-
1 penetrar
v.1 to pierce, to penetrate (introducirse en) (sujeto: arma, sonido).Los policías penetraron The policemen penetrated.Ella penetró el misterio She penetrated=understood the mystery.El ácido penetra la piel Acid penetrates the skin.La bala penetra la pared The bullet pierces the wall.2 to get to the bottom of (secreto, misterio).3 to penetrate (sexualmente).4 to go deep into, to penetrate.El misil penetró la tierra The missile went deep into the ground.* * *1 (introducirse - en un territorio) to penetrate (en, -); (- en una casa, propiedad) to enter2 (atravesar) to penetrate, seep through1 (atravesar) to penetrate; (ruido) to pierce■ el olor era tan fuerte que penetró la ropa the smell was so strong that it got right into our clothes2 (descifrar - misterio) to get to the bottom of; (- secreto) to fathom (out)* * *verb1) to penetrate2) enter* * *1. VI1) (=entrar)penetraron a través de o por una claraboya — they entered through a skylight
el agua había penetrado a través de o por las paredes — the water had seeped into the walls
penetrar en: penetramos en un túnel — we went into o entered a tunnel
el cuchillo penetró en la carne — the knife went into o entered o penetrated the flesh
2) frm (=descifrar) to penetrate2. VT1) (=atravesar) to go right through2) [sexualmente] to penetrate3) frm (=descubrir) [+ misterio] to fathom; [+ secreto] to unlock; [+ sentido] to grasp; [+ intención] to see through, grasp3.See:* * *1.verbo intransitivoa) ( entrar)penetrar por algo — agua/humedad to seep through something
b) ( en el acto sexual) to penetrate2.penetrar vta) <defensa/membrana> to penetrateb) (liter) <misterio/secreto> to fathom, penetrate (liter)c) (Com) < mercado> to penetrated) ( en el acto sexual) to penetrate* * *= cut through, go into, penetrate, go in, permeate, break through, tread into, seep into, seep through, seep, pervade, see through, insinuate + Reflexivo + (into), insinuate + Posesivo + way through, insinuate into, pierce, intromit.Ex. Publishers attempting to cut through this nomenclature morass can check with the library's administration.Ex. As something you may or may not know, every item going into the processing stream is assigned a priority, and our judgment will in many cases be different from yours, as our needs will be different from yours.Ex. But the leaven of the principles, promulgated by the International Federation, has not yet penetrated into more than half the lump of documentary material.Ex. But in the country the processes of printing always provoke such lively curiosity that the customers preferred to go in by a glazed door set in the shop-front and giving onto the street.Ex. This concept permeates all bibliothecal activities from start to finish, especially indexing and abstracting.Ex. Is there a glass ceiling for librarians? If so, what's the best way to break through it?.Ex. This seems to suggest that Schopenhauer may have trodden much further into the mystics' domain than he is willing to admit.Ex. Rampant commercialism is seeping into every crevice of American culture.Ex. The consequences were beginning to seep through to respondents at the time of the visits made to them and were creating a great deal of concern.Ex. The outer edges of the sheet -- the deckle edges -- are rough and uneven where the stuff seeped between the deckle and the mould.Ex. I strongly believe that we must cultivate a more positive attitude towards change in the field of library work, and that this attitude must pervade all levels of librarianship.Ex. Books can seldom be disbound for the benefit of bibliographers (although it is worth remembering that they sometimes have to be rebound, when they are completely dismembered), but we can now see through printing ink by means of betaradiography.Ex. But self-concern can insinuate itself into every corner of the emotional life.Ex. As they insinuated their way through the stack area, the secretary responded that all she knew was that the director had just returned from a meeting.Ex. While endorsing the thought that language is insinuated into brains, I also identify what I believe is the theory's Achilles heel.Ex. She waited like Saint Sebastian for the arrows to begin piercing her.Ex. During copulation, hamster females maintain lordosis for hundreds of seconds, while the male mounts and intromits repeatedly.----* osar penetrar = venture into.* palabras + penetrar = words + sink.* penetrar de un modo inclinado = slant into.* penetrar una barrera = break through + barrier.* * *1.verbo intransitivoa) ( entrar)penetrar por algo — agua/humedad to seep through something
b) ( en el acto sexual) to penetrate2.penetrar vta) <defensa/membrana> to penetrateb) (liter) <misterio/secreto> to fathom, penetrate (liter)c) (Com) < mercado> to penetrated) ( en el acto sexual) to penetrate* * *= cut through, go into, penetrate, go in, permeate, break through, tread into, seep into, seep through, seep, pervade, see through, insinuate + Reflexivo + (into), insinuate + Posesivo + way through, insinuate into, pierce, intromit.Ex: Publishers attempting to cut through this nomenclature morass can check with the library's administration.
