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41 hauteur
hauteur [ˈotœʀ]feminine nouna. ( = taille) height ; [de son] pitch• « hauteur maximum 3 mètres » "headroom 3 metres"• tomber de toute sa hauteur [personne] to fall headlong• à hauteur de 10 000 € up to €10,000b. ( = colline) hillc. ( = arrogance) parler avec hauteur to speak haughtily* * *’otœʀ
1.
1) ( dimension verticale) heightprendre de la hauteur — lit [avion, oiseau] to climb
2) ( profondeur) depthhauteur d'eau — Nautisme depth of water
3) Sport4) (de robe, jupe) length5) ( éminence) hill6) Mathématique height7) ( qualité morale) nobility9) ( en acoustique) pitch10) ( d'astre) altitude
2.
à la hauteur de locution1) ( au niveau)2) ( à côté)3) figêtre à la hauteur du talent de quelqu'un — [scénario] to do justice to somebody's talent
4) (en valeur, quantité)à (la) hauteur de 10% — up to 10%
••se dresser de toute sa hauteur — [personne] to draw oneself up to one's full height; [animal] to stand on its hind legs
* * *'otœʀ nf1) (dimension) heightà la hauteur de (sur un plan horizontal) — level with, (= à côté de) by, figequal to
être à la hauteur fig — to be up to it, to be equal to the task
2) péjoratif haughtiness3) (terrain élevé) hill* * *A nf1 ⇒ Les mesures de longueur ( dimension verticale) height; une tour d'une hauteur de 30 m a tower 30 metresGB high; le bâtiment a 15 m de hauteur the building is 15 m high; un mur de 3 m de hauteur a 3 m wall; tableaux suspendus à des hauteurs différentes pictures hung at different heights ou levels; perdre de la hauteur to lose height; prendre de la hauteur lit [avion, oiseau] to climb, to gain height; hauteur libre or maximum 5 m Aut max headroom 5 m; à hauteur d'homme at about the height of a person; à hauteur d'yeux or des yeux at eye level;2 ( profondeur) (d'eau, de rivière) depth; hauteur d'eau Naut depth of water; d'une hauteur d'eau de 10 m 10 m deep;4 Cout (de robe, jupe) length; acheter 2 hauteurs de tissu pour faire une robe to buy 2 dress lengths of material; dans le sens de la hauteur length-wise;5 ( éminence) hill; chapelle située sur une hauteur chapel on a hill; gagner les hauteurs to reach high ground; il y a encore de la neige sur les hauteurs there is still some snow on the mountain tops; habiter sur les hauteurs de la ville to live in the upper part of the town;7 ( qualité morale) nobility; hauteur d'âme nobility of spirit; hauteur de conception/d'idées lofty conception/ideas;8 péj ( arrogance) haughtiness; parler/répondre avec hauteur to speak/reply haughtily; regard/refus plein de hauteur haughty look/refusal;9 ( en acoustique) pitch;10 Astron altitude; prendre la hauteur d'une étoile to measure the altitude of a star.B à la hauteur loc1 ( au niveau) suspendre un tableau à la hauteur des autres to hang a picture level with ou at the same height as the others; arriver à la hauteur de to come up to; raccourcir une jupe à la hauteur des genoux to shorten a dress to knee-level;2 ( à côté) arriver à la hauteur de to draw level with; quand son bateau est arrivé à la hauteur du nôtre when his boat drew level with ours; un déraillement s'est produit à la hauteur de Rouen there was a derailment near Rouen;3 fig être à la hauteur to measure up; être à la hauteur de qn to match up to sb; être à la hauteur de sa tâche/ses responsabilités to be up to ou equal to one's job/one's responsibilities; être à la hauteur des espérances/attentes de qn to live up to sb's hopes/expectations; être à la hauteur du talent de qn [scénario, sujet] to do justice to sb's talent; l'interprétation n'était pas à la hauteur de la qualité du texte the acting didn't do justice to the quality of the text; être à la hauteur de la situation/des circonstances to be equal to the situation/the circumstances;4 (en valeur, quantité) à (la) hauteur de 5 000 €/10% up to 5,000 €/10%; contribuer à qch à hauteur de 10% to take a stake of up to 10% in sth.hauteur d'appui Constr, Archit chest height; à hauteur d'appui at chest height ( épith); hauteur sous plafond height from floor to ceiling.tomber de toute sa hauteur to fall headlong; se dresser de toute sa hauteur [personne] to draw oneself up to one's full height; [animal] to stand on its hind legs.