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1 divulge di·vulge vt
[daɪ'vʌldʒ]divulgare, rivelare, (evidence, information) rendere pubblico (-a) -
2 volunteer
I 1. [ˌvɒlən'tɪə(r)]1) volontario m. (-a)2) mil. volontario m.2.1) (unpaid) [fire brigade, helper, work] volontario2) mil. [force, division] di volontariII 1. [ˌvɒlən'tɪə(r)]1) (offer willingly) offrire (spontaneamente) [help, advice]2) (divulge willingly) dare, fornire spontaneamente [information, explanation]2."it was me," he volunteered — "sono stato io," disse spontaneamente
1) fare il volontario ( for per)2) mil. arruolarsi come volontario* * *[volən'tiə] 1. verb1) (to offer oneself for a particular task, of one's own free will (often without being paid for such work): He volunteered to act as messenger; She volunteered for the dangerous job.) (offrirsi come volontario)2) (to offer (eg an opinion, information etc): Two or three people volunteered suggestions.) offrire2. noun(a person who offers to do, or does, something (especially who joins the army) of his own free will: If we can get enough volunteers we shall not force people to join the Army.) volontario* * *I 1. [ˌvɒlən'tɪə(r)]1) volontario m. (-a)2) mil. volontario m.2.1) (unpaid) [fire brigade, helper, work] volontario2) mil. [force, division] di volontariII 1. [ˌvɒlən'tɪə(r)]1) (offer willingly) offrire (spontaneamente) [help, advice]2) (divulge willingly) dare, fornire spontaneamente [information, explanation]2."it was me," he volunteered — "sono stato io," disse spontaneamente
1) fare il volontario ( for per)2) mil. arruolarsi come volontario
См. также в других словарях:
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 — v. (B) to divulge information to the press * * * [d(a)ɪ vʌldʒ] (B) to divulge information to the press … Combinatory dictionary
divulge — di|vulge [ dı vʌldʒ ] verb transitive FORMAL to give information about something, especially something that should be kept secret: I m not allowed to divulge information about my clients … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
divulge — ► VERB ▪ make known (private or sensitive information). ORIGIN Latin divulgare publish widely … English terms 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
information — n. 1) to furnish, give, offer, provide information 2) to collect, dig up, find, gather; extract information 3) to classify information 4) to divulge, leak information 5) to declassify information 6) to feed information (into a computer) 7) to… … Combinatory 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
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
information — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ accurate, correct, precise ▪ authoritative, credible, reliable ▪ erroneous, false, inaccurate … Collocations dictionary
information */*/*/ — UK [ˌɪnfə(r)ˈmeɪʃ(ə)n] / US [ˌɪnfərˈmeɪʃ(ə)n] noun [uncountable] Get it right: information: Information is an uncountable noun, so: ▪ it is never used in the plural ▪ it never comes after an or a number Wrong: Consumers can find informations… … English dictionary
divulge, disclose — These terms mean to make known to others what was intended to be kept secret, private, or confidential. Divulge is more likely to be used when something previously secret is revealed to a small number of people or a particular group; disclose… … Dictionary of problem words and expressions