Ex: As something you may or may not know, every item going into the processing stream is assigned a priority, and our judgment will in many cases be different from yours, as our needs will be different from yours.Ex: But the leaven of the principles, promulgated by the International Federation, has not yet penetrated into more than half the lump of documentary material.Ex: But in the country the processes of printing always provoke such lively curiosity that the customers preferred to go in by a glazed door set in the shop-front and giving onto the street.Ex: This concept permeates all bibliothecal activities from start to finish, especially indexing and abstracting.Ex: Is there a glass ceiling for librarians? If so, what's the best way to break through it?.Ex: This seems to suggest that Schopenhauer may have trodden much further into the mystics' domain than he is willing to admit.Ex: Rampant commercialism is seeping into every crevice of American culture.Ex: The consequences were beginning to seep through to respondents at the time of the visits made to them and were creating a great deal of concern.Ex: The outer edges of the sheet -- the deckle edges -- are rough and uneven where the stuff seeped between the deckle and the mould.Ex: I strongly believe that we must cultivate a more positive attitude towards change in the field of library work, and that this attitude must pervade all levels of librarianship.Ex: Books can seldom be disbound for the benefit of bibliographers (although it is worth remembering that they sometimes have to be rebound, when they are completely dismembered), but we can now see through printing ink by means of betaradiography.Ex: But self-concern can insinuate itself into every corner of the emotional life.Ex: As they insinuated their way through the stack area, the secretary responded that all she knew was that the director had just returned from a meeting.Ex: While endorsing the thought that language is insinuated into brains, I also identify what I believe is the theory's Achilles heel.Ex: She waited like Saint Sebastian for the arrows to begin piercing her.Ex: During copulation, hamster females maintain lordosis for hundreds of seconds, while the male mounts and intromits repeatedly.* osar penetrar = venture into.* palabras + penetrar = words + sink.* penetrar de un modo inclinado = slant into.* penetrar una barrera = break through + barrier.* * *penetrar [A1 ]vi1(en un lugar): la puerta por donde penetró el ladrón the door through which the thief enteredel agua penetraba por entre las tejas water was seeping in o coming in between the tilesuna luz tenue penetraba a través de los visillos a pale light filtered in through the lace curtainsun intenso olor penetraba por todos los rincones de la casa a pungent smell pervaded every corner of the housepenetrar EN algo:la bala penetró en el pulmón izquierdo the bullet pierced his left lungtropas enemigas han penetrado en nuestras fronteras enemy troops have pushed over o crossed o penetrated our bordershace un frío que penetra en los huesos the cold gets right into your bonesla humedad había penetrado en las paredes the damp had seeped into the wallsesta crema penetra rápidamente en la piel this cream is quickly absorbed by the skin2 (descubrir, descifrar) penetrar EN algo:intenta penetrar en la intimidad del personaje he attempts to delve into the personality of the characteres difícil penetrar en su mente it is difficult to fathom his thoughts o ( colloq) to get inside his head3 (en un mercado) penetrar EN algo to penetrate sth4 (en el acto sexual) to penetrate■ penetrarvt1 (atravesar) to penetrateun ruido que penetra los oídos a piercing o ear-splitting noisees difícil penetrar la corteza it is difficult to penetrate o get through the outer layer2 ‹misterio/secreto› to fathom3 ( Com) ‹mercado› to penetrate4 (en el acto sexual) to penetrate* * *
penetrar ( conjugate penetrar) verbo intransitivo ( entrar) penetrar por algo [agua/humedad] to seep through sth;
[ luz] to shine through sth;
[ ladrón] to enter through sth;
penetrar EN algo to penetrate sth
verbo transitivo
to penetrate;◊ la bala le penetró el pulmón the bullet penetrated o entered his lung
penetrar
I verbo transitivo to penetrate: el aceite penetró el tejido y no pude sacar la mancha, the oil went straight through the material and I couldn't get it out
era incapaz de penetrar el sentido de sus palabras, it was impossible to get to the bottom of his meaning
un intenso olor penetraba el lugar, a strong smell seeped through the place
