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1 extort
اِنْتَزَعَ \ extort: to obtain sth. (a promise, money, etc.) by force, or fear of force. extract: to take out (a tooth from sb.’s mouth, oil from a seed, useful parts from a book, etc.). grab: to seize quickly. snatch: to take (or try to take) violently: He snatched the bag from her hand. He snatched at the ball but missed it. It is rude to snatch when you are offered something. tear: (with down, off, out) to move by pulling or tearing: Someone has torn the notice down. tear sb. away: to cause sb. to leave sth. very interesting: I could hardly tear myself away from the party, but I had to go home. \ See Also ابتز (ابْتَزَّ)، اختطف (اِخْتَطَفَ)، مزق (مَزَّقَ) -
2 extorsionar
v.to extort (law).* * *1 (usurpar) to extort, exact2 figurado (molestar) to inconvenience, cause inconvenience to* * *VT1) (=usurpar) to extort money from2) (=molestar) to pester, bother* * *verbo transitivo to extort money from* * *= screw.Ex. The article is entitled 'Are you being screwed electronically? -- ethical issues in an electronic age'.* * *verbo transitivo to extort money from* * *= screw.Ex: The article is entitled 'Are you being screwed electronically? -- ethical issues in an electronic age'.
* * *extorsionar [A1 ]vtto extort money from* * *
extorsionar ( conjugate extorsionar) verbo transitivo
to extort money from
extorsionar verbo transitivo to extort
' extorsionar' also found in these entries:
English:
extort
* * *extorsionar vtDer to extort money from* * *v/t extort money from* * *extorsionar vt: to extort -
3 erpressen
v/t2. (etw.) extort ( von from); von jemandem eine Unterschrift / ein Zugeständnis etc. erpressen blackmail s.o. into signing s.th. / making a concession etc.* * *to extort; to blackmail* * *er|prẹs|sen [Eɐ'prɛsn] ptp erpre\#sstvtGeld etc to extort (von from); jdn to blackmail* * *1) (to obtain money illegally from (a person), usually by threatening to make known something which the victim wants to keep secret.) blackmail2) (to obtain (from a person) by threats or violence: They extorted a confession from him by torture.) extort* * *er·pres·sen *vt1. (durch Drohung nötigen)▪ jdn \erpressen to blackmail sb2. (abpressen)▪ etw [von jdm] \erpressen to extort sth [from sb]* * *transitives Verb* * *erpressen v/t1. (jemanden) blackmail (mit over;zu +inf into +ger)2. (etwas) extort (von from);von jemandem eine Unterschrift/ein Zugeständnis etc* * *transitives Verb* * *v.to blackmail adv.to extort v. -
4 вымогать деньги
1) General subject: blackmail, bleed, dun somebody out of his money, fleece, (у кого-л.) get money out of, gouge money out of (у кого-л.), gouge out of money (у кого-л.), make somebody squeal, trim, (у кого-л.) put through the wringer, squeeze money, squeeze money from (у кого-л.)2) Law: pinch3) Jargon: put (someone) on the shake, put the shake on ( someone), rip-off, ripoff, shake4) Banking: extort money5) Makarov: squeeze from (smb.) (у кого-л.), squeeze money from (smb.) (у кого-л.), squeeze money out of (smb.) (у кого-л.), squeeze out of (smb.) (у кого-л.), dun out of his money, extort money from (у кого-л.) -
5 extorquer
extorquer [εkstɔʀke]➭ TABLE 1 transitive verb* * *ɛkstɔʀkeverbe transitif to extort ( à quelqu'un from somebody)* * *ɛkstɔʀke vt[argent, renseignement]* * *[ɛkstɔrke] verbe transitif[fonds] to extort -
6 racketter
racketter [ʀakete]➭ TABLE 1 transitive verb* * *ʀakete vt* * *racketter verb table: aimer vtr to extort money from, to shake [sb] down◑ US; se faire racketter to be the victim of extortion.[rakɛte] verbe transitif -
7 taglieggiare
taglieggiare v.tr. to tax; to levy taxes on (s.o., sthg.); to extort money from (s.o.).* * *[taʎʎed'dʒare]verbo transitivotaglieggiare qcn. — to extort money from sb
* * *taglieggiare/taλλed'dʒare/ [1]taglieggiare qcn. to extort money from sb. -
8 rançonner
