-
21 taxable
['tæksəbl]aggettivo [earnings, profit] imponibile, tassabile* * *adjective (liable to be taxed: taxable income/goods.) tassabile* * *taxable /ˈtæksəbl/ (fisc.)A a.imponibile; soggetto a imposta; tassabile; soggetto a tassazione: taxable income, reddito imponibile; taxable value, (valore) imponibileB n.● taxable capacity (o ability), capacità contributiva □ taxable goods, beni soggetti a imposta □ taxable year, anno fiscaletaxabilityn. [u]imponibilità; tassabilità.* * *['tæksəbl]aggettivo [earnings, profit] imponibile, tassabile -
22 (to) deteriorate
(to) deteriorate /dɪˈtɪərɪəreɪt/v. i.2 ( di una crisi) deteriorarsi, degenerare: The situation is deteriorating rapidly, la situazione si sta deteriorando rapidamente; The argument deteriorated rapidly into a fight, il diverbio è rapidamente degenerato in una rissadeteriorationn. [u]2 deterioramento, degenerazione: the deterioration of the economic crisis, il deterioramento della crisi economica. -
23 apt adj
[æpt]1) (suitable: remark) appropriato (-a), adatto (-a), pertinente, (description) felice, indovinato (-a), giusto (-a)2)to be apt to do sth — avere (la) tendenza a fare qcwe are apt to forget that... — tendiamo a dimenticare che...
3) (pupil, student: able) dotato (-a), capace -
24 damage **** dam·age
['dæmɪdʒ]1. n1) also fig danno, danni mplto suffer damage — riportare or subire danni
what's the damage? — (fam: cost) quanto ci tocca sborsare?
2)to pay £5000 in damages — pagare 5000 sterline di indennizzo
2. vt(furniture, crops, machine) danneggiare, (health, eyesight) rovinare, (hopes, reputation) compromettere, (relationship) guastare, (cause) compromettere, recar danno a -
25 firing line
to be (first) in the firing line — fig. essere in prima linea
* * *nto be in the firing line — (fig: liable to be criticized) essere sulla linea del fuoco
* * *to be (first) in the firing line — fig. essere in prima linea
-
26 inclined in·clined adj
[ɪn'klaɪnd]1)(liable, apt)
to be inclined to do sth — essere incline a fare qc, (out of habit) tendere a fare qc, (from preference) essere propenso (-a) a fare qc2)artistically/musically inclined — portato (-a) per l'arte/la musica3)if you feel so inclined — se lo desideri, se ne hai voglia -
27 prone adj
[prəʊn]1) (face down) a faccia in giù, prono (-a)2)prone to — incline a, propenso (-a) a, soggetto (-a) apeople with fair skin are prone to skin cancer — le persone di pelle chiara sono più soggette al cancro della pelle
to be prone to illness — essere or andare soggetto (-a) a malattie
she is prone to burst into tears if... — scoppia facilmente in lacrime se...
-
28 subject **** sub·ject n , adj vb
[səb'dʒɛkt]1. n1) (topic: gen) argomento, soggetto, Scol materia(while we're) on the subject of money... — a proposito di soldi...
2) Gram soggetto3) (Pol: of country) cittadino (-a), (of sovereign) suddito (-a)2. adj1)subject to — (liable to: law, tax, disease, delays) soggetto (-a) a
subject to doing that — (conditional upon) a condizione di fare or che si faccia ciò
these prices are subject to change without notice — questi prezzi sono suscettibili di modifiche senza preavviso
2) (people, nation) assoggettato (-a), sottomesso (-a)3. vtto subject o.s. to ridicule/criticism — esporsi al ridicolo/alle critiche
English-Italian dictionary > subject **** sub·ject n , adj vb
-
29 at the mercy of
(wholly in the power of, liable to be harmed by: A sailor is at the mercy of the sea.) (in balia di), (alla mercé di) -
30 incur
[ɪn'kɜː(r)]1) comm. econ. contrarre [ debts]; incorrere in, subire [ loss]; sostenere, accollarsi [ expense]; esporsi a [ risk]; incorrere in [ penalty]2) (bring down) attirarsi, tirarsi addosso [ wrath]* * *[in'kə:]past tense, past participle - incurred; verb1) (to bring (something unpleasant) on oneself: to incur someone's displeasure.) attirarsi, incorrere in2) (to become liable to pay (a debt): to incur enormous debts.) contrarre* * *[ɪn'kɜː(r)]1) comm. econ. contrarre [ debts]; incorrere in, subire [ loss]; sostenere, accollarsi [ expense]; esporsi a [ risk]; incorrere in [ penalty]2) (bring down) attirarsi, tirarsi addosso [ wrath] -
31 off duty
not actually working and not liable to be asked to do so: The doctor's off duty this weekend; (also adjective) (She spends her off-duty hours at home.) fuori servizio -
32 on duty
(carrying out one's duties or liable to be asked to do so during a certain period: I'm on duty again this evening.) in servizio -
33 subject to
1) (liable or likely to suffer from or be affected by: He is subject to colds; The programme is subject to alteration.) soggetto a2) (depending on: These plans will be put into practice next week, subject to your approval.) (subordinatamente a) -
34 vulnerable
- 1
- 2
См. также в других словарях:
liable — li·a·ble / lī ə bəl/ adj [ultimately from Old French lier to bind, from Latin ligare] 1: answerable according to law: bound or obligated according to law or equity one is liable as an accomplice to the crime of another W. R. LaFave and A. W.… … Law dictionary
liable — li‧a‧ble [ˈlaɪəbl] adjective [not before a noun] LAW 1. legally responsible for paying something: liable for • The troubled company will be liable for about $52 million in back taxes and penalties. 2. likely to be legally punished or forced to… … Financial and business terms
Liable — Li a*ble (l[imac] [.a]*b l), a. [From F. lier to bind, L. ligare. Cf. {Ally}, v. t., {Ligature}.] 1. Bound or obliged in law or equity; responsible; answerable; as, the surety is liable for the debt of his principal. [1913 Webster] 2. Exposed to… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
liable — 1 amenable, answerable, *responsible, accountable Analogous words: obliged, constrained, compelled (see FORCE vb): bound, tied (see TIE vb) Contrasted words: exempt, immune (see corresponding nouns at EXEMPTION): *free, independent 2 … New Dictionary of Synonyms
liable to — likely to experience (something undesirable): → liable liable to subject by law to. → liable … English new terms dictionary
liable — ► ADJECTIVE 1) responsible by law; legally answerable. 2) (liable to) subject by law to. 3) (liable to do) likely to do. 4) (liable to) likely to experience (something undesirable). ORIGIN perhaps from French li … English terms dictionary
liable — [lī′ə bəl; ] often, esp. for 3 [, lī′bəl] adj. [prob. via Anglo Fr < OFr lier, to bind < L ligare, to bind (see LIGATURE) + ABLE] 1. legally bound or obligated, as to make good any loss or damage that occurs in a transaction; responsible 2 … English World dictionary
liable to do something — phrase likely to do something bad or unpleasant The handle is liable to break. Thesaurus: possible and able to be donesynonym Main entry: liable … Useful english dictionary
liable to something — phrase likely to suffer from something unpleasant Many parts of the country are liable to flooding. Thesaurus: in a difficult situationsynonym Main entry: liable … Useful english dictionary
liable to be completed — index determinable (liable to be terminated) Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
liable to be discontinued — index determinable (liable to be terminated) Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary