lendemain ce que l'on peut faire le jour même — never put off until tomorrow what you can do today
* * *remettre verb table: mettreA vtr1 ( replacer) remettre qch dans/sur to put sth back in/on; remettez la bouteille au frais put the bottle back to cool; remets ce livre là où tu l'as pris! put that book back where you found it!; remettre qch à cuire ( sur la cuisinière) to put sth back on the ring; ( dans le four) to put sth back in the oven; remettre qch à sécher ( dehors) to hang the washing ou wash US out again; remettre la main sur qch to put one's hands on sth again; remettre qch en mémoire à qn to remind sb of sth; remettre qn en prison/en pension to send sb back to prison/to boarding school; remettre qn dans un service to put sb back in a department;2 ( donner) remettre qch à qn to hand sth over to sb [clés, rançon]; to hand sth in to sb [lettre, colis, rapport, devoir]; to present sth to sb [récompense, trophée, médaille]; remettre sa démission to hand in one's resignation (à qn to sb); remettre sa vie entre les mains de qn to put one's life in sb's hands; remettre qn entre les mains de la justice to hand sb over to the law;3 ( rétablir) remettre qch droit or d'aplomb to put sth straight again; remettre qch à plat to lay sth down again; remettre qch sur le côté to put sth back on its side; remettre qch debout to stand sth back up;4 ( différer) to postpone, to put off [visite, voyage, rendez-vous, réunion]; to defer [jugement]; remettre une visite à une date ultérieure to postpone a visit until a later date; nous avons remis la réunion à jeudi we've put the meeting off until Thursday; remettre qch au lendemain/à plus tard to put sth off until tomorrow/until later;5 ( faire fonctionner de nouveau) to put [sth] on again, to put [sth] back on [gaz, électricité, chauffage, ventilateur]; to play [sth] again [disque, cassette, chanson]; to turn [sth] on again [contact]; tu peux remettre le courant, j'ai terminé you can put the electricity back on, I've finished; remettre les essuie-glaces/phares to switch the windscreen GB ou windshield US wipers/headlights on again;6 ( remplacer) remettre un bouton à qch to put a new button on sth; remettre une poignée to put a new handle on; remettre une vis/vitre to put a new screw/windowpane in;7 ( ajouter) to add some more [sel, poivre, bois, plâtre, papier]; to add another [bouton, vis, clou]; to put in another [suppositoire]; remets un peu d'eau/d'huile add a bit more water/oil; remettre de l'argent dans qch to put some more money in sth; j'ai remis 15 euros I've put in another 15 euros; remettez-moi quelques tomates○ give me a few more tomatoes;8 ( porter de nouveau) ( ce que l'on vient d'enlever) to put [sth] back on [chaussures, manteau, bijou]; ( ce que l'on portait dans le passé) to wear [sth] again [chaussures, manteau, bijou]; tu peux remettre tes chaussures, on s'en va you can put your shoes back on, we're going; ne remets pas ces chaussettes, elles sont sales don't wear these socks again, they're dirty; il va falloir remettre les bottes, c'est l'hiver we'll have to start wearing our boots again, it's winter;9 Méd to put [sth] back [épaule, cheville];10 ( réconforter) [remontant, médicament] to make [sb] feel better; buvez, cela vous remettra drink up, it'll make you feel better;11 ( se souvenir de) remettre qn/le visage de qn to remember sb/sb's face;12 ( faire grâce de) remettre une dette à qn to let sb off a debt; remettre une peine à qn to give sb remission; remettre ses péchés à qn to forgive sb's sins;13 ○( recommencer) remettre ça to start again; tu ne vas pas remettre ça! you're not going to start again, are you?; on s'est bien amusé, quand est-ce qu'on remet ça? that was fun, when are we going to do it again?B se remettre vpr1 ( retourner) se remettre à un endroit to go ou get back to a place; remets-toi là/devant lui get back there/in front of him; se remettre au lit/à sa place/à table to go back to bed/to one's seat/to the table; se remettre en rang to get back in line; se remettre debout to get ou stand up again; se remettre en selle to get back in the saddle;2 ( s'appliquer à nouveau) se remettre du mascara/rouge à lèvres to put on some more mascara/lipstick; se remettre un suppositoire to put in another suppository;3 ( recommencer) se remettre au travail to go back to work; se remettre au dessin/tennis/piano to start drawing/playing tennis/playing the piano again; se remettre à faire to start doing again; se remettre à boire/espérer/pleurer to start drinking/hoping/crying again; il s'est remis à neiger/faire du vent it's started to snow/to get windy again;4 ( porter sur soi à nouveau) se remettre en jean/jupe to wear jeans/a skirt again;5 ( se rétablir) se remettre de to recover from [maladie, accouchement, accident]; to get over [déception, émotion, échec, décès]; il ne s'est jamais vraiment remis de sa chute he never really recovered from his fall; remets-toi vite! get well soon!; t'es-tu remis de tes émotions? have you got over the shock?; il ne se remet pas de son divorce he can't get over his divorce;6 ( faire confiance) s'en remettre à qn to leave it to sb; s'en remettre à la décision/aux conclusions de qn to accept sb's decision/conclusions;7 ( reprendre une vie de couple) se remettre avec qn to get back together with sb; ils se sont remis ensemble après un an de séparation they got back together after splitting up for a year;8 ( se rappeler) se remettre qn/le visage de qn to remember sb/sb's face.[rəmɛtr] verbe transitifremettre quelque chose à plat to lay something flat again ou back (down) flat[personne]remettre quelqu'un debout to stand somebody up again ou somebody back up[pour remplacer]2. [rétablir dans un état]elle a remis la pagaille dans toute la maison (familier) she plunged the whole household into chaos again3. [rajouter] to addil est assez puni comme ça, n'en remets pas (familier) he's been punished enough already, no need to rub it in5. [recommencer]allez, on remet ça! [au café] come on, let's have another round ou another one!6. [donner - colis, lettre, message] to deliver, to hand over (separable) ; [ - objet, dossier à régler, rançon] to hand over (separable), to give ; [ - dossier d'inscription, dissertation] to hand ou to give in (separable) ; [ - pétition, rapport] to present, to hand in ; [ - démission] to hand in, to tenderremettre quelqu'un aux autorités to hand ou to turn somebody over to the authoritieson lui a remis le prix Nobel he was presented with ou awarded the Nobel prize7. [confier] to placeremettre son âme à Dieu to commit one's soul to God, to place one's soul in God's keeping8. [rendre - copies] to hand ou to give back (separable) ; [ - clés] to hand back (separable), to return9. [ajourner - entrevue] to put off (separable), to postpone, to put back (separable) (UK) ; [ - décision] to put off (separable), to deferremettre quelque chose à huitaine to postpone something ou to put something off for a weekla réunion a été remise à lundi the meeting has been put off ou postponed until Monday11. [reconnaître - personne] to remember12. [faire grâce de - peine de prison] to remit13. (Belgique) [vomir] to vomit————————se remettre verbe pronominal (emploi réfléchi)[se livrer]se remettre entre les mains de quelqu'un to put ou to place oneself in somebody's hands————————se remettre verbe pronominal intransitif1. [se replacer - dans une position, un état]se remettre debout to stand up again, to get back upse remettre en route to get started ou going againa. [se réconcilier] to make it up with somebodyb. [se réinstaller] to go ou to be back with somebody againse remettre d'un accident to recover from ou to get over an accidentallons, remets-toi! come on, pull yourself together ou get a grip on yourself!————————se remettre à verbe pronominal plus préposition1. [recommencer à]se remettre à (faire) quelque chose to start (doing) something again, to take up (doing) something again2. MÉTÉOROLOGIEla pluie se remet à tomber, il se remet à pleuvoir the rain's starting again, it's started raining again————————s'en remettre à verbe pronominal plus préposition -
10 komme
4приходи́ть; приезжа́ть; прибыва́тьkómme gående — прийти́ пешко́м
kómme kǿrende — прие́хать
kómme for sent — опозда́ть
hvordán kómmer jeg til...? — как мне пройти́ к...?
kómme af (med ngn, ngt) — отде́лываться, избавля́ться от кого́-л., чего́-л.
kómme igén — возвраща́ться
kómme ind ; kom ind! — войди́те!