rançonner [ʀɑ̃sɔne]➭ TABLE 1 transitive verb( = voler) [+ convoi, voyageurs] to demand a ransom from ; [+ contribuables, clients] to fleece* * *ʀɑ̃sɔneverbe transitif ( exiger de l'argent de) [brigand] to rob [voyageurs]; [racketteur] to extort money from [commerçants]* * *ʀɑ̃sɔne vt* * *rançonner verb table: aimer vtr1 ( exiger de l'argent de) [brigand] to rob [voyageurs]; [racketteur] to extort money from [commerçants];2 ○( exploiter) to fleece○ [client, contribuable];3 †( demander une rançon à) rançonner un otage/navire to hold a hostage/ship to ransom.[rɑ̃sɔne] verbe transitif1. [exiger une rançon de] to hold to ransom -
9 presse
crush, hustle, jam, press, pressurize, push, squash, squeeze, strain* * *I. (en -r)( redskab til presning, trykkemaskine) press;( pressefolk) reporters,T pressmen pl;( radioavis) news;[ pressen](= aviserne) the press;[ få en god presse] have a good press.II. vb( trykke) press ( fx press the lid down; press one's nose against a window),( ind i, gennem etc også, kraftigere) squeeze ( fx try to squeeze (, press) too much into a suitcase),( skubbe også) push ( fx push a brush through the pipe; push one's finger through a hole; push him down);( trykke sammen, også om frugt) press ( fx flowers; press grapes to extract the juice),( kraftigere) squeeze ( fx a lemon, an orange);( om tøj) press, iron,( lave pressefolder i) press;[ presset glas] pressed glass;(fig) press ( fx he was hard pressed; the enemy pressed them hard);( tilskynde, søge at tvinge) press ( fx press him to stay),T (neds) push ( fx push him to join the party);( tvinge) force ( fx force him to pay up);( forcere) press ( fx one's voice);(glds: til krigstjeneste) press;(fig) squeeze him (, them etc) till the pips squeak;[ med præp & adv:]( om pengeafpresning) blackmail him;[ presse bukserne op] give the trousers a press;[ presse bilen op til 120 km i timen] push the car up to 120 km an hour;[ presse `på]( være presserende) be pressing,( stærkere) be urgent;( udøve tryk) press;[ de presser på for at få en afgørelse] they are pressing for a decision;[ presse sammen] press,( kraftigere) squeeze ( fx press the snow hard to make snowballs; squeeze the snow into snowballs),F compress;( med flertalsobjekt) press (, squeeze) together,F compress ( fx press one's lips together, compress one's lips);[ presse ud] press (, squeeze) out,( folder i tøj) iron out;[ presse saft ud af] press (, squeeze) juice out of;[ presse penge (, oplysninger) ud af en] squeeze money (, information) out of somebody ( fx I'll squeeze every penny I can out of him);( også, T) soak him,( ved trusler) extort money from him,( om pengeafpresning) blackmail him;[ med sig:][ presse sig] press one's way, push ( fx through the crowd; the crowd pressed (el. pushed) forward),( kraftigere) squeeze ( fx he squeezed through the narrow opening);[ presse sig ind] squeeze in,( om bil efter overhaling) cut in. -
10 iemand geld afpersen
iemand geld afpersen————————iemand geld afpersenVan Dale Handwoordenboek Nederlands-Engels > iemand geld afpersen
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11 geld
♦voorbeelden:1 je geld of je leven • your money or your life!baar geld • (hard) cashgroot geld • notes, Abillshet grote geld • (the) big money, Amegabucksklein geld • (small) changepapieren/gemunt geld • paper money, notes, Abills; 〈 gemunt〉 coin(s), specievals geld • counterfeit (money)in/met vreemd geld betalen • pay in foreign currencyzwart geld • undisclosed income, money received under the counterbulken van/zwemmen in het geld • be loaded, be rolling in money/itgeld drukken • print moneyhet geld laten rollen • spend money freelygeld moet rollen • you must keep money movingsmijten met geld • 〈 figuurlijk〉 throw one's money about/aroundgeld in iets steken • put money into somethinggeld wisselen • change moneyde waarde is niet in geld uit te drukken • you can't put a price on itwaar voor zijn geld krijgen • get value for moneygeld als water verdienen • earn big money/a packet〈 spreekwoord〉 het geld dat stom is, maakt recht wat krom is • a golden handshake is