II vi (en un recinto) to go o get [en, in]: un frente frío penetrará por el noroeste, a cold front will sweep over from the north-east
el veneno penetró en la piel, the poison was soaked in through the skin
' penetrar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
calar
- internarse
English:
come through
- penetrate
- pierce
- sink in
- soak in
- strike through
- break
* * *♦ viel agua penetraba por la puerta the water was seeping under the door;la luz penetraba por entre las rendijas the light came filtering through the cracks;[filtrarse por] to get into, to penetrate; [perforar] to pierce; [llegar a conocer] to get to the bottom of;cinco terroristas penetraron en el palacio five terrorists got into the palace;no consiguen penetrar en el mercado europeo they have been unable to penetrate the European market♦ vt1. [introducirse en] [sujeto: arma, sonido] to pierce, to penetrate;[sujeto: humedad, líquido] to permeate; [sujeto: emoción, sentimiento] to pierce;la bala le penetró el corazón the bullet pierced her heart;el frío les penetraba hasta los huesos they were chilled to the bone;el grito le penetró los oídos the scream pierced her eardrums;han penetrado el mercado latinoamericano they have made inroads into o penetrated the Latin American market2. [secreto, misterio] to get to the bottom of3. [sexualmente] to penetrate* * *I v/t penetrateII v/i1 ( atravesar) penetrate2 ( entrar) enter* * *penetrar vi1) : to penetrate, to sink in2)penetrar por orpenetrar en : to pierce, to go in, to enter intoel frío penetra por la ventana: the cold comes right in through the windowpenetrar vt1) : to penetrate, to permeate2) : to pierceel dolor penetró su corazón: sorrow pierced her heart3) : to fathom, to understand* * *penetrar vb1. (entrar) to get into2. (perforar) to penetrate / to pierce -
2 filtrarse
1 (pasar a través) to filter* * *VPR1) [líquido] to seep, leak; [luz, sonido] to filterel agua se filtraba por las paredes — water was seeping o leaking in through the walls
2) (=desaparecer) [dinero, bienes] to disappear* * *(v.) = seep through, percolate, seep into, seepEx. The consequences were beginning to seep through to respondents at the time of the visits made to them and were creating a great deal of concern.Ex. A culture of violence and hatred seems to have percolated through the corridors of the institutions of learning particularly schools.Ex. Rampant commercialism is seeping into every crevice of American culture.Ex. The outer edges of the sheet -- the deckle edges -- are rough and uneven where the stuff seeped between the deckle and the mould.* * *(v.) = seep through, percolate, seep into, seepEx: The consequences were beginning to seep through to respondents at the time of the visits made to them and were creating a great deal of concern.
Ex: A culture of violence and hatred seems to have percolated through the corridors of the institutions of learning particularly schools.Ex: Rampant commercialism is seeping into every crevice of American culture.Ex: The outer edges of the sheet -- the deckle edges -- are rough and uneven where the stuff seeped between the deckle and the mould.* * *
■filtrarse verbo reflexivo
1 (líquido) seep
2 (una noticia) to leak out
' filtrarse' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
filtrar
English:
filter out
- filter through
- get out
- leak
- seep
- filter
- percolate
* * *vpr1. [penetrar] to filter, to seep ( por through);la luz se filtra por una rendija the light filters in through a crack;la humedad se filtra por la pared the damp seeps through the wall2. [información, noticia] to be leaked* * ** * *vr: to seep through, to leak* * *filtrarse vb1. (líquidos) to leak / to seep2. (luz) to filter3. (información) to leak -
3 eindringen
v/i (unreg., trennb., ist -ge-)1. eindringen (in + Akk) Person: get in(to); gewaltsam: force one’s way in(to); Einbrecher: break in; Truppen: invade; er drang in sie ein he penetrated her2. eindringen (in + Akk) Sache: get in(to); Wasser, Sand etc.: auch seep in(to); Pfeil etc.: penetrate, pierce; der Stachel drang tief in den Finger ein the thorn went deep into his etc. finger3. fig. in einen Markt: penetrate, make inroads into ( oder on); Idee etc.: penetrate, find its way into, become established in; Fremdwörter dringen in die Sprache ein foreign words come into common usage in the language; ihre Worte sind in ihn eingedrungen her words registered with him, her words really hit home (with him)5. auf jemanden eindringen Feinde etc.: close in on s.o.; fig. mit Fragen etc.: press s.o.; Gefühle: crowd in on s.o.* * *das Eindringenincursion; permeation; intrusion; invasion; penetration; irruption* * *ein|drin|genvi sep irreg aux sein1)(= einbrechen)
