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1 undress
B vtr déshabiller.C vi se déshabiller. -
2 undress
undress [ʌnˈdres]* * *[ˌʌn'dres] 1.transitive verb déshabiller2.intransitive verb se déshabiller -
3 undress
1) (to take the clothes off (a person): She undressed the child; Undress yourself and get into bed.) déshabiller2) (to undress oneself: I undressed and went to bed.) se déshabiller -
4 reveal
A vtr1 ( make public) dévoiler [truth, plan, fault] ; révéler [secret] ; to reveal that révéler que ; to reveal sth to sb révéler qch à qn ; to reveal sb to be sth révéler qn comme étant qch ; to reveal sb's identity révéler l'identité de qn ; to reveal all ( divulge) tout dire ; ( undress) tout montrer ;B v refl to reveal oneself [person] se montrer ; [God] se révéler ; to reveal oneself to be se révéler être.
См. также в других словарях:
undress — [v] take off clothes denude, disarray, dismantle, disrobe, divest oneself, doff, get off, get out of, husk, peel, shed, shock, slip off, slip out of, strip, unattire, uncloak, unclothe, unmask; concepts 211,453 Ant. clothe, dress … New thesaurus
undress — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) v. strip, disrobe, unclothe, peel (sl.), dismantle, expose. See divestment. II (Roget s IV) v. Syn. strip, take off one s clothes, undrape, disrobe, unclothe, dismantle, divest, become naked, assume the… … English dictionary for students
by oneself — ALONE, on one s own, singly, separately, solitarily, unaccompanied, companionless, unattended, unescorted, solo; unaided, unassisted, without help, by one s own efforts, under one s own steam, independently, single handed(ly), off one s own bat,… … Useful english dictionary
disrobe — verb a) to undress someone or something b) to undress oneself Syn: dismantle, divest, strip, unclothe, uncover … Wiktionary
dishabille — 1670s, from Fr. déshabillé (17c.), noun use of pp. of déshabiller to undress (oneself), from des (see DIS (Cf. dis )) + habiller to dress, originally prepare, arrange (see HABIT (Cf. habit)) … Etymology dictionary
disrobe — 1580s in intrans. sense of to undress (oneself); see DIS (Cf. dis ) + ROBE (Cf. robe). Related: Disrobed; disrobing. Transitive sense is from 1580s … Etymology dictionary
air one’s pores — tv. to undress oneself; to become naked. □ I’m fixing to air my pores and take a shower. □ Me and Wilbur, that’s my brother, both fell in the creek and had to air our pores a while so our pants could dry out … Dictionary of American slang and colloquial expressions
shuck — [Jak] 1. n. an insincere person. □ The guy’s a shuck. Don’t believe a thing he says! □ Who needs a shuck for a legislator? 2. tv. & in. to kid someone; to tease someone. □ Cool it! I’m just shucking. □ … Dictionary of American slang and colloquial expressions
strip — 1. v. & n. v. (stripped, stripping) 1 tr. (often foll. by of) remove the clothes or covering from (a person or thing). 2 intr. (often foll. by off) undress oneself. 3 tr. (often foll. by of) deprive (a person) of property or titles. 4 tr. leave… … Useful english dictionary
dress — /dres/, n., adj., v., dressed or drest, dressing. n. 1. an outer garment for women and girls, consisting of bodice and skirt in one piece. 2. clothing; apparel; garb: The dress of the 18th century was colorful. 3. formal attire. 4. a particular… … Universalium
THE EVENTS — introduction European Jewry in the Early 1930s Germany in the Early 1930s the expansion of the reich … Encyclopedia of Judaism