kómme sámmen — обща́ться
kómme ved — каса́ться, име́ть отноше́ние
det kómmer ud på ét — всё равно́, безразли́чно
* * *advent, arrive, come, get, put* * *I. (et)( nærmen sig) approach ( fx the approach of night (, winter));( ankomst) coming ( fx the coming of winter), arrival.II. vb (kom, kommet)( især: hen til den talende, til det sted man tænker på) come ( fx come here! come to my house; are you coming to the dance?);( nå frem; blive hensat i) get ( fx get to London, get home, he got here at last; get into a better temper),( ankomme) arrive ( fx the guests will arrive soon; arrive in London(, at a place)),( komme på besøg) call;( hælde) pour;( smøre) spread ( fx glue (, paint) on something);[ forskellige forbindelser:][ nu kommer jeg!] coming![ komme nærmere] approach, come (, get) closer;(se også nærme sig);[ kom så da!] come on![ med sig:][ komme sig] improve,T pick up,( blive rask) recover, get well;[ komme sig af] recover from ( fx an illness, a shock, a surprise), get over ( fx an illness, a disappointment, a shock, a surprise);(dvs bliver kvikkere) you are coming on!(se også kommende);[ med præp og adv:][ komme `af](mar: komme af grunden) come off, get off;[` komme af]( skyldes) come from, be due to,( nedstamme fra) come of,( om ord: afledes af) be derived from;[ hvoraf kommer dette?] why is this?[ komme af med] get rid of;[ kom an!] come on![ komme an på] depend on ( fx it depends on the weather);(dvs afhænger af omstændighederne) that depends;[ det er karakteren det kommer an på] it's the character that matters (el.counts);[ det kommer an på dig] it depends on you, it is up to you;[ komme bag på én] take somebody by surprise;[ komme bort] get off, get away,(om brev etc også) go astray;[ komme bort fra] get away from;( utilsigtet) stray from ( fx the subject);(dvs benægte) there is no denying it;[ komme efter](dvs følge på) follow, succeed, come after,( komme for at hente) come for, call for;(dvs opdage) find out, get on to,( lære) pick up;[ jeg skal komme efter ham!] I'll be after him!( om sag) come on;[ komme foran] get in front,(ved konkurrence etc) get ahead, take the lead;[ komme forbi] pass (by);( slippe forbi) get past;[` komme fra] come from ( fx Germany, the working class);(dvs et arbejde) he made a good job of it,( ulykke) he escaped unhurt,( vovestykke) he got away with it;[ det var det jeg kom fra] as I was saying; as I was going to say;(se også levende);[ komme frem] come out, appear,( komme videre) get on;( bane sig vej) make one's way,( i verden) get on, rise;( til bestemmelsessted) get through, get there;( røbes) be revealed, become known;[ jeg kunne hverken komme frem eller tilbage] I was stuck;[ komme frem af] emerge from;[ komme frem med] put forward,T come up with ( fx a plan, a suggestion),( afsløre, F) disclose;[ komme fri](af lænker etc) get free;( hvis man sidder fast) get loose;( i fodbold) get clear;[ komme fri af] get loose from,F disengage (el. extricate) oneself from;[ komme hen til] come up to;[ komme hos Smith] be often at the Smiths,F be a frequent guest at Smith's;[ komme i avisen] get into the papers;[ komme i himlen] go to heaven;[ komme i mål], se ndf: komme ind;[ komme i tre oplag (, udgaver)] run into three printings (, editions);[ komme igen] come back, return,( betale sig) pay in time;[ jeg kommer igen en anden gang] I'll call again (another time);[ komme igennem] get through; pass;[ komme igennem med et forslag] get (el. carry el. put) a proposal through;[ komme ind] enter; come (, get) in ( fx come in! we couldn't get in);( om tog) come in, arrive;(fig: i diskussion) come in;( i sport) get in, finish ( fx he finished third);[ komme ind i] enter;( sætte sig ind i) acquaint oneself with;( i samtale) get on to a subject;( berøre) touch on a subject;[ komme nærmere ind på sagen] go into detail;(dvs blive taget med) be included,( slutte sig til andre) join;[` komme med](dvs bringe) bring ( fx the milkman brings milk every day);( fremkomme med) come up with ( fx the right answer, a solution);( ytre) make ( fx a remark; make rude remarks about, make no protest), say ( fx a few words),F utter ( fx protests);[ komme med en forklaring] give an explanation;[ han kom ikke med nogen forklaring] he offered no explanation;[ komme om ved](også fig) get around;[( søge at) komme nemt om ved det] cut a corner; cut corners;[ komme op] get up;( om planter) come up;( om teaterstykke) be put on;[ komme op at skændes] quarrel;[ komme op at slås] come to blows;[ komme op i et fag] be examined in a subject;(se også år);[ komme op på et stort tal] reach a big figure;(se også side);[ komme ovenpå], se ovenpå;[ komme over]( passere) get over ( fx the road, a wall),(fig: overvinde) get over ( fx a difficulty),F overcome, surmount ( fx a difficulty);( komme sig af) get over, recover from ( fx an illness, a shock; he'll soon get over it);( om stemning: gribe) come over ( fx a feeling of hopelessness came over us; what has come over him?);(se også ånd);[ komme overens], se overens;[ komme `på]( blive trykt i blad) be put in;( erindre) think of, remember;[` komme på][ komme på holdet] be included in (el. selected for el. put on) the team;[ jeg kan ikke komme på navnet] I can't think of the name, the name escapes me;[ hvordan kommer du dog på det?] what made you think of that? how did you get that idea?[ komme sammen] meet, come together;( omgås) see each other,F associate with each other;( om par) go out;( omgås) see,F associate with,( om par) go out with,T date ( fx he is going out with (, dating) Vera);( også) he has got a girl friend;[ komme til] come to, arrive at ( fx a place),(se også tur);( erhverve) come by ( fx how did you come by that money?),F obtain;[ der kom andre ` til] they were joined by others,( overraskende) others turned up;[ lad mig komme ` til!] let me (have a go)![ komme til middag (, te etc)] come to dinner (, tea etc);[ komme til penge] come by some money,( ved arv) come into money;( tilfældigt) happen to do something, chance to do something,( uheldigvis) do something by accident;( efterhånden) come (el. get) to do something ( fx I had come (el.got) to hate him);( i fremtiden) will do something ( fx the prices will be higher),( nødvendigvis) will have to do something ( fx you will have to change it);[ han kom til at sige at] he chanced to say that, by mistake he said that,( røbede) he blurted out that;[ han kom aldrig til at se hende mere] he never saw her again;F he was never to see her again;[ når alt kommer til alt] after all;[ når han kan komme til det] when he has a chance;[ det kom til forsoning (, til slag)] there was a reconciliation (, a battle);[ komme noget til] get hurt, be injured;( fatte sig) recover,( efter bevidstløshed) come round, come to oneself;[ komme tilbage] get (, come) back, return;[ komme ud] come out, get out,(se også II. udkomme);( i lotteri) his number came up;[ han kommer meget ud] he goes out a great deal;[ der kom intet ud af planen] the plan came to nothing; nothing came of the plan;[ der kom ikke ret meget ud af det] it did not come to much;(se også sted);[ hvad skal der komme ud af dette?] how is this going to end?[ komme ud af det med] get on with;(se også ud);[ komme ud for] meet with ( fx an accident, criticism, opposition);[nummeret er kommet ud med £500] the number has won £500;( klare) manage;[ komme ud på ét] come to the same thing; be all one;(dvs benægte) there is no denying it (el. getting round it);[ man kan ikke komme uden om at] one cannot ignore that, there is no getting away from the fact that, there is no denying that;[ komme hinanden ved] care about each other;( betyde noget for) matter to each other;[ hvad kommer det dig ved?] what business (el. concern) is that of yours?[ det kommer ikke dig ved] it is no business (el. concern) of yours, it is none of your business;[ det kommer ikke sagen ved], se sag. -
11 relever
relever [ʀəl(ə)ve, ʀ(ə)ləve]➭ TABLE 51. transitive verba. [+ statue, meuble, chaise] to stand up again ; [+ véhicule, bateau] to right ; [+ personne] to help up ; [+ blessé] to pick upb. ( = remonter) [+ col] to turn up ; [+ jupe] to raise ; [+ pantalon] to roll up ; [+ cheveux] to put up ; [+ vitre] (en poussant) to push up ; (avec bouton ou manivelle) to wind up ; [+ store] to roll up ; [+ manette] to push upc. ( = mettre plus haut) to raised. [+ économie] to rebuild ; [+ pays, entreprise] to put back on its feete. [+ salaire, impôts, niveau de vie] to raise ; [+ chiffre d'affaires] to increasef. [+ sauce, plat] to flavour (with spices)g. [+ sentinelle] to relieveh. [+ faute, fait, contradiction, empreintes] to findi. [+ adresse, renseignement] to note down ; [+ notes] to take down ; [+ plan] to copy out ; [+ compteur, électricité, gaz] to readj. ( = réagir à) [+ injure, calomnie] to react to• relever le gant or le défi to take up the challengek. [+ copies, cahiers] to collect• relever de ( = se rétablir de) to recover from ; ( = être du ressort de) to be a matter for ; ( = être sous la tutelle de) to come under3. reflexive verba. ( = se remettre debout) to stand up againb. ( = sortir du lit) to get upc. [strapontin] to tip upd. se relever de [+ deuil, chagrin, honte] to recover from• se relever de ses ruines/cendres to rise from its ruins/ashes* * *ʀəl(ə)ve, ʀləve
1.
1) ( remettre debout) to pick up [personne tombée, tabouret]; to put [something] back up (again) [statue, clôture]2) ( mettre à la verticale) to raise [dossier de siège, manette]3) ( bouger à nouveau)relever la tête — ( redresser) to raise one's head; ( pour voir) to look up; ( ne pas être vaincu) to refuse to accept defeat
4) ( mettre plus haut) to turn up [col]; to lift [jupe]; to wind up [vitre de voiture]; to raise [voile, store]; ( à nouveau) to raise [something] again5) ( constater) to note, to notice [erreur, signe]; to notice [fait, absence]; ( faire remarquer) to point out [erreur, contradiction]6) ( prendre note de) to take down, to note down [date, nom, dimensions, numéro]; to take [empreinte]; to note down [citation]7) ( collecter) to take in [copies d'examen]8) ( réagir à) to react to [remarque]‘il t'a encore critiqué’ - ‘je n'ai pas relevé’ — ‘he criticized you again’ - ‘I let it go’
9) ( reconstruire) to rebuild [mur]; to put [something] back on its feet [pays, économie]10) ( augmenter) to raise [niveau de vie, prix, productivité]11) ( remplacer) to relieve [équipe]relever la garde — to change the guard, to relieve the guard
12) ( donner plus d'attrait à) lit, fig to spice up [plat, récit]relever quelqu'un de — to release somebody from [vœux, obligation]
14) ( en tricot)
2.
relever de verbe transitif indirect1) ( dépendre de)notre service relève du ministère de la Défense — our department comes under the Ministry of Defence
2) ( être de la compétence de)l'affaire relève de la Cour européenne de justice — the case comes within the competence of the European Court of Justice
3) ( s'apparenter à)4) ( se rétablir)relever de — to be recovering from [maladie]
3.
se relever verbe pronominal1) ( après une chute) to pick oneself up; (après avoir été assis, couché) to get up again2) ( être mis à la verticale)se relever facilement — [dossier] to be easy to raise
3) ( être remonté) [store] to be raisedla vitre ne se relève plus — the window won't wind GB ou roll US up
4) ( se remettre)se relever de — to recover from [maladie, chagrin, crise]
* * *ʀ(ə)l(ə)ve1. vt1) (= redresser) [statue, meuble] to stand up again, [personne tombée] to help up, [col] to turn up, fig, [pays, économie, entreprise] to put back on its feet2) (= rehausser) [vitre, plafond] to raise, [niveau de vie] to raise, [style, conversation, débat] to elevate3) CUISINE, [plat, sauce] to season4) (= constater) [fautes, points] to pick out, [traces] to find, to pick up5) (= prendre note de) [adresse] to take down, to note, [compteur] to read, [cotes] to plot, [schéma, plan] to sketch6) (= ramasser) [cahiers, copies] to collect, to take inJe relève les copies dans cinq minutes. — I'll collect the papers in five minutes.