[ʼotɶr] nom féminin1. [mesure verticale] heightla pièce fait trois mètres de hauteur (sous plafond) the ceiling height in the room is three metres ||COUTURE length ||prendre de la hauteur to gain altitude ou heightn'étant plus mandaté, je me permets de voir les choses avec (une certaine) hauteur as I'm no longer in office, I can afford to look upon things with a certain detachment6. SPORT————————hauteurs nom féminin plurielà hauteur de locution prépositionnelle[jusqu'à]vous serez remboursé à hauteur de 4 000 euros you'll be reimbursed up to 4,000 eurosà la hauteur locution adjectivaletu ne t'es pas montré à la hauteur you weren't up to it ou equal to the taskà la hauteur de locution prépositionnelle1. [à côté de]arrivé à sa hauteur, je m'aperçus qu'il parlait tout seul when I was ou drew level with him, I noticed he was talking to himselfelle habite à la hauteur de l'église she lives near the church ou up by the churcharrivés à la hauteur du cap when we were in line with ou when we were off the capeil y a des embouteillages à la hauteur de l'échangeur de Rocquencourt there are traffic jams at the Rocquencourt interchange2. [digne de] worthy ofêtre à la hauteur d'une situation to be equal to ou up to a situationen hauteur locution adverbiale1. [debout] upright2. [dans un endroit élevé] -
42 capitombolo
m tumble, fall* * *capitombolo s.m.1 tumble, headlong fall: fare un capitombolo, to take a tumble (o to tumble down o to fall headlong) // a capitomboli, headlong (o head over heels)* * *[kapi'tombolo]sostantivo maschile tumble, fall, spillfare un capitombolo — to take a tumble, to go head over heels
* * *capitombolo/kapi'tombolo/sostantivo m.tumble, fall, spill; fare un capitombolo to take a tumble, to go head over heels. -
43 lungo
(pl -ghi) 1. adj longcaffè weaknon essere lungo! don't be long!, don't take forever!a lungo at length, for a long timefig alla lunga in the long runandare per le lunghe drag ondi gran lunga by far2. prep along( durante) throughout* * *lungo agg.1 long: un lungo cammino, a long way; un lungo corteo, a long procession; lungo dieci metri, ten metres long; un lungo inverno, a long winter; un lungo sospiro, a long-drawn sigh; un lungo viaggio, a long journey; una lunga vita, a long life; calzoni lunghi, long trousers; le signore erano in (abito) lungo, the ladies were in long dresses; capelli lunghi, long hair; era un discorso un po' lungo, it was a somewhat lengthy speech; è una lunga storia, it is a long story; in questa stagione le notti si fanno più lunghe, at this season of the year the nights get longer; una lunga attesa, a long (o lengthy) wait; un film lungo due ore, a two-hour film; morì dopo lunga malattia, he died after a long illness; non lo vedo da lungo tempo, it is a long time since I saw him; oggi hai la barba lunga, you haven't had a shave today; quel vecchio ha la barba lunga, that old man has a long beard; avere braccia, mani lunghe, to have long arms, long hands; aver gambe lunghe, to be long-legged; avere il naso lungo, to have a long nose; avere il viso, il collo lungo, to have a long face, a long neck; avere la vista lunga, to be longsighted, (essere lungimirante) to be farsighted; fare una lunga chiacchierata con qlcu., to have a long talk with s.o.; percorrere la strada più lunga, to take the longest way round // cadde lungo disteso, he fell headlong; giaceva lungo disteso per terra, he lay full length on the ground // sono amici di lunga data, they are friends of long standing (o old friends) // avere la lingua lunga, (essere chiacchierone) to be a chatterbox, (essere pettegolo) to be a gossip // avere le mani lunghe, (rubacchiare) to be