better than ten witnesses2 een smak/hoop/berg geld • bags/stacks of moneyhet is weggegooid geld! • that's a (sheer) waste of moneyiemand geld afpersen • extort money from someonegeld hebben • be well-offgeen geld hebben • be brokezij heeft geld van zichzelf • she has money of her owngelden misbruiken • misappropriate/misapply fundsdat zal zijn geld wel opbrengen • that will pay (for itself)iemand die veel geld uitgeeft • a big spendergoed in zijn geld zitten • be well offmet zijn geld geen raad weten • have money to burnmensen met geld • moneyed peoplezonder geld zitten • be out of pocket, be brokekinderen betalen half geld • children half-priceik zal het geld er gauw weer uit hebben • it will soon pay for itselfniet goed? geld terug • money refunded/back if not satisfactory, money-back guaranteehet is echt niet duur voor dat geld • its a good buyvoor geen geld ter wereld • not for love or money(dat is) geen geld! • that's a bargain! -
12 afpersen
1 extort/wring/force/wrest (from)♦voorbeelden: -
13 wyciągać
impf ⇒ wyciągnąć* * *1) ( wydobywać) to pull out, to draw; (prostować: nogi, ręce) to stretch2) (pot) (z łóżka, do kina) to drag out (pot)wyciągać kogoś z kłopotów/wody/ — to get sb out of trouble/the water
wyciągać od kogoś pieniądze — pot to scrounge money off sb (pot)
ten samochód wyciąga 180 km/godz. — pot this car does 180 kph (pot)
* * *ipf.1. (= wydobywać) pull out, soak; wyciągnąć od kogoś pieniądze extort money from sb; wyciągnąć konsekwencje w stosunku do kogoś bring l. call sb to account; wyciągnąć wnioski draw conclusions; wyciągać coś na światło dzienne bring sth to light; wyciągać z kogoś tajemnicę worm a secret out of sb; wyciągnąć pierwiastek mat. extract the square root.2. (= rozprostowywać) stretch; wyciągać rękę po coś hold out one's hand for sth; wyciągnąć pomocną dłoń lend a helping hand; wyciągnąć rękę do zgody extend l. offer an olive branch to sb; wyciągnąć nogi pot. (= umrzeć) turn up one's toes, peg out, hop the twig, pop one's clogs, kick the bucket.4. pot. (= nakłaniać do wyjścia) draw out; udało mi się wyciągnąć go do kina I succeeded in persuading him to go to the movies; wyciągnąć kogoś z łóżka draw sb out of bed; wyciągnąć kogoś na zwierzenia draw sb out.5. (= uwalniać) get out; wyciągnąć kogoś z więzienia get sb out of prison; wyciągnąć kogoś z biedy lift sb out of poverty.6. pot. (= uzyskiwać) obtain, acquire, pull in; wyciągam jakieś dwa tysiące miesięcznie I pull in about two thousand a month; ten samochód wyciąga nawet dwieście this car makes even up to 200 kph.ipf.1. (= rozprostowywać się) stretch out; wyciągnąć się jak długi stretch out full length.2. (= wysuwać się naprzód) draw forward.3. (= ulegać rozciąganiu) stretch, extend; sweter się wyciągnął the sweater has stretched.The New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > wyciągać
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14 wydu|sić
pf — wydu|szać impf (wydusisz — wyduszam) Ⅰ vt 1. (zabić) to strangle, to throttle- mordercy wydusili całą rodzinę the murderers strangled the whole family2. (wycisnąć) wydusić coś z czegoś to squeeze sth from a. out of sth- wydusić pastę z tuby to squeeze toothpaste out of the tube3. pot. (wyciągnąć) wydusić coś z kogoś to wring sth from a. out of sb, to get sth from a. out of sb- wydusić z kogoś prawdę to wring the truth out of sb- nic z niego nie wydusili they didn’t get a word out of him- już my z niego wydusimy, gdzie schował broń we’ll find out from him where he hid the weapon, don’t worry! pot.- wydusić z kogoś pieniądze to extort money from sb- stał czerwony i nie mógł wydusić ani słowa he stood there blushing and couldn’t get a word out- no wyduś coś wreszcie! come on, spit it out! pot.The New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > wydu|sić
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15 taglieggiare vt
[taʎʎed'dʒare]to extort money from, Storia to exact a tribute from -
16 taglieggiare