éíndringen — to force one's way into sth; (Dieb etc auch) to force an entry into sthin unsere Linien/das Land éíndringen (Mil) — to penetrate our lines/into the country
2)éíndringen — to go into sth, to penetrate (into) sth; (Wasser, Gas auch) to get into or find its way into sth; (Fremdwort, Amerikanismus) to find its way into sth
eine Stimmung in sich éíndringen lassen — to let oneself be carried away by a mood
3)(= bestürmen)
auf jdn éíndringen — to go for or attack sb (mit with); (mit Fragen, Bitten etc) to besiege sb* * *das1) (to enter or go to (a party, meeting etc) without being invited or without paying.) gate-crash3) intrude4) (to investigate: He probed into her private life.) probe5) (to be fully understood: The news took a long time to sink in.) sink in* * *ein|drin·genvi irreg Hilfsverb: sein1. (einbrechen)2. (vordringen)3. (hineindringen, hineinsickern)Grundwasser drang in den Tunnel ein groundwater got [or seeped] into the tunnel4. (sich kundig machen)5. (sich verbreiten)6. (bestürmen)* * *unregelmäßiges intransitives Verb; mit sein1)in etwas (Akk.) eindringen — penetrate into something; < vermin> get into something; < bullet> pierce something; (allmählich) <water, sand, etc.> seep into something
2) (einbrechen)in ein Gebäude eindringen — force an entry or one's way into a building
Feinde sind in das Land eingedrungen — (geh.) enemies invaded the country
3)eindringen auf — (+ Akk.) set upon, attack < person>
mit Fragen auf jemanden eindringen — besiege or ply somebody with questions
* * *eindringen v/i (irr, trennb, ist -ge-)1.in +akk) Person: get in(to); gewaltsam: force one’s way in(to); Einbrecher: break in; Truppen: invade;er drang in sie ein he penetrated her2.der Stachel drang tief in den Finger ein the thorn went deep into his etc finger3. fig in einen Markt: penetrate, make inroads into ( oder on); Idee etc: penetrate, find its way into, become established in;Fremdwörter dringen in die Sprache ein foreign words come into common usage in the language;ihre Worte sind in ihn eingedrungen her words registered with him, her words really hit home (with him)4. fig:5.auf jemanden eindringen Feinde etc: close in on sb; fig mit Fragen etc: press sb; Gefühle: crowd in on sb* * *unregelmäßiges intransitives Verb; mit sein1)in etwas (Akk.) eindringen — penetrate into something; < vermin> get into something; < bullet> pierce something; (allmählich) <water, sand, etc.> seep into something
2) (einbrechen)in ein Gebäude eindringen — force an entry or one's way into a building
Feinde sind in das Land eingedrungen — (geh.) enemies invaded the country
3)eindringen auf — (+ Akk.) set upon, attack < person>
mit Fragen auf jemanden eindringen — besiege or ply somebody with questions
* * *n.intrusion n.irruption n.penetration n. -
4 filtrar
v.1 to filter.Mario aclara el destilado Mario filters the distilled liquid.2 to leak.* * *1 (hacer pasar) to filter2 (seleccionar) to filter3 (divulgar) to leak1 (pasar a través) to filter* * *verb1) to filter2) leak* * *1. VT1) [+ líquido, luz] to filter2) [+ llamadas, visitantes] to screen3) [+ información, documento, grabación] to leak2.See:* * *1.verbo transitivo1)a) <líquido/rayos> to filterb) < llamadas> to screen2) <informaciones/noticias> to leak2.filtrar vi líquido/luz to filter3.filtrarse v pron2)a) noticia to leakb) dinero to seep away, dwindle* * *= filter (out), winnow, strain.Ex. Central libraries are an important part of the interlending system and by ensuring regional utilisation of public library resources and thus filtering requests they protect research libraries.Ex. Not only are entries weeded in order to be subject-specific, but those weeded entries are winnowed even further so that only useful information is left.Ex. Sampling for immature stages of mosquito was done weekly between May 1999 and January 2000 by straining them from the water in ravines and gutters.----* filtrar el acceso = filter + access.* filtrar + Información = leak + Información.* filtrarse = seep through, percolate, seep into, seep.* * *1.verbo transitivo1)a) <líquido/rayos> to filterb) < llamadas> to screen2) <informaciones/noticias> to leak2.filtrar vi líquido/luz to filter3.filtrarse v pron2)a) noticia to leakb) dinero to seep away, dwindle* * *= filter (out), winnow, strain.Ex: Central libraries are an important part of the interlending system and by ensuring regional utilisation of public library resources and thus filtering requests they protect research libraries.