light-fingered; essere lungo di mano, (essere manesco) to be very free with one's fists // fare la faccia lunga, to pull a long face // fare il passo più lungo della gamba, to bite off more than one can chew2 (alto) tall: lungo come un palo, come una pertica, as tall as a beanpole; era lungo lungo, he was ever so tall3 (fam.) (lento) slow: sbrigati, quanto sei lungo!, hurry up, how slow you are!; essere lungo a fare qlco., to take a long time doing sthg.; una ferita lunga da guarire, a wound that is slow to heal // è lungo come la fame, (fam.) he is painfully slow4 (diluito) weak, thin: brodo lungo, thin soup; caffè lungo, weak coffee; vino lungo, watered wine5 (fon.) long: sillaba, vocale lunga, long syllable, vowel.◆ FRASEOLOGIA: a lungo, a long time, for long; at length: hai aspettato a lungo?, did you wait a long time (o long)?; non ho atteso a lungo, I haven't waited long; non voglio aspettare più a lungo, I won't wait any longer; ha parlato a lungo, he spoke at length // a lungo andare, alla lunga, in the long run, sooner or later, eventually, at last: a lungo andare ce la faremo, we'll do it sooner or later; a lungo andare mi diventò simpatico, I got to like him eventually // di gran lunga, by far, far and away: è di gran lunga il migliore, he is by far (o far and away) the best // in lungo e in largo, high and low (o everywhere o far and wide) // per il lungo, in length: due metri per il lungo, two metres in length // andare per le lunghe, to take a long time: questa faccenda va per le lunghe, this business takes a long time // farla lunga, to keep on, to go on and on: come la fai lunga!, how you keep on! // saperla lunga, to have a long head (o to know what's what) // tirare in lungo qlco., to draw sthg. out // tirar di lungo, to keep going.lungo prep.1 (rasente) along: camminare lungo il fiume, to walk along the river; lungo tutto il percorso di gara ci sono servizi di assistenza, there are assistance units along the course of the race2 (durante) during, over: lungo il viaggio, during the journey; lungo il corso dei secoli, over the centuries.* * *['lunɡo] lungo -a, -ghi, -ghe1. aggamici da lunga data — long-standing o old friends
2) (lento: persona) slowessere lungo a o nel fare qc — to be slow at doing sth, take a long time to do sth
essere lungo come la fame — to be a slowcoach Brit o slowpoke Am
3) (diluito: caffè) weak, watery, (brodo) thin4)avere la barba lunga — to be unshavenfare la faccia lunga o il muso lungo o il viso lungo — to pull a long face
a lunga gittata Mil — long-range
saperla lunga fam — to know a thing or two, know what's what
a lungo andare — in the long run, in the end
2. smper il lungo — along its length, lengthways
in lungo e in largo — (girare, cercare) far and wide, everywhere
a lungo — (aspettare) for a long time, (spiegare) in great detail
3. sfè di gran lunga il migliore — it's far and away the best, it's the best by far
alla lunga — in the long run, in the end
4. prepcamminare lungo il fiume — to walk along o beside the river
lungo il corso dei secoli — throughout the centuries, in the course of the centuries
* * *1.1) (nello spazio) [gambo, ciglia, vestito, lettera, distanza] longun tubo lungo due metri — a pipe two metres long, a two-metre long pipe
2) (nel tempo) [viaggio, film, silenzio] long, lengthy; [ vita] long; [ amicizia] long-standing3) colloq. (lento)essere lungo nel fare — [ persona] to be slow to do
4) (allungato) [ caffè] weak; [ brodo] thin, watery5) (alto) tall6) ling. [ vocale] long7)dirla -a — to speak volumes, to say a lot (su about)
saperla -a — (essere ben informato) to know all (su about)
9) in lungo e in largo far and wide, far and nearcercare qcs. in lungo e in largo — to hunt high and low for sth
10) a lungo (for) a long time11) a lungo andare, alla lunga in the long run2.sostantivo maschile1) abbigl.2) per il lungo [tagliare, spezzare] lengthwise3.2) (nel tempo)••cadere lungo disteso (per terra) — to fall flat on one's face, to fall headlong