vt [taʎʎed'dʒare]to extort money from, Storia to exact a tribute from -
17 concutio
con-cŭtĭo, cussi, cussum, 3, v. a. [quatio, as cur = quāre].I.To strike one upon another, to strike together (rare): utrum cavae manus concutiantur, an planae, Sen. Q. N. 2, 28, 1:II.concussā manu dare signa,
Ov. M. 11, 465:frameas,
Tac. G. 11.—To shake violently, to shake, agitate (freq. and class. in prose and poetry).A.Lit. (mostly poet.): concutit ungula terram, Enn. ap. Macr. S. 6, 1 (Ann. v. 419 Vahl.): tonitru concussa aequora caeli, Att. ap. Non. p. 505, 8 (Trag. Rel. v. 224 Rib.); cf.:2.templa caeli summa sonitu (in a parodying of pathos),
Ter. Eun. 3, 5, 42; cf.:serena caeli sonitu,
Lucr. 2, 1101; 6, 358:grandi tonitru concussa repente Terra,
id. 5, 551; cf. id. 6, 544:terra ingenti motu concussa est,
Liv. 3, 10, 6; Ov. M. 8, 781:concussae cadunt urbes,
Lucr. 5, 1236: concusso terrae motu theatro, * Suet. Ner. 20:moenia,
Ov. M. 13, 175:freta,
id. ib. 6, 691;7, 201: undas,
id. ib. 8, 605:artus,
Lucr. 5, 1076; 6, 595; cf. id. 2, 949:corpora risu,
id. 1, 918; 2, 976; cf. Juv. 3, 101; Quint. 6, 3, 9:caput,
Ov. M. 2, 50:caesariem,
id. ib. 1, 179; cf.comam,
id. F. 2, 846:tempora,
id. M. 13, 644:manum,
id. ib. 11, 465:pectus,
id. ib. 2, 755:arma manu,
to hurl, id. ib. 1, 143; 7, 130; cf.:tela lacertis,
id. ib. 12, 79:te certo arcu,
to hit surely, Prop. 1, 7, 15:inmissis aurigae undantia lora Concussere jugis,
Verg. A. 5, 147:in calicibus concussis,
Plin. 35, 16, 55, § 193 Sillig N. cr.:munimenta arietibus admotis,
Curt. 8, 2, 22:aures Caesaris concutit fragor,
Luc. 6, 163:corpus concutit gestatio,
Sen. Ep. 15, 6:pectora planctu,
Stat. S. 5, 1, 179.— Pass.:quorum (ignium) ictu concuti aera verum est,
Plin. 2, 43, 43, § 112:corpus concutitur gestatione,
Cels. 3, 21:majore cachinno Concutitur,
Juv. 3, 100:concutitur sanguis,
Lucr. 3, 249.—Esp. in part. perf.:mugitibus aether,
Verg. G. 3, 151:risu tremulo (ora),
Lucr. 1, 919; 2, 976:rates,
shattered, Ov. P. 2, 3, 59:coma,
id. F. 2, 846:corpus vulnere,
Stat. S. 3, 4, 70:fores,
Ov. Am. 1, 6, 50:ilex,
Verg. G. 4, 81:quercus,
id. ib. 1, 159:materies per artus,
Lucr. 2, 949:Lyrnesia moenia dextrā,
Ov. M. 13, 175:mons,
Prop. 3, 13 (4, 12), 53:paries,
Dig. 39, 2, 18, § 11:remo concusso tollere ratem,
Val. Fl. 1, 340.— With Gr. acc.:pectus concussa crebris verberibus,
Luc. 2, 335.—Se, to examine by shaking one's self; the figure taken from the searching of a thief, etc., by shaking his garments; hence, trop. equiv. to search, examine (cf. excutio):B.te ipsum Concute, num qua tibi vitiorum inseverit olim Natura,
Hor. S. 1, 3, 35 Orell. ad loc. and cf. B. 3. infra.—Trop.1.To shake the power of, shake to its foundation, to shatter, cause to waver, to impair, disturb, distract:2.rem publicam,
Cic. Phil. 2, 42, 109; Plin. Pan. 6, 3:provincias magnis momentis,
Vell. 2, 78:regnum,
Liv. 33, 19, 1:orbem,
Tac. H. 1, 16:opes Lacedaemoniorum,
Nep. Epam. 6, 4:provincias magnis molimentis,
Vell. 2, 78, 1:concusso jam et paene fracto Hannibale,
Liv. 28, 44, 11:domum,
Tac. H. 3, 45:concussā Transrhenanorum fide,
id. ib. 5, 25:nondum concusso senatusconsulto,
id. A. 14, 43:imperium Persarum,
Curt. 4, 14, 20; cf. Plin. Ep. 10, 114 (115), 3:concussa fides,
Luc. 1, 182.—To shake in feeling, to agitate violently.a.Usually, to put in fear, terror, or anxiety, to terrify, alarm, trouble:(β).terrorem metum concutientem definiunt,
Cic. Tusc. 4, 8, 19:consules declarantur M. Tullius et C. Antonius, quod factum primo populares conjurationis concusserat,
Sall. C. 24, 1:populum Romanum terrore Numantini belli,
Vell. 2, 90, 3; Quint. 4, 2, 37:urbem,
Verg. A. 4, 666:totam Asiam,
Curt. 4, 1, 20:ingens barbaros pavor concusserat,
id. 8, 2, 24:casu concussus acerbo,
Verg. A. 5, 700; Tac. H. 2, 99 fin.:extemplo turbati animi concussaque vulgi Pectora,
Verg. A. 11, 451. — Poet. in a Greek constr.:casu animum concussus amici,
Verg. A. 5, 869:hoc concussa metu mentem Juturna virago,