Ex: Not only are entries weeded in order to be subject-specific, but those weeded entries are winnowed even further so that only useful information is left.Ex: Sampling for immature stages of mosquito was done weekly between May 1999 and January 2000 by straining them from the water in ravines and gutters.* filtrar el acceso = filter + access.* filtrar + Información = leak + Información.* filtrarse = seep through, percolate, seep into, seep.* * *filtrar [A1 ]vtA1 ‹líquido/rayos› to filter2 ‹llamadas› to screenB ‹informaciones/noticias› to leakC ( Inf) to filter■ filtrarvi«líquido/luz» to filterlas nubes dejaban filtrar los rayos del sol the sun's rays filtered through the cloudsA1 «agua» to leakel agua se filtraba por un pequeño agujero en el tejado the water seeped o leaked through a small hole in the roofla humedad que se filtra por las paredes the damp that seeps through the walls2 «dinero» to seep away, dwindleB «noticia» to leakla noticia se ha filtrado a la prensa the news has leaked to the press* * *
filtrar ( conjugate filtrar) verbo transitivo
filtrarse verbo pronominal
[ humedad] to seep;
filtrar verbo transitivo
1 (un líquido) to filter
2 (una noticia, un dato) to leak
' filtrar' also found in these entries:
English:
filter
- leak
- strain
* * *♦ vt1. [tamizar] to filter2. [información, noticia] to leak3. [llamadas] to screen* * *v/t1 agua filter2 información leak* * *filtrar v: to filter* * *filtrar vb1. (líquidos, luz) to filter2. (información) to leak -
5 infiltrarse
pron.v.to infiltrate, to insinuate by filtration.* * *1 to infiltrate (en, -)* * *VPR1) [espía, agente] to infiltrateconsiguieron infiltrarse en territorio rumano — they succeeded in infiltrating into Romanian territory
2) [ideas, costumbres] to permeateel liberalismo se fue infiltrando entre los intelectuales — liberalism gradually permeated the intelligentsia
3) [líquido] to seep; [luz] to filter* * *(v.) = creep (up) (in/into), infiltrate, make + Posesivo + way (into/onto), weasel + Posesivo + way into, worm + Posesivo + way throughEx. Abstracting may not always be accorded a high priority by volunteer abstractors and undesirable delays may creep into the preparation of abstracts.Ex. Black librarians in the UK were urged to join the Association, get themselves organized, and ' infiltrate' to change things from the inside.Ex. Although electronic books (eBooks) are beginning to make their way into libraries collections, the question remains as to why it has taken so long for this to happen.Ex. He then rented a hidden camera and weaseled his way into the private ceremony to take a shot of the singer.Ex. Corruption wormed its way through their ranks, as it did through the ranks of their kinfolk.* * *(v.) = creep (up) (in/into), infiltrate, make + Posesivo + way (into/onto), weasel + Posesivo + way into, worm + Posesivo + way throughEx: Abstracting may not always be accorded a high priority by volunteer abstractors and undesirable delays may creep into the preparation of abstracts.
Ex: Black librarians in the UK were urged to join the Association, get themselves organized, and ' infiltrate' to change things from the inside.Ex: Although electronic books (eBooks) are beginning to make their way into libraries collections, the question remains as to why it has taken so long for this to happen.Ex: He then rented a hidden camera and weaseled his way into the private ceremony to take a shot of the singer.Ex: Corruption wormed its way through their ranks, as it did through the ranks of their kinfolk.* * *
■infiltrarse verbo reflexivo to infiltrate [en, into]
' infiltrarse' also found in these entries:
English:
infiltrate
- penetrate
* * *vpr1.infiltrarse en algo [espía] to infiltrate sth;se infiltró en el grupo terrorista he infiltrated the terrorist organization;se infiltraron en la red de la CIA they hacked into the CIA's computer network2. [líquido] to seep;la humedad se infiltró en la pared the damp seeped through the wall3. [ideas]sus ideas se infiltraron en el país rápidamente her ideas quickly spread through the country* * *v/r:* * *vr♦ infiltración nf -
6 insinuer
insinuer [ɛ̃sinye]➭ TABLE 11. transitive verb• que voulez-vous insinuer ? what are you insinuating?2. reflexive verb* * *ɛ̃sinɥe
1.
2) ( introduire) to slip ( dans into)
2.
s'insinuer verbe pronominal [personne] ( physiquement) to slip; ( socialement) to ingratiate oneself ( auprès de quelqu'un with somebody); [sentiment, idée] to creep; [liquide, odeur] to seeple doute s'insinuait en eux or dans leur esprit — doubt crept into their minds
* * *ɛ̃sinɥe vt* * *insinuer verb table: aimerA vtr1 ( suggérer) to insinuate (que that);2 ( introduire) to slip (dans into).B s'insinuer vpr [personne] ( physiquement) to slip (dans into); ( socialement) to ingratiate oneself (auprès de qn with sb); [sentiment, idée] to creep (dans into); [liquide, odeur] to seep (dans into); le doute s'insinuait en eux or dans leur esprit doubt crept into their minds; s'insinuer dans les bonnes grâces de qn to curry favourGB with sb.[ɛ̃sinɥe] verbe transitifque veut-elle insinuer? what's she hinting at ou trying to insinuate?insinuez-vous que je mens? are you insinuating ou implying that I'm lying?————————s'insinuer verbe pronominal intransitifa. [suj: arôme, gaz] to creep inb. [suj: eau] to filter ou to seep inc. [suj: personne] to make one's way in, to infiltrate, to penetrates'insinuer dans les bonnes grâces de quelqu'un to insinuate oneself into somebody's favour, to curry favour with somebodyle doute/une idée diabolique s'insinua en lui doubt/an evil thought crept into his mind -
7 pénétrer
pénétrer [penetʀe]➭ TABLE 61. intransitive verb► pénétrer dans [personne, véhicule] [+ lieu] to enter ; [+ groupe, milieu] to penetrate ; [soleil] to shine into ; [vent] to blow into ; [air, liquide, insecte] to come into ; [crème, balle] to penetrate ; [aiguille] to go into ; [huile, encre] to soak into2. transitive verbb. ( = découvrir) [+ mystère, secret] to fathomc. [+ marché] to break into3. reflexive verb* * *penetʀe
1.
