-
1 defeat
1. transitive verb1) (overcome) besiegen; zu Fall bringen [Antrag, Vorschlag]2) (baffle)something defeats me — ich kann etwas nicht begreifen; (frustrate)
the task has defeated us — diese Aufgabe hat uns überfordert
2. noundefeat the object/purpose of something — etwas völlig sinnlos machen
* * *[di'fi:t] 1. verb(to win a victory over: They defeated our team by three goals; We will defeat the enemy eventually.) besiegen2. noun(the loss of a game, battle, race etc: His defeat in the last race depressed him; We suffered yet another defeat.) die Niederlage- academic.ru/98924/defeated">defeated- defeatism
- defeatist* * *de·feat[dɪˈfi:t]I. vt1. (win over)▪ to \defeat sb/sth candidate, enemy, army jdn/etw besiegenthis line of reasoning \defeats me, I must admit ( fig) diesem Argument kann ich leider nicht folgento \defeat sb's hopes jds Hoffnungen zerschlagento \defeat a proposal einen Vorschlag ablehnento \defeat an amendment einen Antrag auf Gesetzesänderung ablehnen3. (destroy)▪ to \defeat sth:that \defeats the purpose of this meeting dann verliert dieses Treffen seinen SinnII. n Niederlage f* * *[dɪ'fiːt]1. n(= defeating) Besiegung f, Sieg m (of über +acc); (of motion, bill) Ablehnung f; (of hopes, plans) Vereitelung f; (= being defeated) Niederlage ftheir defeat of the enemy —
their defeat by the enemy — ihre Besiegung or Niederlage durch den Feind
2. vtarmy, team besiegen, schlagen; government eine Niederlage beibringen (+dat), besiegen; motion, bill ablehnen; hopes, plans vereitelnto defeat one's own ends or object — sich (dat or acc) ins eigene Fleisch schneiden
* * *defeat [dıˈfiːt]A v/t1. einen Gegner besiegen, schlagen:he felt defeated fig er war niedergeschlagen;it defeats me fig das ist mir zu hoch;it defeats me why … fig ich begreife nicht, warum …;it defeats me to do so fig das geht über meine Kraft2. einen Angriff nieder-, ab-, zurückschlagen, abweisen3. PARL einen Antrag etc zu Fall bringen:defeat by vote niederstimmen4. eine Hoffnung, einen Plan etc vereiteln, zunichtemachen, durchkreuzen5. JUR einen Anspruch etc null und nichtig machenB s1. Besiegung f2. Niederlage f:learn from defeat aus Niederlagen lernen3. Nieder-, Zurückschlagung f, Abweisung f4. PARL Ablehnung f (eines Antrags)5. Vereit(e)lung f, Durchkreuzung f6. Misserfolg m, Fehlschlag m* * *1. transitive verb1) (overcome) besiegen; zu Fall bringen [Antrag, Vorschlag]2) (baffle)something defeats me — ich kann etwas nicht begreifen; (frustrate)
2. noundefeat the object/purpose of something — etwas völlig sinnlos machen
* * *n.Niederlage f. v.ablehnen v.besiegen v.vereiteln v.vernichten v. -
2 concede
transitive verb* * *[kən'si:d]1) (to admit: He conceded that he had been wrong.) einräumen2) (to grant (eg a right).) gewähren* * *con·cede[kənˈsi:d]I. vt1. (acknowledge)▪ to \concede sth etw zugeben [o einräumen]to \concede defeat eine Niederlage eingestehen, sich akk geschlagen geben2. (surrender)▪ to \concede sth authority, power etw aufgebento \concede independence to a country einem Land die Unabhängigkeit zugestehento \concede a territory ein Gebiet abtreten3. (grant)▪ to \concede sth privilege, right etw einräumen4. SPORTto \concede a goal ein Tor kassieren famto \concede a match/point ein Spiel/einen Punkt abgeben* * *[kən'siːd]1. vtto concede a point to sb — jdm in einem Punkt recht geben; (Sport) einen Punkt an jdn abgeben
2) (= admit, grant) zugeben, einräumen (form); privilege einräumen (to sb jdm); right zubilligen, zugestehen (to sb jdm)it's generally conceded that... — es ist allgemein anerkannt, dass...