7) (= répliquer à) [remarque] to react to, to reply toJe n'ai pas relevé sa réflexion. — I didn't react to his remark.
8) [défi] to accept, to take up9) (= prendre le relais) [sentinelle, équipe] to relieve10) (= décharger)relever qn de [ses fonctions] — to relieve sb of, [ses vœux] to release sb from
2. vi1) [jupe, bord] to ride up2) (= être du ressort)relever de [responsable, autorité] — to be a matter for
3) (= concerner)* * *relever verb table: leverA vtr1 ( remettre debout) to pick up [personne tombée, tabouret]; to put [sth] back up (again) [statue, clôture];2 ( mettre à la verticale) to raise [dossier de siège, manette];3 ( bouger à nouveau) relever la main ( pour parler) to put up one's hand again; relever les yeux or le nez or le front to look up; relever la tête ( redresser) to raise one's head; ( pour voir) to look up; ( ne pas être vaincu) to refuse to accept defeat;4 ( mettre plus haut) to turn up [col]; to lift [jupe]; to wind up [vitre de voiture]; to raise [voile, store]; ( à nouveau) to raise [sth] again [store, rideau de théâtre]; relever un coin du rideau to lift up a corner of the curtain; relever ses cheveux to put one's hair up; elle a toujours les cheveux relevés she always wears her hair up;5 ( constater) to note, to notice [erreur, contradiction, signe]; to notice [fait, absence]; ( faire remarquer) to point out [erreur, contradiction]; relever que to note that; ‘il t'a encore critiqué’-‘je n'ai pas relevé’ ‘he criticized you again’-‘I didn't notice’; relever la moindre inexactitude to seize on the slightest inaccuracy;6 ( prendre note de) to take down, to note down [date, nom, dimensions, numéro d'immatriculation]; to take [empreinte]; to note down [citation, passage]; relever le compteur to read the meter;7 ( collecter) to take in [copies d'examen];8 ( réagir à) to react to [remarque]; relever la gageure or le défi to take up the challenge; relever un pari to take on a bet;9 ( reconstruire) to rebuild [mur]; to put sth back on its feet [pays, institution, industrie, économie];10 ( augmenter) to raise [niveau de vie, niveau d'études]; to raise, to increase [taux d'intérêt, prix, productivité]; relever les salaires de 3% to put up ou increase salaries by 3%; relever toutes les notes de trois points to put all the grades up by three marks;12 ( donner plus d'attrait à) to spice up [plat]; relever une sauce avec de la moutarde to spice a sauce up with mustard; relever un récit de détails amusants to enliven a tale with amusing details;13 fml ( libérer) relever qn de to release sb from [vœux, obligation]; relever qn de ses fonctions to relieve sb of their duties;14 ( en tricot) relever une maille to pick up a stitch.B relever de vtr ind1 ( dépendre de) notre service relève du ministère de la Défense our department comes under the Ministry of Defence;2 ( être de la compétence de) l'affaire relève de la Cour européenne de justice the case comes within the competence of the European Court of Justice; cela ne relève pas de ma compétence/mes fonctions this doesn't come within my competence/my duties;3 ( s'apparenter à) cela relève de la gageure/du mythe this comes close to being impossible/to being a myth;C se relever vpr1 ( après une chute) to pick oneself up; ( après avoir été assis) to get up again;2 ( sortir du lit) to get up again, to get out of bed again;3 ( être mis à la verticale) se relever facilement [dossier] to be easy to raise; se relever automatiquement to be raised automatically;4 ( être remonté) [store] to be raised; la vitre ne se relève plus the window won't wind GB ou roll US up;5 ( se remettre) se relever de to recover from [maladie, chagrin, crise, scandale]; il ne s'en relèvera pas he'll never recover from it; se relever de ses ruines to rise from the ruins.[rəlve] verbe transitif1. [redresser - lampe, statue] to stand up (separable) again ; [ - chaise] to pick up (separable) ; [ - tête] to lift up (separable) againa. [debout] they helped me (back) to my feetb. [assis] they sat me up ou helped me to sit up2. [remonter - store] to raise ; [ - cheveux] to put up (separable) ; [ - col, visière] to turn up (separable) ; [ - pantalon, manches] to roll up (separable) ; [ - rideaux] to tie back (separable) ; [ - strapontin] to lift up (separable)3. [augmenter - prix, salaires] to increase, to raise, to put up (separable) ; [ - notes] to put up, to raise4. [ramasser, recueillir] to pick up (separable)5. [remettre en état - mur] to rebuild, to re-erect ; [ - pylône] to re-erect, to put up (separable) againa. [ville] to reconstruct ou to rebuild a ruined cityb. [maison] to rebuild a ruined housec'est lui qui a relevé la nation (figuré) he's the one who put the country back on its feet (again) ou got the country going again6. [mettre en valeur] to enhance8. [remarquer] to noticea. [elle n'a pas réagi] she didn't pick up the hintb. [elle l'a sciemment ignorée] she pretended not to notice the hint9. [enregistrer - empreinte digitale] to record ; [ - cote, mesure] to take down (separable), to plot ; [ - informations] to take ou to note down ; [ - plan] to sketchon a relevé des traces de boue sur ses chaussures traces of mud were found ou discovered on his shoesrelever sa position to plot ou to chart one's positionrelever quelqu'un de ses fonctions to relieve somebody of his/her duties11. DROIT [prisonnier] to release————————[rəlve] verbe intransitif[remonter - vêtement] to ride up————————relever de verbe plus préposition1. [être de la compétence de - juridiction] to fall ou to come under ; [ - spécialiste] to be a matter for ; [ - magistrat] to come under the jurisdiction ofcela relève des tribunaux/de la psychiatrie it's a matter for the courts/the psychiatrists2. [tenir de]3. (soutenu) [se rétablir de]————————se relever verbe pronominal (emploi passif)[être inclinable] to lift up————————se relever verbe pronominal intransitif1. [se remettre - debout] to get ou to stand up again ; [ - assis] to sit up again2. [remonter]————————se relever de verbe pronominal plus prépositionje ne m'en relèverai/ils ne s'en relèveront pas I'll/they'll never get over it -
12 retten
I v/t save (auch fig.); aus dem Feuer etc.: auch rescue (aus, vor + Dat from); (bergen) recover; bes. NAUT. salvage (auch fig.), salve; jemandem das Leben retten save s.o.’s life; jemanden vor dem Ertrinken retten save s.o. from drowning; jemanden aus einem brennenden Wagen retten rescue s.o. from a burning car; vor dem Abbruch retten (Haus) rescue from demolition; die Situation / den Abend retten fig. save the situation / rescue the evening; bist du noch zu retten? umg. have you gone completely mad?, have you lost your mind?; er ist nicht mehr zu retten umg. he’s a lost cause, he’s beyond help; der Kranke ist kaum mehr zu retten the patient is almost beyond ( oder past) hope; er rettete seine Ehre he vindicated his hono(u)rIII v/refl escape ( vor + Dat from); sich ins Haus etc. retten können manage to escape into the house etc.; sich vor Arbeit etc. nicht mehr retten können be snowed under ( oder inundated) with work etc.; er konnte sich vor Angeboten / Arbeit nicht ( mehr) retten he was besieged with offers / swamped with work; rette sich, wer kann! iro. it’s every man for himself* * *to save; to rescue; to salvage* * *rẹt|ten ['rɛtn]1. vtto save; (aus Gefahr auch, = befreien) to rescue; (COMPUT ) Datei to recoverjdn/etw vor jdm/etw retten — to save sb/sth from sb/sth
ein rettender Gedanke — a bright idea that saved the situation or his/our etc bacon (inf)
der Patient/die alte Kirche ist noch/nicht mehr zu retten — the patient/the old church can still be saved or is not yet past saving/is past saving
wir sollten retten, was noch zu retten ist — we should salvage what we can
er hat wieder geheiratet? er ist nicht mehr zu retten — he got married again? he's beyond redemption or past saving or past helping
bist du noch zu retten? (inf) — are you out of your mind?, have you gone completely round the bend? (Brit inf)
2. vrto escape/aus etw retten — to escape onto/under/from sth
sich vor jdm/etw retten — to escape (from) sb/sth
sich vor etw nicht mehr retten können or zu retten wissen (fig) — to be swamped with sth
rette sich, wer kann! — (it's) every man for himself!
* * *1) (to get or take out of a dangerous situation, captivity etc: The lifeboat was sent out to rescue the sailors from the sinking ship.) rescue2) (to rescue or bring out of danger: He saved his friend from drowning; The house was burnt but he saved the pictures.) save* * *ret·ten[ˈrɛtn̩]I. vt1. (bewahren)▪ jdn/etw [vor jdm/etw] \retten to save sb/sth [from sb/sth]ein geschickter Restaurator wird das Gemälde noch \retten können a skilled restorer will still be able to save the paintingsie konnte ihren Schmuck durch die Flucht hindurch \retten she was able to save her jewellery while fleeing2. (den Ausweg weisend)▪ \rettend which saved the daydas ist der \rettende Einfall! that's the idea that will save the day!; s.a. Leben3.II. vrsie konnte sich gerade noch durch einen Sprung in den Straßengraben retten she was just able to save herself by jumping into a ditch at the side of the roadsie rettete sich vor der Steuer nach Monaco she escaped the taxman by moving to Monacoer konnte sich gerade noch ans Ufer \retten he was just able to reach the safety of the bankrette sich, wer kann! (fam) run for your lives!sich akk vor jdm/etw nicht mehr zu \retten wissen, sich akk vor jdm/etw nicht mehr \retten können to be swamped by sth/mobbed by sb* * *1.jemanden vor jemandem/etwas retten — save somebody from somebody/something
ist er noch zu retten? — (ugs. fig.) has he gone [completely] round the bend? (coll.)