id. ib. 12, 468; so Hor. S. 2, 3, 295.—In the jurists: aliquem, to terrify one by threats, etc., in order to extort money from him, Dig. 1, 18, 6, § 3; Paul. Sent. 5, 25, 12; Cod. Th. 9, 27, 6; cf. concussio, II., concussor, and concussura.—b.In gen., of any excitement of the passions: magnum et summum est deoque vicinum, non concuti. Hanc stabilem animi sedem Graeci euthumian vocant... ego tranquillitatem voco, Sen. Tranq. 2, 3:3.hoc agite: Poenas petite violatae Stygis: Concutite pectus,
Sen. Herc. Fur. 105.—To urge, excite, rouse to activity, = excitare, commovere (rare and not ante-Aug.):fecundum concute pectus,
Verg. A. 7, 338:tu concute plebem,
Petr. Poet. 124, 288:se concussere ambae,
Juv. 10, 328:non leviter se Numidia concussit,
Flor. 3, 1, 2.—Hence, * concussus, a, um, P. a., stirred up, restless:Pallas aliquanto concussior,
Mart. Cap. 4, § 332. -
18 udsuge
vb suck out;(fig) extort money from, bleed (white);(dvs om befolkning) ground down by taxation. -
19 taglieggiare qcn.
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20 arqon
rope. arqon sol to block the arrival party of a new bride to the groom’s house with a rope (to extort money from them). bo’yniga arqon solganday to force s.o. to do s.t. (as if putting a rope around his neck). arqonni uzun tashlab qo’y to tolerate s.o.’s behavior for the time being, to let slide for now. arqonnini ustiga tashlab yubor to send off, to send packing
См. также в других словарях:
squeeze money from a person — extort money from someone, force someone to give money … English contemporary dictionary
extort money — illegally obtain money from someone by force or intimidation, blackmail, wring … English contemporary dictionary
extort — ex‧tort [ɪkˈstɔːt ǁ ɔːrt] verb [transitive] LAW to illegally force someone to give you money by threatening them: extort money from/out of somebody • Smith was arrested on suspicion of having extorted property and money from at least 18 clients … Financial and business terms
extort — v. (D; tr.) to extort from (to extort money from merchants) * * * [ɪk stɔːt] (D;tr.) to extort from (to extort money from merchants) … Combinatory dictionary
extort — verb (T) to illegally force someone to give you money by threatening them: extort money from/out of sb: Landlords tried to cover their losses by extorting high rents from tenants. extortion noun (U): Confessions were obtained by extortion.… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
extort — ex·tort /ik stȯrt/ vt [Latin extortus, past participle of extorquere to remove by twisting, obtain by force, from ex out + torquere to twist]: to obtain (as money) from a person by force, intimidation, or undue or unlawful use of authority or… … Law dictionary
extort — UK [ɪkˈstɔː(r)t] / US [ɪkˈstɔrt] verb [transitive] Word forms extort : present tense I/you/we/they extort he/she/it extorts present participle extorting past tense extorted past participle extorted to illegally get money or information from… … English dictionary
extort — [[t]ɪkstɔ͟ː(r)t[/t]] extorts, extorting, extorted 1) VERB If someone extorts money from you, they get it from you using force, threats, or other unfair or illegal means. [V n from n] Corrupt government officials were extorting money from him...… … English dictionary
money — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ big ▪ There is big money in golf for the top players. ▪ easy ▪ He started stealing as a way of making easy money. ▪ bonus … Collocations dictionary
extort — ex|tort [ıkˈsto:t US o:rt] v [T] [Date: 1400 1500; : Latin; Origin: , past participle of extorquere, from torquere to twist ] to illegally force someone to give you something, especially money, by threatening them →↑blackmail extort sth from sb ▪ … Dictionary of contemporary English
extort — ex|tort [ ık stɔrt ] verb transitive to illegally get money or information from someone using force or threats: Gangsters have been extorting money from local businessmen … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English