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1 CLOTHE
• Clothe thee in war, arm thee in peace - Готовь летом сани, а зимой телегу (Г) -
2 clothe
كَسَا \ clothe: to dress; put clothes on or supply clothes for: A man must feed and clothe his family. coat: to put a covering on sth.: His shoes were coated with mud. cover: to scatter over; put here and there: He covered her face with kisses. The trees were covered with fruit, put (sth.) over the surface of sth. else so as to hide or protect it She covered her face as I passed. We cover meat against flies. Clouds covered the sun. Cats are covered with fur. dress: to put clothes on (sb.): She dressed her children in cotton clothes. A baby cannot dress itself. \ See Also غطى (غَطَّى)، ألبس (أَلْبَسَ) -
3 clothe
لَبِسَ \ clothe: to dress; put clothes on or supply clothes for: A man must feed and clothe his family. She was clothed in black. put on: (the opposite of take off) to dress oneself in: Put your hat and coat on. dress: to put on one’s clothes. have sth. on: to wear sth: What did she have on (or What had she got on)? She had a fur coat on. wear: to have on the body: He wore a shirt and trousers. \ See Also ألبس (أَلْبَسَ)، كسا (كَسَا)، ارتدى (ارْتَدَى) -
4 clothe
[kləuð] past tense, past participle clothed verb1) to provide with clothes:يَكْسو، يُلْبِسThe widow did not have enough money to clothe her children.
2) to put clothes on:يَرْتَدي، يَلْبِسShe clothed herself in the most expensive materials.
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5 clothe, dress
لبَّسَ \ clothe, dress. \ See Also كسا (كَسَا) -
6 dress, clothe
ألْبَسَ \ dress, clothe. -
7 p. od to clothe
• clad -
8 proš. od clothe
• clad -
9 kle
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10 облекать
clothe глагол: -
11 kasa
clothe, cover [Sem k-s-y, Mal kesa, Heb kissa, Syr kase, JNA kusitha (hat), Uga ksw, ksy (dress up)] -
12 zayya
clothe [?] -
13 forsørge med tøj
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14 надавати владу
clothe with authority, vest with authority -
15 ikle
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16 resmi olarak giydir
clothe formally -
17 lata í
clothe, dress -
18 peças de roupa
clothe, clothes -
19 membeli sandang
clothe -
20 се облекува
clothe; dress————————attire* * *attire
См. также в других словарях:
Clothe — (kl[=o][th]), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Clothed} (kl[=o][th]d) or {Clad} (kl[a^]d); p. pr. & vb. n. {Clothing}.] [OE. clathen, clothen, clethen, AS. cl[=a][eth]ian, cl[=ae][eth]an. See {Cloth}.] 1. To put garments on; to cover with clothing; to dress … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
clothe — clothe, attire, dress, apparel, array, robe. Clothe, the least specific of these terms, means to cover or to provide what will cover (one s body or whatever is bare) with or as if with garments {clothe the child warmly} {clothe your thoughts in… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
clothe — clothe; en·clothe; un·clothe; un·der·clothe; … English syllables
Clothe — Clothe, v. i. To wear clothes. [Poetic] [1913 Webster] Care no more to clothe eat. Shak. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
clothe — I verb accouter, amicire, appoint, arm, array, attire oneself, bedeck, bedrape, cloak, conceal, costume, cover, cover up, disguise, drape, dress, embroider, empower, enable, encase, endow, endue, enfold, enrobe, envelop, enwrap, equip, fit out,… … Law dictionary
clothe — [ klouð ] verb transitive 1. ) to provide someone with clothes: We asked for money to feed and clothe the children. 2. ) FORMAL to put clothes on someone: Mary is old enough to feed and clothe herself … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
clothe in words — To express in words • • • Main Entry: ↑clothe … Useful english dictionary
clothe in words — index phrase Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
clothe — [kləuð US klouð] v [T usually passive] [: Old English; Origin: clathian, from clath; CLOTH] 1.) formal to put clothes on your body = ↑dress be clothed in sth ▪ The King was clothed in a purple gown. fully/partially/scantily etc clothed ▪ The… … Dictionary of contemporary English
clothe — O.E. claþian, from clað (see CLOTH (Cf. cloth)). Related: Clothed. Other O.E. words for this were scrydan and gewædian … Etymology dictionary
clothe — has two past and participial forms: clothed (the normal word) and clad. Clothed is suitable for most contexts (except when the less formal word dressed is called for), whereas clad is reserved for special uses: (1) as a literary word, and (2)… … Modern English usage