2.das alte Haus/der Patient ist nicht mehr zu retten — the old house is past saving/the patient is beyond help
sich vor etwas (Dat.) retten — escape [from] something
3.sich vor jemandem/etwas nicht od. kaum [noch] retten können — be besieged by somebody/be swamped with something
intransitives Verb (Ballspiele) save* * *A. v/t save (auch fig); aus dem Feuer etc: auch rescue (jemandem das Leben retten save sb’s life;jemanden vor dem Ertrinken retten save sb from drowning;jemanden aus einem brennenden Wagen retten rescue sb from a burning car;vor dem Abbruch retten (Haus) rescue from demolition;die Situation/den Abend retten fig save the situation/rescue the evening;bist du noch zu retten? umg have you gone completely mad?, have you lost your mind?;er ist nicht mehr zu retten umg he’s a lost cause, he’s beyond help;der Kranke ist kaum mehr zu retten the patient is almost beyond ( oder past) hope; errettete seine Ehre he vindicated his hono(u)rB. v/i SPORT make a save;den rettenden Einfall haben come up with the answer, save the dayC. v/r escape (vor +dat from);sich ins Haus etcretten können manage to escape into the house etc;sich vor Arbeit etcer konnte sich vor Angeboten/Arbeit nicht (mehr) retten he was besieged with offers/swamped with work;rette sich, wer kann! iron it’s every man for himself* * *1.jemanden vor jemandem/etwas retten — save somebody from somebody/something
ist er noch zu retten? — (ugs. fig.) has he gone [completely] round the bend? (coll.)
2.das alte Haus/der Patient ist nicht mehr zu retten — the old house is past saving/the patient is beyond help
sich vor etwas (Dat.) retten — escape [from] something
3.sich vor jemandem/etwas nicht od. kaum [noch] retten können — be besieged by somebody/be swamped with something
intransitives Verb (Ballspiele) save* * *v.to deserves v.to make the best of a bad job expr.to receive v.to salvage v.to salve v.to save v. -
13 riprendere
take again( prendere indietro) take backlavoro go back tophotography recordriprendere coscienza regain consciousnessriprendere a fare qualcosa start doing something again* * *riprendere v.tr.1 ( prendere di nuovo) to take* again; to retake*; ( riacchiappare) to catch* (again): devo riprendere la medicina?, shall I take my medicine again?; ha ripreso l'abitudine di fumare, he has taken up smoking again; temo di aver ripreso il raffreddore, I am afraid I have caught a cold again (o I have caught another cold); lanciava la palla in aria e la riprendeva, he threw the ball up into the air and caught it; riprendere il proprio posto, to sit down in one's place again; (fig.) to take one's seat again; verrò a riprendere il bambino dopo il lavoro, I'll come to pick up the child after work; riprendere le armi, to take up arms again; riprendere il cammino, to take to the road again; riprese il cammino verso casa, he set out for home again // lo ha ripreso la febbre, he has (had) another bout of fever; lo riprese la malinconia, he fell back in a state of gloom // riprendere moglie, marito, to remarry // riprendere coraggio, to take courage again // riprendere sonno, to get back to sleep // riprendere un punto, ( nel lavoro a maglia) to pick up a stitch // riprendere quota, (aer.) to regain height2 ( riassumere) to resume; ( personale) to re-engage, to re-employ, to hire again: ripresi la segretaria che avevo licenziato, I re-engaged (o took on again) the secretary I had dismissed; riprendere il comando della nave, to resume command of the ship3 ( ricominciare) to start again, to begin* again, to resume: ha ripreso a piovere, it has started raining again; riprendere a scrivere, a lavorare, to begin writing, working again; riprendere il lavoro, la lettura, to resume work, reading4 ( ricatturare, riconquistare) to retake*, to recapture: riprendemmo il prigioniero fuggito, we recaptured the escaped prisoner; riprendere una fortezza, una città, to retake (o to recapture) a fortress, a town // (sport): riprendere il gruppo di testa, to catch up again with the leaders; riprendere il primo posto in classifica, to regain the top position in the table5 ( prendere indietro) to take* back, to get* back; ( ricuperare) to recover: la casa editrice riprese le copie invendute del libro, the publishing house took back the unsold copies of the book; quando posso riprendere i miei libri?, when can I take (o get) back my books?; sono andata a riprendere l'ombrello che avevo dimenticato, I went to collect the umbrella I had left behind; riprendere forza, to recover strength; riprendere conoscenza, i sensi, to recover consciousness, to come to one's senses again; riprendere fiato, to get one's breath back // la malavita sta riprendendo piede nella zona, the underworld is recovering ground in the area6 ( riutilizzare) to draw* on; ( derivare) to take*: questo compositore ha ripreso alcune danze popolari, this composer has drawn on popular dance tunes; alcuni versi sono ripresi da Shakespeare, some verses are taken from Shakespeare7 ( ripetere) to take* up: il tema iniziale viene ripreso nella seconda parte, the opening theme is taken up in the second part8 ( rimproverare) to tell* off, to reprimand, to reprove, to find* fault with (s.o.): la maestra l'ha ripreso perché parlava troppo, the teacher told him off because he talked too much; mi riprende sempre, he always finds fault with me; riprendere severamente qlcu., to reprimand s.o. sharply9 ( sartoria) to take* in: questo vestito deve essere ripreso in vita, this dress must be taken in at the waist10 (teatr.) to revive: questa commedia è stata ripresa dopo venti anni, this play has been revived after twenty years11 (cinem.) to shoot*: riprendere una scena, to shoot a scene; l'hanno ripreso mentre sbadigliava, they caught him (on film) while he was yawning◆ v. intr.1 ( ricominciare) to start again, to begin* again; ( a parlare) to go* on: aveva smesso di fumare, ma poi ha ripreso, he had given up smoking but then he started again; riprendiamo da dove eravamo rimasti, let's begin again from where we were; si riprende fra dieci minuti, we'll start again in ten minutes; le trasmissioni riprenderanno appena possibile, normal service will be resumed as soon as possible; ''Dimmi'', riprese, ''quando sei arrivato?'', ''Tell me'', he went on, ''when did you arrive?'' // la vita riprende, things are looking up again2 ( rinvigorire) to recover; to revive: i fiori riprendono nell'acqua, flowers revive in water; il vecchio riprende lentamente, the old man is slowly recovering.◘ riprendersi v.intr.pron.1 ( da malattia) to recover, to get* over, to rally; ( da turbamento) to collect oneself: dopo la malattia si riprese lentamente, after his illness he recovered slowly; datemi il tempo di riprendermi, give me time to collect myself; dopo la morte di suo padre, non si è più ripreso, after his father's death he was no longer his former self // dopo aver fatto bancarotta, non si riprese più, after he went bankrupt he never got on his legs again; il mercato azionario non si è ripreso dal crollo, the stock market has not recovered from the crash2 ( correggersi) to correct oneself: fece un errore madornale, ma si riprese subito, he made a huge mistake but he corrected himself at once.* * *1. [ri'prɛndere]vb irreg vt1) (prendere di nuovo: gen) to take again, (prigioniero) to recapture, (città) to retake, (impiegato) to take on again, re-employ, (raffreddore) to catch again, (velocità) to pick up again, (quota) to regainriprendere moglie/marito — to get married again
riprendere i sensi — to recover consciousness, come to o round
riprendere sonno — to go back to sleep, get back to sleep
2) (riavere) to get back, (ritirare: oggetto riparato) to collectpasso a riprendere Francesco/l'impermeabile più tardi — I'll call by to pick up Francesco/the raincoat later
puoi riprenderlo, non mi serve più — you can have it back, I don't need it any more
3) (ricominciare: viaggio, lavoro) to resume, start again"dunque", riprese, "dove eravamo?" — "so", he continued, "where were we?"
4) Cine, TV to shootquesta foto li riprende in un atteggiamento affettuoso — this photo shows them in an affectionate pose
5) (rimproverare) to reprimand6) (restringere: abito) to take in7) (Sport: raggiungere) to catch up with2. vip (riprendersi)1) (riaversi) to recover, (pianta) to revive2) (correggersi) to correct o.s.* * *[ri'prɛndere] 1.verbo transitivo1) (prendere di nuovo) to regain [controllo, comando]; to recover [ territorio]; to take* back [impiegato, regalo]riprendere sonno — to fall asleep again, to go back to sleep
riprendere marito, moglie — (riposarsi) to marry again, to remarry
2) (ricatturare) to recapture [ prigioniero]4) (ricominciare) to go* back to, to restart, to resume, to return to [lavoro, scuola]; to pick up, to take* up, to resume [conversazione, carriera]; to renew, to restart, to resume [ negoziati]5) (recuperare)riprendere conoscenza — to come round BE o around AE o to life, to regain consciousness
6) cinem. fot. to shoot*; (con videocamera) to video(tape)8) (utilizzare di nuovo) to draw* on [idea, tesi]9) (sgridare) to pick up, to pull up, to tell* off10) mus. to repeat2.1) (ricominciare) [attività, ciclo] to restart, to resume; [discussione, processo, scuola] to reopen, to resume"i programmi riprenderanno il più presto possibile" — "normal service will be resumed as soon as possible"
2) (continuare)3."strano," riprese lui — "strange", he continued
verbo pronominale riprendersi1) (ristabilirsi) to recover, to gather oneself; (riaversi) to collect one's wits, to collect oneself, to perk up, to recollect oneself- rsi da uno shock — to recover from o get over the shock
2) (rinverdire) [ pianta] to perk up, to revive3) econ. [commercio, economia] to recover, to perk up4) (correggersi) to correct oneself* * *riprendere/ri'prεndere/ [10]1 (prendere di nuovo) to regain [controllo, comando]; to recover [ territorio]; to take* back [impiegato, regalo]; riprendere sonno to fall asleep again, to go back to sleep; riprendere marito, moglie (riposarsi) to marry again, to remarry2 (ricatturare) to recapture [ prigioniero]4 (ricominciare) to go* back to, to restart, to resume, to return to [lavoro, scuola]; to pick up, to take* up, to resume [conversazione, carriera]; to renew, to restart, to resume [ negoziati]; riprendere servizio to report back for duty; riprendere la lettura to return to one's book5 (recuperare) riprendere quota to gain height again; riprendere terreno to catch up; riprendere conoscenza to come round BE o around AE o to life, to regain consciousness; riprendere colore to get one's colour back6 cinem. fot. to shoot*; (con videocamera) to video(tape)8 (utilizzare di nuovo) to draw* on [idea, tesi]9 (sgridare) to pick up, to pull up, to tell* off10 mus. to repeat(aus. avere)1 (ricominciare) [attività, ciclo] to restart, to resume; [discussione, processo, scuola] to reopen, to resume; "i programmi riprenderanno il più presto possibile" "normal service will be resumed as soon as possible"2 (continuare) "strano," riprese lui "strange", he continuedIII riprendersi verbo pronominale1 (ristabilirsi) to recover, to gather oneself; (riaversi) to collect one's wits, to collect oneself, to perk up, to recollect oneself; - rsi da uno shock to recover from o get over the shock2 (rinverdire) [ pianta] to perk up, to revive3 econ. [commercio, economia] to recover, to perk up4 (correggersi) to correct oneself. -
14 davon
Adv.1. räumlich, Herkunft: from it ( oder them), from there; (weg) away; nicht weit davon ( entfernt) sein be not far (away) from; fig. not a million miles away from; ich bin weit davon entfernt, das zu glauben fig. the last thing I’m going to do is believe that; ich muss das Hemd wechseln, es sind zwei Knöpfe davon abgegangen two buttons have come off it; auf II 62. Teil: of it ( oder them); trink nicht davon don’t drink from that; etwas davon wegnehmen take something away from it; Zinsen davon abziehen deduct interest from it; ich habe zehn Euro davon ausgegeben I’ve spent ten euros of it; sie hatten vier Kinder, zwei davon sind schon tot they had four children, two of whom are already dead3. Ursache etc., mit Passiv: by it; davon sterben die from ( oder of) it; müde davon tired from it; davon krank / gesund werden become ill / well through it; davon wurde er wach he was awakened by it; davon wird man müde it makes you tired; davon kannst du etwas lernen you can learn (something) from that; das kommt davon, dass du so faul bist oder wenn man so faul ist that’s what comes of being so lazy; das kommt davon! what did you expect?; ich hatte nichts als Ärger davon I had nothing but trouble with ( oder from) it; was habe 'ich davon? what do I get out of it?; was 'habe ich davon? why should I?; was hast du eigentlich davon, wenn du so gemein bist? what do you get out of being so nasty?; das hast du nun davon! umg. that’s what comes of it!; mit Schadenfreude: serves you right4. Thema: (darüber) about it, of it; genug davon! enough of that!, Am. auch enough already!; weiß sie schon davon? does she know (about it) already?; ich will nichts davon hören! I don’t want to hear a word about it ( oder on the subject)!; was hältst du davon, wenn wir jetzt ins Kino gehen? what would you say to a trip to the cinema (Am. movies) now?6. Grundlage: davon leben live off it; er lebt davon, Hunde zu züchten he makes his living (from) breeding dogs7. fig.: es hängt davon ab, ob it depends (on) whether; abgesehen davon leaving that aside, ignoring that; davon geheilt sein be cured of it; sich davon unterscheiden differ from; etc.; vgl. auch die mit davon verbundenen Adjektive, Substantive und Verben* * ** * *da|vọn [da'fɔn] (emph) ['daːfɔn]adv1) (räumlich) from there; (wenn Bezugsobjekt vorher erwähnt) from it/them; (mit Entfernungsangabe) away (from there/it/them)weg davon! (inf) — get away from there/it/them
See:→ auf2) (fig)(in Verbindung mit n, vb siehe auch dort)
es unterscheidet sich davon nur in der Länge — it only differs from it in the lengthnein, weit davon entfernt! — no, far from it!
ich bin weit davon entfernt, Ihnen Vorwürfe machen zu wollen — the last thing I want to do is reproach you
wenn wir einmal davon absehen, dass... — if for once we overlook the fact that...
wir möchten in diesem Fall davon absehen, Ihnen den Betrag zu berechnen — in this case we shall not invoice you
in ihren Berechnungen sind sie davon ausgegangen, dass... — they made their calculations on the basis that...
3) (fig = dadurch) leben, abhängen on that/it/them; sterben of that/it; krank/braun werden from that/it/them... und davon kommt das hohe Fieber —... and that's where the high temperature comes from,... and the high temperature comes from that
... und davon hängt es ab — and it depends on that
das hängt davon ab, ob... — that depends on whether...
gib ihr ein bisschen mehr, davon kann sie doch nicht satt werden — give her a bit more, that won't fill her up
was habe ICH denn davon? — what do I get out of it?
was hast du denn davon, dass du so schuftest? — what do you get out of slaving away like that?
4) (mit Passiv) by that/it/themdavon betroffen werden or sein — to be affected by that/it/them
5) (Anteil, Ausgangsstoff) of that/it/themdavon essen/trinken/nehmen — to eat/drink/take some of that/it/them
die Hälfte davon — half of that/it/them
das Doppelte davon — twice or double that
zwei/ein Viertelpfund davon, bitte! — would you give me two of those/a quarter of a pound of that/those, please
er hat drei Schwestern, davon sind zwei älter als er —
früher war er sehr reich, aber nach dem Krieg ist ihm nichts davon geblieben — he used to be very rich but after the war nothing was left of his earlier wealth
ich habe keine Ahnung davon — I've no idea about that/it
* * *da·von[daˈfɔn]1. (räumlich: von dieser Person) from him/her; (von dieser Sache, diesem Ort) from it; (von diesen Personen, Sachen) from them; (von dort) from therelinks/rechts \davon to the left/rightdas vorne auf dem Foto ist mein Bruder, das links \davon meine Schwester the person at the front of the photo is my brother, the one on the left my sister[links/rechts] \davon abgehen [o abzweigen] to branch off [to the right/left]einige Meter \davon entfernt [o weg] a few metres awaywir konnten die Sänger kaum sehen, weil wir einhundert Meter \davon entfernt standen we could hardly see the singers as we were standing one hundred metres away [from them]in der Nähe \davon nearbydu weißt doch wo der Bahnhof ist? die Schule ist nicht weit \davon [entfernt] you know where the station is? the school is not far from thereder Bahnhof liegt in der Stadtmitte, und die Schule nicht weit \davon the station is in the town centre and the school is not far from itzu weit \davon entfernt sein to be too far awaydu bist zu weit \davon entfernt, um es deutlich zu sehen you're too far away to see it clearlyer will erwachsen sein? er ist noch weit \davon entfernt! he thinks he's grown up? he's got far [or a long way it] to go yet!meine Hände sind voller Farbe, und ich kriege sie einfach nicht \davon ab! my hands are full of paint and I can't get it off!das Kleid war/die Ohrringe waren so schön, dass ich die Augen kaum \davon abwenden konnte the dress was/the earrings were so wonderful I could hardly take my eyes of it/themetw \davon abwischen to wipe sth offetw \davon lösen/trennen to loosen/separate sth from that/it/themetw \davon ableiten to derive sth from that/it/themich finde seine Theorien fragwürdig und würde meine These nicht davon \davon I think his theories are questionable and I wouldn't derive my thesis from themhast du die Bücher gelesen? was hältst du \davon? have your read the books? what do you think of them?sie unterscheiden sich \davon nur in diesem kleinen Detail they differ from that only in this small detail\davon betroffen sein to be affected by it/thatdas Gegenteil \davon the opposite of that/it/themjdn \davon heilen to heal sb of that/it\davon verstehe ich gar nichts! I know nothing about that/it!\davon weiß ich nichts I don't know anything about that/itgenug \davon! enough [of that]!kein Wort mehr \davon! not another word!was weißt du denn schon \davon! what do you know about it anyway?was weißt du \davon? what do you know about that/it?\davon war nie die Rede! that was never mentioned!ein andermal mehr \davon, ich muss jetzt los I'll tell you more later, I have to go nowkeine Ahnung \davon haben to have no idea about that/it\davon hören/sprechen/wissen to hear/speak/know of that/it/them6. (dadurch)beschwer dich nicht, das kommt \davon! don't complain, you've only got yourself to blame!ach, \davon kommt der seltsame Geruch! that's where the strange smell comes from!man wird \davon müde, wenn man zu viel Bier trinkt drinking too much beer makes you tiredwird man \davon krank? does that make you ill?werde ich \davon wieder gesund? will that cure me?entschuldige den Lärm. bist du \davon aufgewacht? sorry for the noise. did it wake you?für mich bitte keine Sahne. \davon wird mir immer schlecht no cream for me, please. it makes me sicktrink nicht so viel Bier! \davon wird man dick don't drink so much beer! it makes you fat\davon werde ich nicht satt that won't fill mesoll sie doch das Geld behalten, ich hab nichts \davon! let her keep the money, it's no use to me!das hast du nun \davon, jetzt ist er böse! now you've [gone and] done it, now he's angry!was habe ich denn \davon? what do I get out of it?, what's in it for me?was hast du denn [o hast du etwas] \davon, dass du so schuftest? nichts! what do you get [or do you get something] out of working so hard? nothing!was hast du \davon, wenn du gewinnst? what do you get out of winning?