1) ( s'infiltrer dans) [pluie] to soak ou seep into [terre]; [soleil] to penetrate [feuillage]2) ( percer à jour) to fathom [secret, pensée]3) ( sexuellement) to penetrate4) ( atteindre) [idée, mode] to reach [milieu]5) ( remplir)
2.
verbe intransitif1) ( entrer)pénétrer dans or à l'intérieur de — [personne, animal] to enter, to get into [lieu]; [balle] to penetrate [organe]; [armée] to penetrate [pays]; [personne] to penetrate [cercle, organisation]
l'auteur nous fait pénétrer dans l'univers des sociétés secrètes — the author takes us into the world of secret societies
2) ( s'infiltrer)3) ( s'imprégner)
3.
se pénétrer verbe pronominal* * *penetʀe1. vipénétrer dans [maison, enceinte] — to enter, to get into
Ils ont pénétré dans la maison en passant par le jardin. — They entered the house through the garden., They got into the house through the garden.
L'armée a pénétré en territoire ennemi. — The army penetrated enemy territory.
2. vt1) [froid, projectile] to penetrate2) [air, eau] to come into, to get into3) (sexuellement) to penetrate4) [mystère, secret] to fathom* * *pénétrer verb table: céderA vtr1 ( s'infiltrer dans) [pluie, liquide] to soak into, to seep into [terre, tissu]; [soleil, lumière] to penetrate [feuillage]; la pluie a pénétré nos vêtements the rain soaked through our clothes; le froid m'a pénétré jusqu'aux os the cold went right through me;2 ( percer à jour) to fathom [mystère, secret, intentions, pensée];3 ( sexuellement) to penetrate;4 ( atteindre) [idée, mode] to reach [milieu, groupe];5 ( remplir) to fill; son courage me pénétrait d'admiration his/her courage filled me with admiration; il était pénétré d'un sentiment de reconnaissance he was filled with gratitude.B vi1 ( entrer) pénétrer dans or à l'intérieur de [personne, animal] to enter, to get into [lieu]; [balle, éclat d'obus] to penetrate [organe]; [armée, soldats] to penetrate [lignes ennemies, pays]; [personne] to penetrate [cercle, groupe, organisation]; pénétrer en territoire ennemi to enter ou penetrate enemy territory; ils ont pénétré dans le bâtiment sans se faire repérer they got into the building without anyone noticing them; il est interdit de pénétrer sur le chantier it is forbidden to enter the building site; pénétrer dans une maison par effraction to break into a house; l'auteur nous fait pénétrer dans l'univers des sociétés secrètes the author takes us into the world of secret societies;2 ( s'infiltrer) pénétrer dans [lumière, froid, odeur] to get into, to penetrate [lieu]; [eau, vent, fumée] to get into [lieu]; c'est par là que le froid/l'eau pénètre that's where the cold/the water gets in; pour empêcher le froid de pénétrer to keep the cold air out;3 ( s'imprégner) pénétrer dans [crème, lotion] to penetrate [peau, cuir chevelu]; [cire, vernis] to penetrate [meuble, bois]; faire pénétrer la pommade en massant doucement to rub the ointment in by massaging gently.[penetre] verbe intransitifils ont réussi à pénétrer en Suisse they managed to cross into ou to enter Switzerlanda. [avec sa permission] to enter somebody's houseb. [par effraction] to break into somebody's housepénétrer sur un marché to break into a market, to make inroads into ou on a marketfaire pénétrer la crème en massant doucement gently rub ou massage the cream in2. (soutenu)pénétrer dans [approfondir] to go (deeper) into————————[penetre] verbe transitifun froid glacial me pénétra I was chilled to the bone ou to the marrow2. [imprégner] to spread into ou throughces idées ont pénétré toutes les couches de la société these ideas have spread through all levels of society3. [sexuellement] to penetrate————————se pénétrer de verbe pronominal plus prépositionil faut vous pénétrer de l'importance du facteur religieux you must be aware of ou you must understand the importance of the religious element -
8 penetrare
1. v/t penetrate2. v/i: penetrare in enter* * *penetrare v.tr.1 to seep into (sthg.); to penetrate; to pierce: un grido penetrò il silenzio, a cry pierced the silence; la lama gli penetrò il braccio, the blade penetrated his arm; l'acqua penetra la roccia, the water seeps into the rock; un odore che penetra l'aria, a pungent smell that hangs in the air2 (arrivare a capire, a conoscere) to penetrate, to get* to the heart of (sthg.): penetrare un mistero, la verità, to penetrate (o to get to the heart of) a mystery, the truth; penetrare i più oscuri recessi di un'anima, to penetrate the innermost recesses of a soul◆ v. intr.1 to penetrate (into sthg.); ( a fatica, con oggetto acuto) to pierce (into sthg.); ( passare attraverso) to pass (through sthg.); ( entrare) to go* (into sthg.), to enter (sthg.); ( entrare furtivamente) to steal* (into sthg.): la luce penetrava dalla finestra, the light filtered through the window; una spina è penetrata nella pelle, a thorn has pierced the skin; i ladri penetrarono in casa dal balcone, the thieves stole into the house from the balcony2 (di notizie, idee) to penetrate (into sthg.); to filter (into sthg.); ( di freddo, di suono) to pierce (into sthg.): un freddo che penetra, a piercing (o biting) cold; le loro idee stanno lentamente penetrando nella nostra cultura, their ideas are slowly filtering into our culture; un rumore che penetra, a piercing (o shrill) noise.* * *[pene'trare]1)(