2. vinachgeben, kapitulieren* * *concede [kənˈsiːd]A v/t1. zugestehen, einräumen:a) gewähren, bewilligen ( sb sth jemandem etwas):concede a privilege ein Vorrecht einräumenconcede a right ein Recht anerkennen;win a game without conceding a goal ein Spiel zu null gewinnen;2. abtreten (to dat)3. concede an election seine (Wahl)Niederlage eingestehenB v/i1. nachgeben, Zugeständnisse machen2. MIL, POL, SPORT sich geschlagen geben* * *transitive verb(admit, allow) zugeben; (grant) zugestehen, einräumen [Recht, Privileg]* * *v.einräumen v.erlauben v.konzedieren v.zugeben v.zugestehen v. -
3 defeat
de·feat [dɪʼfi:t] vt1) ( win over)to \defeat sb (at cards, chess, football) jdn schlagen;this line of reasoning \defeats me, I must admit ( fig) diesem Argument kann ich leider nicht folgen;to \defeat sb's hopes jds Hoffnungen zerschlagen;to \defeat a proposal einen Vorschlag ablehnento be \defeated bill abgelehnt werden;to \defeat an amendment einen Antrag auf Gesetzesänderung ablehnen3) ( destroy)to \defeat sth;that \defeats the purpose of this meeting dann verliert dieses Treffen seinen Sinn n Niederlage f;
См. также в других словарях:
concede — ► VERB 1) finally admit or agree that something is true. 2) surrender (a possession, advantage, or right). 3) admit defeat in (a match or contest). 4) fail to prevent an opponent scoring (a goal or point). ORIGIN Latin concedere, from cedere… … English terms dictionary
concede — con|cede [kənˈsi:d] v ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(admit something is true)¦ 2¦(admit defeat)¦ 3 concede a goal/point/penalty 4¦(give something as a right)¦ ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ [Date: 1400 1500; : French; Origin: concéder, from Latin concedere, from com ( COM ) + cedere (… … Dictionary of contemporary English
concede — verb 1 ADMIT STH IS TRUE (T) to admit that something is true or correct although you wish it was not true: You could be right I suppose , Sheila conceded. | concede (that): I concede that he s a good runner, but I still think I can beat him. 2… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
defeat — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun ADJECTIVE ▪ complete, comprehensive (esp. BrE), decisive, heavy, major, overwhelming, resounding, serious, stunning, total … Collocations dictionary
defeat — de|feat1 W3 [dıˈfi:t] n [U and C] 1.) failure to win or succeed ▪ She was a woman who hated to admit defeat . ▪ The Democratic Party candidate has already conceded defeat . defeat in ▪ The socialist party suffered a crushing defeat in the French… … Dictionary of contemporary English
defeat */*/ — I UK [dɪˈfiːt] / US [dɪˈfɪt] noun [countable/uncountable] Word forms defeat : singular defeat plural defeats failure to win a competition or to succeed in doing something England suffered a 2–0 defeat by Scotland. a humiliating/heavy/crushing… … English dictionary
defeat — de|feat1 [ dı fit ] noun count or uncount ** failure to win a competition or succeed in doing something: Wisconsin suffered a 23 7 defeat by Illinois. admit/accept/concede defeat: a stubborn man who was not prepared to admit defeat a… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
concede — [c]/kənˈsid / (say kuhn seed) verb (conceded, conceding) –verb (t) 1. to admit as true, just, or proper; admit. 2. to grant as a right or privilege; yield. –verb (i) 3. to make concession; yield; admit. 4. to admit defeat in an election. {Latin… …
concede — v.tr. 1 a (often foll. by that + clause) admit (a defeat etc.) to be true (conceded that his work was inadequate). b admit defeat in. 2 (often foll. by to) grant, yield, or surrender (a right, a privilege, points or a start in a game, etc.). 3… … Useful english dictionary
concede — verb 1》 finally admit that something is true. ↘admit (defeat) in a match or contest. 2》 surrender or yield (a possession, advantage, or right). ↘fail to prevent an opponent scoring (a goal or point). Derivatives conceder noun Origin C15:… … English new terms dictionary
concede — v.t. admit, acknowledge; allow, grant; surrender; Sport, allow opponent to score; v.i. admit defeat. ♦ conceder, n … Dictionary of difficult words