\davon haben wir nichts we won't get anything [or we get nothing] out of it\davon leben to live on [or off] that/it/themwenn noch etwas Vorhangsstoff übrig ist, kann ich \davon noch ein paar Kissen nähen if there's some curtain material left, I can make a few cushions from ites ist genügend Eis da, nimm nur \davon! there's enough ice-cream, please take [or have] some [of it]ist das Stück Wurst so recht, oder möchten Sie mehr \davon? will this piece of sausage be enough, or would you like [some] more [of it]?wie viel Äpfel dürfen es sein? — 6 Stück \davon, bitte! how many apples would you like? — six, please!das Doppelte/Dreifache \davon twice/three times as much\davon essen/trinken to eat/drink [some] of that/it/themdie Milch ist schlecht, ich hoffe, du hast nicht \davon getrunken the milk is sour, I hope you didn't drink any [of it]die Hälfte/ein Pfund/ein Teil \davon half/a pound/a part of that/it/them10. mit bestimmten vb, substdas war ein faszinierender Gedanke, und ich kam einfach nicht mehr \davon los it was a fascinating thought and I couldn't get it out of my mindich kenne die Kinder, aber die Eltern \davon habe ich noch nie getroffen I know the children, but I haven't met their parentsüberleg dir deine Entscheidung gut, für uns hängt viel \davon ab consider your decision well, a lot depends on it for uses hängt \davon ab, ob/dass... it depends on whether...das hängt ganz davon ab! depends!\davon absehen, etw zu tun to refrain from doing sth* * *1) from it/them; (von dort) from there; (mit Entfernungsangabe) away [from it/them]wir sind noch weit davon entfernt — (fig.) we are still a long way from that
2)dies ist die Hauptstraße, und davon zweigen einige Nebenstraßen ab — this is the main road and a few side roads branch off it
3) (darüber) about it/them4) (dadurch) by it/them; therebydavon kriegt man Durchfall — you get diarrhoea from [eating] that/those
das kommt davon! — (ugs.) [there you are,] that's what happens
5)das Gegenteil davon ist wahr — the opposite [of this] is true
6) (aus diesem Material, auf dieser Grundlage) from or out of it/them* * *davon advnicht weit davon (entfernt) sein be not far (away) from; fig not a million miles away from;ich bin weit davon entfernt, das zu glauben fig the last thing I’m going to do is believe that; ich muss das Hemd wechseln,trink nicht davon don’t drink from that;etwas davon wegnehmen take something away from it;Zinsen davon abziehen deduct interest from it;ich habe zehn Euro davon ausgegeben I’ve spent ten euros of it;sie hatten vier Kinder, zwei davon sind schon tot they had four children, two of whom are already dead3. Ursache etc, mit Passiv: by it;davon sterben die from ( oder of) it;müde davon tired from it;davon krank/gesund werden become ill/well through it;davon wurde er wach he was awakened by it;davon wird man müde it makes you tired;davon kannst du etwas lernen you can learn (something) from that;das kommt davon, dass du so faul bist oderwenn man so faul ist that’s what comes of being so lazy;das kommt davon! what did you expect?;ich hatte nichts als Ärger davon I had nothing but trouble with ( oder from) it;was habe 'ich davon? what do I get out of it?;was 'habe ich davon? why should I?;was hast du eigentlich davon, wenn du so gemein bist? what do you get out of being so nasty?;4. Thema: (darüber) about it, of it;genug davon! enough of that!, US auch enough already!;weiß sie schon davon? does she know (about it) already?;ich will nichts davon hören! I don’t want to hear a word about it ( oder on the subject)!;was hältst du davon, wenn wir jetzt ins Kino gehen? what would you say to a trip to the cinema (US movies) now?5. Material: out of, from;sie hat sich davon Schuhe gemacht she made shoes from it6. Grundlage:davon leben live off it;er lebt davon, Hunde zu züchten he makes his living (from) breeding dogs7. fig:es hängt davon ab, ob it depends (on) whether;abgesehen davon leaving that aside, ignoring that;davon geheilt sein be cured of it;sich davon unterscheiden differ from; etc; → auch die mit davon verbundenen Adjektive, Substantive und Verben* * *1) from it/them; (von dort) from there; (mit Entfernungsangabe) away [from it/them]wir sind noch weit davon entfernt — (fig.) we are still a long way from that
2)dies ist die Hauptstraße, und davon zweigen einige Nebenstraßen ab — this is the main road and a few side roads branch off it
3) (darüber) about it/them4) (dadurch) by it/them; therebydavon kriegt man Durchfall — you get diarrhoea from [eating] that/those
das kommt davon! — (ugs.) [there you are,] that's what happens
5)das Gegenteil davon ist wahr — the opposite [of this] is true
6) (aus diesem Material, auf dieser Grundlage) from or out of it/them* * *adv.therefrom adv.thereof adv. -
15 Les douleurs et les maladies
Où est-ce que ça vous fait mal?où avez-vous mal?= where does it hurt?Pour traduire avoir mal à, l’anglais utilise un possessif devant le nom de la partie du corps (alors que le français a un article défini), et un verbe qui peut être hurt ou ache ( faire mal). hurt est toujours possible:il a mal à la jambe= his leg hurtssa jambe lui fait mal= his leg hurtsil a mal au dos= his back hurtsil a mal aux yeux= his eyes hurtil a mal aux oreilles= his ears hurtache est utilisé avec les membres, les articulations, la tête, les dents et les oreilles:il a mal au bras= his arm achesOn peut aussi traduire par have a pain in:il a mal à la jambe= he has a pain in his legPour quelques parties du corps, l’anglais utilise un composé avec -ache:avoir mal aux dents= to have toothacheavoir mal au dos= to have backacheavoir mal aux oreilles= to have earacheavoir mal au ventre= to have stomachacheavoir mal à la tête= to have a headache (noter l’article indéfini)Attention à:il a mal au cœur= he feels sickil a mal aux reins= he has backachequi n’affectent pas la partie du corps désignée en français.Les accidentsLà où le français a des formes pronominales (se faire mal à etc.) avec l’article défini, l’anglais utilise des verbes transitifs, avec des adjectifs possessifs:il s’est cassé la jambe= he broke his legil s’est fait mal au pied= he hurt his footNoter:il a eu la jambe cassée= his leg was brokenLes faiblesses chroniquesLe français avoir le X fragile peut se traduire par to have something wrong with one’s X ou to have X trouble:avoir le cœur fragile= to have something wrong with one’s heart ou to have heart troubleavoir les reins fragiles= to have something wrong with one’s kidneys ou to have kidney troublePour certaines parties du corps (le cœur, les chevilles), on peut aussi utiliser l’adjectif weak:avoir le cœur fragile= to have a weak heartNoter que l’anglais utilise l’article indéfini dans cette tournure.Les maladiesL’anglais utilise tous les noms de maladie sans article:avoir la grippe= to have fluavoir un cancer= to have canceravoir une hépatite= to have hepatitisavoir de l’asthme= to have asthmaavoir les oreillons= to have mumpsêtre au lit avec la grippe= to be in bed with fluguérir de la grippe= to recover from flumourir du choléra= to die of choleraMême les noms de maladies suivies d’un complément ne prennent pas toujours d’article:avoir un cancer du foie= to have cancer of the liverMais:avoir un ulcère à l’estomac= to have a stomach ulcerEt attention à a cold ( un rhume), qui n’est pas vraiment une maladie:avoir un rhume= to have a coldL’anglais utilise moins volontiers les adjectifs dérivés des noms de maladies, si bien qu’on peut avoir:être asthmatique= to have asthma ou to be asthmaticêtre épileptique= to have epilepsy ou to be epilepticêtre rachitique= to have ricketsNoter:quelqu’un qui a la malaria= someone with malariaquelqu’un qui a un cancer= someone with cancerles gens qui ont le Sida= people with AidsLes gens qui se font soigner pour une maladie sont désignés par a X patient:quelqu’un qui se fait soigner pour un cancer= a cancer patientLes attaques de la maladieLe français attraper se traduit par to get ou to catch.attraper la grippe= to get flu ou to catch fluattraper une bronchite= to get bronchitis ou to catch bronchitisMais get est utilisable aussi pour ce qui n’est pas infectieux:développer un ulcère à l’estomac= to get a stomach ulcerAvoir peut se traduire par develop lorsqu’il s’agit de l’apparition progressive d’une maladie:avoir un cancer= to develop canceravoir un début d’ulcère= to develop an ulcerPour une crise passagère, et qui peut se reproduire, on traduira avoir un/une... par to have an attack of…ou a bout of…:avoir une crise d’asthme= to have an asthma attackavoir une bronchite= to have an attack of bronchitisavoir une crise de malaria= to have a bout of malariaNoter aussi:avoir une crise d’épilepsie= to have an epileptic fitLes traitementsLe français contre ne se traduit pas toujours par against.prendre quelque chose contre le rhume des foins= to take something for hay feverprendre un médicament contre la toux= to be taking something for a coughprescrire un médicament contre la toux= to prescribe something for a coughdes cachets contre la malaria= malaria tabletsse faire vacciner contre la grippe= to have a flu injectionvacciner qn contre le tétanos= to give sb a tetanus injectionse faire vacciner contre le choléra= to have a cholera vaccinationun vaccin contre la grippe= a flu vaccine ou an anti-flu vaccineMais noter:prendre des médicaments contre la grippe= to take something for fluNoter l’utilisation de la préposition anglaise on avec le verbe operate:se faire opérer d’un cancer= to be operated on for cancerle chirurgien l’a opéré d’un cancer= the surgeon operated on him for cancerDictionnaire Français-Anglais > Les douleurs et les maladies
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16 abjagen
v/t (trennb., hat -ge-): jemandem etw. abjagen get s.th. off s.o.; jemandem die Kunden abjagen steal s.o.’s customers* * *ạb|ja|gen sep1. vt2. vr (inf)to wear oneself out* * *ab|ja·genvt (fam)1. (durch eine Verfolgung entreißen)▪ jdm etw \abjagen to snatch sth from sb2. (listig erwerben)▪ jdm etw \abjagen to poach sth from sb* * *transitives Verb* * *abjagen v/t (trennb, hat -ge-):jemandem etwas abjagen get sth off sb;jemandem die Kunden abjagen steal sb’s customers* * *transitives Verb* * *v.to recover from v. -
17 siebie
⇒ się* * *pron( siebie samego) oneself; ( siebie wzajemnie) each other, one anotherprzed siebie — right lub straight ahead
być u siebie — ( w domu) to be at home; ( w swoim pokoju) to be in one's room
powiedzieć ( perf) coś od siebie — to express one's own opinion
brać (wziąć perf) coś do siebie — to take sth personally
być pewnym siebie — to be sure of o.s.
