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61 dirigere
1. [di'ridʒere]vb irreg vt1) (condurre) to run, (ditta) to manage, (giornale) to edit, (partito, inchiesta) to lead, (operazioni, traffico) to direct, (orchestra) to conduct2)dirigere verso o contro — to point atdirigere contro — (critiche) to direct at, aim at
dirigere l'attenzione su qc/qn — to turn one's attention to sth/sb
3) (pacco, lettera) to address2. vr (dirigersi)dirigersi a o verso — (luogo) to make one's way towards, make o head for
dirigersi verso — (persona) to come/go towards
l'aereo si dirigeva a nord — the plane was on its way o flying north
si diresse a o verso casa — he headed home, he set off home
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62 incriminare
vt [inkrimi'nare]Dir -
63 preporre
vt irreg [pre'porre]1) (porre innanzi) to place before, (fig : preferire) to prefer, put before2)preporre qn a qc — to put sb in charge of sth -
64 provvedere
1. [provve'dere]vb irreg vi (aus avere)1)provvedere a — (famiglia) to provide for
2) (prendere provvedimenti) to take steps, act3)provvedere a — (occuparsi di) to look after, take charge of
provvedere alla spesa/a fare la spesa — to do the shopping
l'azienda che provvede alla raccolta dei rifiuti urbani — the company responsible for refuse collection
2. vtprovvedere qn di qc — to provide o supply sb with sth
3. vr (provvedersi)provvedersi di — to provide o.s. with
См. также в других словарях:
charge sth to sb's account — ► if you charge something to someone s account , the amount they have spent is recorded and they pay for it at a later time: »Charge the bill to my account, please. Main Entry: ↑charge … Financial and business terms
charge — The document evidencing mortgage security required by Crown Law (law derived from English law). A Fixed Charge refers to a defined set of assets and is usually registered. A Floating Charge refers to other assets which change from time to time (… … Financial and business terms
charge — charge1 W1S1 [tʃa:dʒ US tʃa:rdʒ] n ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(price)¦ 2¦(control)¦ 3¦(somebody/something you look after)¦ 4¦(crime)¦ 5¦(blame)¦ 6¦(attack)¦ 7¦(effort)¦ 8¦(electricity)¦ 9¦(explosive)¦ 10¦(strength of feelings)¦ … Dictionary of contemporary English
charge — 1 noun 1 PRICE (C, U) the amount of money you have to pay for goods or services: Gas charges will rise in July. (+ for): When you buy a suit, there is no charge for any alterations. | free of charge (=at no cost): Your order will be delivered… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
charge — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun 1 price asked for sth ADJECTIVE ▪ heavy, high ▪ nominal, reasonable, small ▪ minimum ▪ fixed … Collocations dictionary
bring sth about phrasal — verb (T) to make something happen: Computers have brought about many changes in the workplace. bring sb/sth around/round phrasal verb (T) 1 bring the conversation around/round to to deliberately and gradually introduce a new subject into a… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
in charge — ► in control of or responsible for someone or something: »Who will be in charge of the department when Sophie leaves? »From now on, Steve is in charge. leave sb in charge (of sth) »He was on vacation and had left his deputy in charge. put sb in… … Financial and business terms
take charge of sth — take charge (of sth) ► to take control of something or of a group of people: »His boss asked him to take charge of the office for a few days while she was away. Main Entry: ↑charge … Financial and business terms
price sb/sth out of the market — Ⅰ. price yourself/sb/sth out of the market ► COMMERCE to charge so much for a product or service that people cannot or do not want to buy it: »By setting the price at that level we had effectively priced ourselves out of the market. »With house… … Financial and business terms
price sth out of the market — Ⅰ. price yourself/sb/sth out of the market ► COMMERCE to charge so much for a product or service that people cannot or do not want to buy it: »By setting the price at that level we had effectively priced ourselves out of the market. »With house… … Financial and business terms
price yourself/sb/sth out of the market — Ⅰ. price yourself/sb/sth out of the market ► COMMERCE to charge so much for a product or service that people cannot or do not want to buy it: »By setting the price at that level we had effectively priced ourselves out of the market. »With house… … Financial and business terms