gen) penetrare (in qc) — to penetrate (sth), enter (sth)penetrò in casa di nascosto — he entered the house by stealth, he stole into the house
penetrare nella parete — (chiodo) to penetrate the wall, (acqua) to soak into the wall
far penetrare — (aria, luce) to let in
2. vt(gen), fig to penetrate, (sogg : proiettile) to penetrate, (acqua, aria) to go o come into* * *[pene'trare] 1.verbo transitivo1) [ liquido] to soak in, to seep into, to permeate [terreno, tessuto]3) (sessualmente) to penetrate2.penetrare in — [luce, odore] to enter, to get in [ luogo]
* * *penetrare/pene'trare/ [1]1 [ liquido] to soak in, to seep into, to permeate [terreno, tessuto]3 (sessualmente) to penetrate(aus. essere) penetrare in [luce, odore] to enter, to get in [ luogo]; il freddo mi è penetrato nelle ossa the cold went right through my bones; fare penetrare la pomata to let the ointment absorb. -
9 introduire
introduire [ɛ̃tʀɔdyiʀ]➭ TABLE 381. transitive verba. ( = faire entrer) [+ objet] to place ; [+ visiteur] to show inb. ( = lancer) [+ mode] to launch ; [+ idées nouvelles] to bring inc. ( = présenter) to introduce2. reflexive verba. ( = pénétrer)b. [usage, mode, idée] to be adopted* * *ɛ̃tʀɔdɥiʀ
1.
1) ( insérer) to insert [objet]2) ( faire entrer) ( en grande pompe) to usher [somebody] in [personne]; ( clandestinement) to smuggle4) ( faire adopter) to introduce [produit, idée] ( dans into)5) ( importer illicitement) to smuggle
2.
s'introduire verbe pronominal1) ( pénétrer)2) ( se faire admettre) [personne] to gain admittance ( dans to)* * *ɛ̃tʀɔdɥiʀ vt1) [ouvrage, propos] to introduce2) [visiteur] to show in3) [aiguille, clef] to insertintroduire qch dans — to insert sth into, to put sth into
4) [personne] (= faire rencontrer)introduire qn dans [club, société, milieu] — to introduce sb into
5) [personne] (= faire découvrir à qn)C'est lui qui m'a introduit à la philosophie. — It was he who introduced me to philosophy.
6) [produit, innovation] (= faire connaître)introduire qch auprès de [personne, marché, public] — to introduce sth to
7) [mesure] introduce8) INFORMATIQUE, [données] to input, to enter* * *introduire verb table: conduireA vtr1 ( insérer) to insert [objet] (dans into); introduire une clé dans une serrure to insert a key into a lock;2 ( faire entrer) ( en grande pompe) to usher [sb] in [invité, visiteur]; ( clandestinement) to smuggle [personne] (dans into);3 ( présenter) to introduce [personne]; il m'a promis qu'il m'introduirait auprès du ministre he promised me that he would introduce me to the minister;4 ( faire adopter) to introduce [mesures, coutume, produit, idée] (dans into); introduire une nouvelle législation to introduce new legislation;5 ( importer illicitement) to smuggle [produits, drogue] (dans into);B s'introduire vpr1 ( pénétrer) [personne, eau, fumée] to get (dans into); les cambrioleurs se sont introduits dans la maison par la lucarne the burglars got into the house through the skylight; s'introduire dans une maison/pièce par effraction to break into a house/room;2 ( se faire admettre) [personne] to gain admittance (dans to);3 ( être adopté) [mode, mot, idée] to be introduced (dans into).[ɛ̃trɔdɥir] verbe transitifintroduire une clé dans une serrure to put ou to insert a key into a lock2. [faire adopter - idée, mot] to introduce, to bring in (separable) ; [ - règlement] to institute ; [ - mode, produit] to introduce, to launchintroduire un produit sur le marché ÉCONOMIE to bring out (separable) ou to launch a product onto the market3. [présenter] to introduce[faire entrer - visiteur] to show in (separable)4. SPORT————————s'introduire dans verbe pronominal plus préposition1. [pénétrer dans - suj: clé, piston] to go ou to fit into ; [ - suj: eau] to filter ou to seep into ; [ - suj: cambrioleur] to break into(figuré) [suj: date, erreur] to crep into2. [être accepté par - suj: idée] to penetrate (into), to spread throughout, to infiltrate (péjoratif)3. [se faire admettre dans - suj: postulant] to gain admittance to ; [ - suj: intrigant] to worm one's way into, to infiltrate -
10 infiltrarsi vip
[infil'trarsi]infiltrarsi in — to infiltrate, (fumo, gas, luce) to penetrate into, filter into, (umidità, liquido) to penetrate, seep (into)
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11 s'insinuer
ɛ̃sinɥe1. vpr/pass[humidité, liquide]2. vpr/réfl(= se glisser) to worm one's way into, to creep into -
12 infiltrarse en
v.to filter into, to seep into, to ooze into. -
13 infiltrarsi
vip [infil'trarsi]infiltrarsi in — to infiltrate, (fumo, gas, luce) to penetrate into, filter into, (umidità, liquido) to penetrate, seep (into)
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14 resap
to penetrate into; to seep into; to diffuse into -
15 verrinnen
v/i (unreg.) Wasser etc.: trickle away; Zeit: pass, slip away; Stunden: auch tick away; Jahre: pass by, slip by* * *to trickle* * *ver|rịn|nen ptp verro\#nnen [fɛɐ'rɔnən]vi irreg aux sein(Wasser) to trickle away ( in +dat into); (Zeit) to elapse* * *ver·rin·nen *vi irreg Hilfsverb: sein2. (versickern)* * *verrinnen v/i (irr) Wasser etc: trickle away; Zeit: pass, slip away; Stunden: auch tick away; Jahre: pass by, slip by* * *v.to trickle v. -
16 s'infiltrer
ɛ̃filtʀe vpr/vis'infiltrer dans [sable, saleté] — to penetrate into, [liquide] to seep into, fig (= noyauter) to infiltrate
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17 penetrar
• come in• penetrate• penetrate into• perforate• permeability• permeate through• pierce• seep into• sink in• understand -
18 просачиваться в почву
•As rain falls on a slope, it will begin to seep into the soil.
Русско-английский научно-технический словарь переводчика > просачиваться в почву
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19 просачиваться в
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20 merembesi
ooze out, leak, filter through something* * *ooze out, leak, filter through something; permeate something, seep into something
См. также в других словарях:
seep — [ sip ] verb intransitive 1. ) to flow into or out of something through small holes, usually when this should not happen: seep through: The rain had seeped through his clothes. seep into: Poisonous chemicals from the factory are seeping into our… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
seep — [si:p] v [I always + adverb/preposition] [: Old English; Origin: sipian] 1.) to flow slowly through small holes or spaces seep into/through/down etc ▪ Blood seeped down his leg. 2.) to move or spread gradually seep away/into/through etc ▪ His… … Dictionary of contemporary English
seep — UK [siːp] / US [sɪp] verb [intransitive] Word forms seep : present tense I/you/we/they seep he/she/it seeps present participle seeping past tense seeped past participle seeped 1) to flow into or out of something through small holes, usually when… … English dictionary
seep — [[t]si͟ːp[/t]] seeps, seeping, seeped 1) VERB If something such as liquid or gas seeps somewhere, it flows slowly and in small amounts into a place where it should not go. [V prep/adv] Radioactive water had seeped into underground reservoirs...… … English dictionary
seep — verb ADVERB ▪ gradually, slowly ▪ away, back, out, through, up ▪ The power had gradually seeped away … Collocations dictionary
seep — I. intransitive verb Etymology: alteration of earlier sipe, from Middle English sipen, from Old English sipian; akin to Middle Low German sipen to seep Date: 1790 1. to flow or pass slowly through fine pores or small openings ; ooze < water… … New Collegiate Dictionary
seep — [siːp] verb [I] to flow into or out of something through small holes Chemicals from the factory were seeping into the earth.[/ex] … Dictionary for writing and speaking English
seep in — Synonyms and related words: absorb, adsorb, assimilate, blot, blot up, chemisorb, chemosorb, digest, drink, drink in, drink up, engross, filter in, imbibe, infiltrate, ingest, leak in, osmose, percolate in, percolate into, slurp up, soak in, soak … Moby Thesaurus
seep — v. (P; intr.) the water seeped in to the basement * * * [siːp] (P;intr.) the water seeped into the basement … Combinatory dictionary
seep — verb (intransitive always + adv/prep) to flow slowly through small holes or spaces (+ in/into/through etc): Whenever it rained water started seeping in … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
seep — verb a brown substance is seeping into the basement Syn: ooze, trickle, exude, drip, dribble, flow, issue, escape, leak, drain, bleed, filter, percolate, soak … Thesaurus of popular words