pewny siebie — self-assured, self-confident
dochodzić (dojść perf) do siebie — to recover
* * *pron.1. (identyczność, t. siebie samego) oneself; iść przed siebie walk straight on l. ahead; spojrzeć za siebie look back; spojrzenie za siebie backward glance; pozostawić l. zostawić coś za sobą leave sth behind; czuj się jak u siebie (w domu) make yourself at home; u siebie sport ( o meczu) home; chodzą ze sobą od trzech miesięcy they've been seeing each other for the past three months; chodzić ze sobą date; (zwł. w okresie narzeczeństwa) court; zabierać kogoś/coś ze sobą take sb/sth with sb l. along; zabrała ze sobą wszystko, co tylko można sobie wyobrazić she took along everything but the kitchen sink; coś nie ma przed sobą przyszłości there's no future in l. for sth; masz przed sobą wspaniałą przyszłość you've got a great future ahead of you; chcę mieć to za sobą I want to get it over; mieć najgorsze za sobą be over the hump; mieć za sobą najtrudniejszą część czegoś break the back of sth; mieć najlepsze lata za sobą be past one's prime, be over the hill; mieć za sobą daleką drogę (bardzo się zmienić, dojrzeć itp.) t. dosł. have come a long way; nieść l. pociągać za sobą involve, imply, entail; porwać za sobą (zwł. tłum) carry; spalić za sobą mosty burn one's bridges l. boats (behind one); zamknij za sobą drzwi shut l. close the door behind l. after you; dochodzić do siebie po czymś recover from sth; brać coś do siebie ( uwagi) take sth personally; przyciągnąć kolana do siebie draw up one's knees; przytulić kogoś do siebie hug sb; zapraszać kogoś do siebie ask sb round, ask sb to come to one's place; zrazić l. zniechęcać kogoś do siebie antagonize sb, disaffect sb; wyjść z siebie blow l. pop one's cork, be beside o.s.; wykrztuś l. wyrzuć l. wyduś to z siebie! (= powiedz to) spit it out!; wylewać z siebie żale pour out one's sorrows; wypruwać z siebie żyły sweat blood, sweat one's guts out; zadowolony z siebie self-complacent, self-satisfied; zrobić z siebie durnia make an idiot l. ass of o.s.; zrobić z siebie pośmiewisko make o.s. a laughing stock; być z siebie dumnym be proud of o.s.; robić z siebie głupka play the fool; robić z siebie widowisko make an exhibition l. a spectacle of o.s.; samemu z siebie ( zrobić coś) by o.s.; samo z siebie by itself, per se; zostawiać coś po sobie leave sth as one's legacy; cel sam w sobie an end in itself; łączyć w sobie (zwł. cechy) combine; mieć w sobie to coś (trudną do zdefiniowania cechę, która dodaje atrakcyjności) have this something; mieścić w sobie contain, hold; ona ma w sobie trochę snobizmu she's somewhat of a snob; przemóc w sobie dumę swallow one's pride; rzecz sama w sobie thing-in-itself, noumenon; sprzeczność sama w sobie a contradiction in terms; zamknięty w sobie indrawn, introvert, withdrawn; zebrać się w sobie pull o.s. together, get a grip on o.s.; mieć coś przy sobie have sth on l. about sb; nie mam przy sobie pieniędzy I have no money on me; ręce przy sobie! (keep your) hands off!; sam sobie jesteś winien it is your own fault, you only have yourself to blame; sami sobie pieczemy chleb we bake our own bread; wmówić sobie, że... kid o.s. (into believing) that...2. (wzajemność, t. siebie wzajemnie) each other, one another; dzielić (pomiędzy siebie) (koszt, dochód) split; wyjaśnić sobie wszystko get l. put l. set things straight; wyjaśnijmy sobie jedną rzecz let's have l. get one thing clear; mówić sobie po imieniu be on first name terms with each other; przypadli sobie do gustu they took (a) fancy l. liking to each other; dalej od siebie farther away from each other l. one another; bliżej siebie closer to each other l. one another.The New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > siebie
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18 beter
beter1〈 het〉1 something/anything better♦voorbeelden:bij gebrek aan beter • for want of anything better————————beter21 [vergrotende trap van ‘goed’] better2 [genezen; minder ziek] better♦voorbeelden:het is beter dat je nu vertrekt • you'd better leave nowze is beter in wiskunde dan haar broer • she's better at maths than her brotheralles is beter dan een bezoek aan haar • anything is preferable to visiting herdat is al beter • that's more like ithuilen maakt het er helemaal niet beter op voor je • crying won't do you any goodbeter maken • improvehij was beter af zonder hun hulp • he'd be better off without their helpergens beter van worden • benefit from somethingbeter worden • improvedaar wordt het niet beter van • that will not make things any betterbij gebrek aan iets beters • for want of anything betterwel wat beters te doen hebben • have better things to dohij is weer helemaal beter • he has completely recoveredbeter maken, weer beter maken • curebeter worden, weer beter worden • recover, get well againbetere kwaliteit (van) koffie • better-quality coffeeII 〈 bijwoord〉1 [vergrotende trap van ‘goed’] better2 [anders] better♦voorbeelden:hij kan zijn geld wel beter gebruiken • he knows better than to spend his money on thatbeter gezegd • (or) ratherje had beter kunnen helpen, je had er beter aan gedaan te helpen • you would have done better to helphet beter hebben (dan vroeger/dan een ander) • be better off (than before/than someone else)de leerling kon beter • the student could do betterom (des te) beter te kunnen zien • (all) the better to seejij kunt beter je mond houden • you'd better keep your mouth shutJohn tennist beter dan ik • John is a better tennis-player than meiets tegen beter weten in doen • do something against one's better judgementze weten niet beter of … • for all they know …des te beter (voor ons) • so much the better (for us)hoe eerder hoe beter • the sooner the betterde volgende keer beter • better luck next timehij weet nu wel beter • he knows better now -
19 rifare
do again( rinnovare) do upstanza tidy (up)letto make* * *rifare v.tr.1 to do* again, to redo*; to make* again, to remake*: bello quel passo di danza, rifallo!, that dance step is fine, do it again!; è tutto da rifare, the whole thing must be redone (o done again); non ho ancora rifatto il mio letto, I have not yet made my bed // rifare un esame, to take an exam (ination) again2 ( ricostruire) to rebuild*: l'antica chiesa fu rifatta nel XVIII secolo, the ancient church was rebuilt in the 18th century3 ( rieleggere) to re-elect: rifare qlcu. presidente, to re-elect s.o. president (o chairman)4 ( ripercorrere) to retrace: ha dovuto rifare la strada fino al semaforo, he had to retrace his steps as far as the traffic-lights6 ( imitare) to imitate, to ape: rifare i gesti, le mosse di qlcu., to ape (o to imitate) s.o.'s gestures, movements7 ( imitare fraudolentemente) to forge: rifare la firma di qlcu., to forge s.o.'s signature8 ( indennizzare) to indemnify, to reimburse: rifare qlcu. di un danno, to indemnify s.o. for damages; ti rifarò delle spese, I'll refund (o reimburse) you.◘ rifarsi v.rifl. o intr.pron.1 to make* up (for); to make* good (sthg.): voleva rifare del denaro perduto, he wanted to make up for (o he wanted to recover) the money he had lost; rifare del tempo perduto, to make up for lost time; dopo che fece bancarotta ci mise tre anni a rifare, after he went bankrupt he took three years to get on his feet again; ho continuato a giocare perché speravo di rifarmi, I went on playing, because I was hoping to make good my losses; non so neppure se mi rifarò delle spese, I don't even know if I'll recoup (o cover o clear) my expenses2 ( ritornare, ridiventare) to become* again: il tempo si è rifatto bello, the weather has become fine again // dopo una settimana si è rifatto vivo, after a week he showed (o turned) up again3 ( vendicarsi) to get* even (with s.o.); to revenge oneself: egli voleva rifare su di loro dei torti ricevuti, he wanted to get even with them (o to revenge himself on them) for the wrongs he had received4 ( risalire) to go* back to (sthg.); ( attingere) to draw* on (sthg.): per ritrovarne le tracce dobbiamo rifarci a epoche preistoriche, to find traces of it we have to go back to prehistoric times; rifare all'esperienza passata, to draw on previous experience5 ( richiamare) to follow: qui l'autore si rifà a un metodo classico, here the author is following a classical method6 ( con chirurgia estetica): rifare il seno, to have one's breasts redone, to have plastic surgery on one's breasts; è tutta rifatta, (spreg.) it's all plastic (surgery).* * *1. [ri'fare]vb irreg vtstai tranquillo, non lo rifarà — don't worry, she won't do it again
rifarsi la bocca — (anche), fig to take away a bad taste
rifarsi una vita — to make a new life for o.s.
2. vip (rifarsi)1)rifarsi vivo — to re-appear, turn up again
2) (ricuperare)rifarsi di — (perdita, spesa) to recover from
rifarsi di qc su qn — (vendicarsi) to get one's own back on sb for sth, get even with sb for sth
3) (riferirsi)rifarsi a — (periodo, fenomeno storico) to go back to, (stile, autore) to follow
* * *[ri'fare] 1.verbo transitivo1) (fare di nuovo) to do* [sth.] again, to redo* [esercizio, calcolo, lavoro]; to remake* [letto, vestito, film]2) (risistemare) to redo* [pavimento, grondaia]; to resurface [ strada]farsi rifare il naso, il seno — to have a nose job, breast job
3) (imitare) to imitate2.verbo pronominale rifarsi1) (recuperare)-rsi del tempo, sonno perduto — to make up for lost time, sleep
2) (riferirsi) to relate (a to)3) (rivalersi)-rsi su qcn. — to take it out on sb.
4) colloq. (con chirurgia plastica)-rsi il naso, seno — to have a nose job, breast job
••••-rsi gli occhi con qcs. — to feast one's eyes on sth.
Note:v. la voce 1.fare* * *rifare/ri'fare/ [8]v. la voce 1. fare.1 (fare di nuovo) to do* [sth.] again, to redo* [esercizio, calcolo, lavoro]; to remake* [letto, vestito, film]; rifare la valigia to repack one's suitcase; rifare gli stessi errori to make the same mistakes again; rifare la stessa strada to go back the same way; rifare un numero di telefono to redial a phone number; si doveva rifare tutto da capo it all had to be done all over again2 (risistemare) to redo* [pavimento, grondaia]; to resurface [ strada]; rifare i tacchi delle scarpe to reheel the shoes; farsi rifare il naso, il seno to have a nose job, breast job3 (imitare) to imitateII rifarsi verbo pronominale1 (recuperare) -rsi del tempo, sonno perduto to make up for lost time, sleep2 (riferirsi) to relate (a to)-rsi gli occhi con qcs. to feast one's eyes on sth.; - rsi una vita to start a new life. -
20 Computers
The brain has been compared to a digital computer because the neuron, like a switch or valve, either does or does not complete a circuit. But at that point the similarity ends. The switch in the digital computer is constant in its effect, and its effect is large in proportion to the total output of the machine. The effect produced by the neuron varies with its recovery from [the] refractory phase and with its metabolic state. The number of neurons involved in any action runs into millions so that the influence of any one is negligible.... Any cell in the system can be dispensed with.... The brain is an analogical machine, not digital. Analysis of the integrative activities will probably have to be in statistical terms. (Lashley, quoted in Beach, Hebb, Morgan & Nissen, 1960, p. 539)It is essential to realize that a computer is not a mere "number cruncher," or supercalculating arithmetic machine, although this is how computers are commonly regarded by people having no familiarity with artificial intelligence. Computers do not crunch numbers; they manipulate symbols.... Digital computers originally developed with mathematical problems in mind, are in fact general purpose symbol manipulating machines....The terms "computer" and "computation" are themselves unfortunate, in view of their misleading arithmetical connotations. The definition of artificial intelligence previously cited-"the study of intelligence as computation"-does not imply that intelligence is really counting. Intelligence may be defined as the ability creatively to manipulate symbols, or process information, given the requirements of the task in hand. (Boden, 1981, pp. 15, 16-17)The task is to get computers to explain things to themselves, to ask questions about their experiences so as to cause those explanations to be forthcoming, and to be creative in coming up with explanations that have not been previously available. (Schank, 1986, p. 19)In What Computers Can't Do, written in 1969 (2nd edition, 1972), the main objection to AI was the impossibility of using rules to select only those facts about the real world that were relevant in a given situation. The "Introduction" to the paperback edition of the book, published by Harper & Row in 1979, pointed out further that no one had the slightest idea how to represent the common sense understanding possessed even by a four-year-old. (Dreyfus & Dreyfus, 1986, p. 102)A popular myth says that the invention of the computer diminishes our sense of ourselves, because it shows that rational thought is not special to human beings, but can be carried on by a mere machine. It is a short stop from there to the conclusion that intelligence is mechanical, which many people find to be an affront to all that is most precious and singular about their humanness.In fact, the computer, early in its career, was not an instrument of the philistines, but a humanizing influence. It helped to revive an idea that had fallen into disrepute: the idea that the mind is real, that it has an inner structure and a complex organization, and can be understood in scientific terms. For some three decades, until the 1940s, American psychology had lain in the grip of the ice age of behaviorism, which was antimental through and through. During these years, extreme behaviorists banished the study of thought from their agenda. Mind and consciousness, thinking, imagining, planning, solving problems, were dismissed as worthless for anything except speculation. Only the external aspects of behavior, the surface manifestations, were grist for the scientist's mill, because only they could be observed and measured....It is one of the surprising gifts of the computer in the history of ideas that it played a part in giving back to psychology what it had lost, which was nothing less than the mind itself. In particular, there was a revival of interest in how the mind represents the world internally to itself, by means of knowledge structures such as ideas, symbols, images, and inner narratives, all of which had been consigned to the realm of mysticism. (Campbell, 1989, p. 10)[Our artifacts] only have meaning because we give it to them; their intentionality, like that of smoke signals and writing, is essentially borrowed, hence derivative. To put it bluntly: computers themselves don't mean anything by their tokens (any more than books do)-they only mean what we say they do. Genuine understanding, on the other hand, is intentional "in its own right" and not derivatively from something else. (Haugeland, 1981a, pp. 32-33)he debate over the possibility of computer thought will never be won or lost; it will simply cease to be of interest, like the previous debate over man as a clockwork mechanism. (Bolter, 1984, p. 190)t takes us a long time to emotionally digest a new idea. The computer is too big a step, and too recently made, for us to quickly recover our balance and gauge its potential. It's an enormous accelerator, perhaps the greatest one since the plow, twelve thousand years ago. As an intelligence amplifier, it speeds up everything-including itself-and it continually improves because its heart is information or, more plainly, ideas. We can no more calculate its consequences than Babbage could have foreseen antibiotics, the Pill, or space stations.Further, the effects of those ideas are rapidly compounding, because a computer design is itself just a set of ideas. As we get better at manipulating ideas by building ever better computers, we get better at building even better computers-it's an ever-escalating upward spiral. The early nineteenth century, when the computer's story began, is already so far back that it may as well be the Stone Age. (Rawlins, 1997, p. 19)According to weak AI, the principle value of the computer in the study of the mind is that it gives us a very powerful tool. For example, it enables us to formulate and test hypotheses in a more rigorous and precise fashion than before. But according to strong AI the computer is not merely a tool in the study of the mind; rather the appropriately programmed computer really is a mind in the sense that computers given the right programs can be literally said to understand and have other cognitive states. And according to strong AI, because the programmed computer has cognitive states, the programs are not mere tools that enable us to test psychological explanations; rather, the programs are themselves the explanations. (Searle, 1981b, p. 353)What makes people smarter than machines? They certainly are not quicker or more precise. Yet people are far better at perceiving objects in natural scenes and noting their relations, at understanding language and retrieving contextually appropriate information from memory, at making plans and carrying out contextually appropriate actions, and at a wide range of other natural cognitive tasks. People are also far better at learning to do these things more accurately and fluently through processing experience.What is the basis for these differences? One answer, perhaps the classic one we might expect from artificial intelligence, is "software." If we only had the right computer program, the argument goes, we might be able to capture the fluidity and adaptability of human information processing. Certainly this answer is partially correct. There have been great breakthroughs in our understanding of cognition as a result of the development of expressive high-level computer languages and powerful algorithms. However, we do not think that software is the whole story.In our view, people are smarter than today's computers because the brain employs a basic computational architecture that is more suited to deal with a central aspect of the natural information processing tasks that people are so good at.... hese tasks generally require the simultaneous consideration of many pieces of information or constraints. Each constraint may be imperfectly specified and ambiguous, yet each can play a potentially decisive role in determining the outcome of processing. (McClelland, Rumelhart & Hinton, 1986, pp. 3-4)Historical dictionary of quotations in cognitive science > Computers
См. также в других словарях:
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recover — recoverer, n. /ri kuv euhr/, v.t. 1. to get back or regain (something lost or taken away): to recover a stolen watch. 2. to make up for or make good (loss, damage, etc., to oneself). 3. to regain the strength, composure, balance, or the like, of… … Universalium
recover — [[t]rɪkʌ̱və(r)[/t]] ♦♦♦ recovers, recovering, recovered 1) VERB When you recover from an illness or an injury, you become well again. [V from n/ ing] He is recovering from a knee injury... A policeman was recovering in hospital last night after… … English dictionary
recover — 1 verb 1 GET BETTER (I) 2 a) to get better after an illness, accident, shock etc: After a few days of fever, he began to recover. (+ from): My boss is recovering from a heart attack. b) if something recovers after a period of trouble or… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
recover — I UK [rɪˈkʌvə(r)] / US [rɪˈkʌvər] verb Word forms recover : present tense I/you/we/they recover he/she/it recovers present participle recovering past tense recovered past participle recovered *** 1) [intransitive] to become fit and healthy again… … English dictionary
recover — re|cov|er1 [ rı kʌvər ] verb *** 1. ) intransitive to become fit and healthy again after an illness or an injury: recover from: I haven t fully recovered from that flu I had. a ) to stop being affected by an unpleasant experience: He was fired… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
recover — re|cov|er W2 [rıˈkʌvə US ər] v [Date: 1200 1300; : Old French; Origin: recovrer, from Latin recuperare; RECUPERATE] 1.) to get better after an illness, accident, shock etc ▪ After a few days of fever, she began to recover. recover from ▪ He s in… … Dictionary of contemporary English
recover — /rəˈkʌvə / (say ruh kuvuh) verb (t) 1. to get again, or regain (something lost or taken away): to recover lost property. 2. to make up for or make good (loss, damage, etc., to oneself). 3. to regain the strength, composure, balance, etc., of… …
recover — re•cov•er [[t]rɪˈkʌv ər[/t]] v. t. 1) to get back or regain (something lost or taken away) 2) to make up for or make good (loss, damage, etc.) to oneself 3) to regain the strength, composure, balance, or the like, of (oneself) 4) law a) to obtain … From formal English to slang
get over something — recover from something, forget something … English contemporary dictionary
sleep something off — recover from something by going to sleep. → sleep … English new terms dictionary