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1 (to) divulge
(to) divulge /daɪˈvʌldʒ/v. t.divulgare; rivelare: Details of the incident were not divulged, i particolari dell'incidente non sono stati divulgati; She refused to divulge the name of her contact, ha rifiutato di rivelare il nome del suo contatto; Sources divulged that secret negotiations had been taking place, delle fonti hanno rivelato che c'erano state trattative segretedivulgation, divulgement, divulgencen. [u]divulgazione; rivelazione. -
2 (to) divulge
(to) divulge /daɪˈvʌldʒ/v. t.divulgare; rivelare: Details of the incident were not divulged, i particolari dell'incidente non sono stati divulgati; She refused to divulge the name of her contact, ha rifiutato di rivelare il nome del suo contatto; Sources divulged that secret negotiations had been taking place, delle fonti hanno rivelato che c'erano state trattative segretedivulgation, divulgement, divulgencen. [u]divulgazione; rivelazione. -
3 reveal
[rɪ'viːl] 1.1) (make public) rivelare [ truth]; svelare, rivelare [ secret]to reveal all — (divulge) spiattellare tutto
2) (make visible) mostrare [view, picture]2.* * *[rə'vi:l]1) (to make known: All their secrets have been revealed.) rivelare2) (to show; to allow to be seen: He scraped away the top layer of paint from the picture, revealing an earlier painting underneath.) rivelare•* * *reveal /rɪˈvi:l/n.(archit.) mazzetta ( di porta o finestra).♦ (to) reveal /rɪˈvi:l/v. t.1 rivelare; svelare: to reveal one's identity, rivelare il proprio nome; to reveal a secret, svelare un segreto; New studies reveal that more and more older people are using the Internet, nuovi studi rivelano che sempre più anziani usano Internet2 rivelare; lasciar intravedere: The mist parted to reveal a stunning landscape, la nebbia si è dissipata rivelando un magnifico paesaggio● to reveal oneself, rivelarsi: She revealed herself to be totally unreliable, si è rivelata completamente inaffidabile □ revealed religion, religione rivelatarevealablea.rivelabile; svelabilerevealern.rivelatore, rivelatrice.* * *[rɪ'viːl] 1.1) (make public) rivelare [ truth]; svelare, rivelare [ secret]to reveal all — (divulge) spiattellare tutto
2) (make visible) mostrare [view, picture]2.
См. также в других словарях:
divulge a secret — tell a secret … English contemporary dictionary
Divulge — Di*vulge , v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Divulged}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Divulging}.] [F. divulguer, L. divulgare; di = dis + vulgare to spread among the people, from vulgus the common people. See {Vulgar}.] 1. To make public; to several or communicate to the … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
divulge — verb a) To make public; to several or communicate to the public; to tell (a secret) so that it may become generally known; to disclose; said of that which had been confided as a secret, or had been before unknown; as, to divulge a secret. b) To… … Wiktionary
Secret combination (Latter Day Saints) — In the Latter Day Saint movement, a secret combination is a secret society of people bound together by oaths to carry out the evil purposes of the group. [LDS Church, [http://scriptures.lds.org/gs/s/37 Guide to the Scriptures: Secret… … Wikipedia
Secret — Se cret, a. [F. secret (cf. Sp. & Pg. secreto, It. secreto, segreto), fr. L. secretus, p. p. of secernere to put apart, to separate. See {Certain}, and cf. {Secrete}, {Secern}.] 1. Hidden; concealed; as, secret treasure; secret plans; a secret… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
secret — I adj. 1) strictly secret 2) most; top secret 3) to keep smt. secret (from smb.) II n. 1) to make a secret of smt. 2) to guard, keep a secret 3) to betray, blurt out, divulge, reveal a secret 4) to ferret out, uncover a secret 5) a closely… … Combinatory dictionary
divulge — verb (T) to give someone information, especially about something secret: Staff may not divulge confidential information. | divulge sth to sb: Do not divulge the conclusions of the report to anyone. | divulge what/where etc: Adams refused to… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
divulge — di|vulge [daıˈvʌldʒ, dı ] v [T] formal [Date: 1400 1500; : Latin; Origin: divulgare to make widely known to everyone , from vulgus the common people ] to give someone information that should be secret = ↑reveal divulge information/secrets/details … Dictionary of contemporary English
divulge — [[t]daɪvʌ̱lʤ, AM dɪ [/t]] divulges, divulging, divulged VERB If you divulge a piece of secret or private information, you tell it to someone. [FORMAL] [V n] Officials refuse to divulge details of the negotiations... [V n] He was charged with… … English dictionary
divulge — UK [daɪˈvʌldʒ] / US [dɪˈvʌldʒ] verb [transitive] Word forms divulge : present tense I/you/we/they divulge he/she/it divulges present participle divulging past tense divulged past participle divulged formal to give information about something,… … English dictionary
secret */*/*/ — I UK [ˈsiːkrət] / US [ˈsɪkrət] noun [countable] Word forms secret : singular secret plural secrets 1) a piece of information that is known by only a small number of people, and is deliberately not told to other people He was accused of selling… … English dictionary