farla -a, andare per le -ghe — to drag on
* * *lungo1 (nello spazio) [gambo, ciglia, vestito, lettera, distanza] long; un tubo lungo due metri a pipe two metres long, a two-metre long pipe; quanto è lungo? how long is it?2 (nel tempo) [viaggio, film, silenzio] long, lengthy; [ vita] long; [ amicizia] long-standing; un colloquio lungo 40 minuti a 40-minute interview; sarebbe lungo da spiegare it would take a long time to explain it; di -a data of long standing5 (alto) tall6 ling. [ vocale] long7 dirla -a to speak volumes, to say a lot (su about); saperla -a (essere ben informato) to know all (su about)8 di gran lunga è di gran -a più intelligente di me he's far more intelligent than I am o than me; è di gran -a la migliore she's by far the best9 in lungo e in largo far and wide, far and near; cercare qcs. in lungo e in largo to hunt high and low for sth.10 a lungo (for) a long time; non resterò a lungo I won't stay for long11 a lungo andare, alla lunga in the long run1 abbigl. vestirsi in lungo to wear a full-length dress2 per il lungo [tagliare, spezzare] lengthwiseIII preposizione2 (nel tempo) lungo tutto il viaggio throughout the tripcadere lungo disteso (per terra) to fall flat on one's face, to fall headlong; farla -a, andare per le -ghe to drag on. -
44 заоравам
1. begin/start ploughing2. run/dig into3. прен. fall headlong* * *заора̀вам,гл.1. begin/start ploughing;2. run/dig into;3. прен. fall headlong.* * *1. begin/start ploughing 2. run/ dig into 3. прен, fall headlong -
45 barquinazo
m.1 overturning, overturn, overturning of a vehicle.2 headlong and strepitous fall, hard and noise blow of somebody falling to the floor, flat fall, headlong fall.* * *SM1) (=caída) tumble, hard fall2) (=movimiento brusco) (Aut) bump, jolt; And sudden start -
46 planazo
-
47 cado
cădo, cĕcĭdi, cāsum, 3 ( part. pres. gen. plur. cadentūm, Verg. A. 10, 674; 12, 410), v. n. [cf. Sanscr. çad-, to fall away].I.Lit.A.In an extended sense, to be driven or carried by one ' s weight from a higher to a lower point, to fall down, be precipitated, sink down, go down, sink, fall (so mostly poet.; in prose, in place of it, the compounds decĭdo, occĭdo, excĭdo, etc.; cf. also ruo, labor;2.opp. surgo, sto): tum arbores in te cadent,
Plaut. Men. 2, 3, 25: (aves) praecipites cadunt in terram aut in aquam, fall headlong to the earth or into the water, Lucr. 6, 745; cf. id. 6, 828;imitated by Verg.: (apes) praecipites cadunt,
Verg. G. 4, 80:nimbus, Ut picis e caelo demissum flumen, in undas Sic cadit, etc.,
Lucr. 6, 258:cadit in terras vis flammea,
id. 2, 215; so with in, id. 2, 209; 4, 1282; 6, 1006; 6, 1125; Prop. 4 (5), 4, 64:in patrios pedes,
Ov. F. 2, 832.—With a different meaning:omnes plerumque cadunt in vulnus,
in the direction of, towards their wound, Lucr. 4, 1049; cf.:prolapsa in vulnus moribunda cecidit,
Liv. 1, 58, 11:cadit in vultus,
Ov. M. 5, 292:in pectus,
id. ib. 4, 579.—Less freq. with ad:ad terras,
Plin. 2, 97, 99, § 216:ad terram,
Quint. 5, 10, 84.—The place from which is designated by ab, ex, de:a summo cadere,
Plaut. Mil. 4, 4, 15:a mento cadit manus,
Ov. F. 3, 20:aves ab alto,
Plin. 10, 38, 54, § 112:ut cadat (avis) e regione loci,
Lucr. 6, 824:ex arbore,
Plin. 17, 20, 34, § 148; Dig. 50, 16, 30, § 4; 18, 1, 80, § 2:cecidisse de equo dicitur,
Cic. Clu. 62, 175:cadere de equo,
Plaut. Mil. 3, 1, 125 (for which Cæsar, Nepos, and Pliny employ decidere):de manibus arma cecidissent,
Cic. Phil. 14, 7, 21; cf.:de manibus civium delapsa arma ipsa ceciderunt,
id. Off. 1, 22, 77:cadunt altis de montibus umbrae,
Verg. E. 1, 84:de caelo,
Lucr. 5, 791; Ov. M. 2, 322:de matre (i. e. nasci),
Claud. in Rufin. 1, 92.—With per:per inane profundum,
Lucr. 2, 222:per aquas,
id. 2, 230:per salebras altaque saxa,
Mart. 11, 91; cf.:imbre per indignas usque cadente genas,
Ov. Tr. 1, 3, 18.—With the adverb altius: altius atque cadant summotis nubibus imbres, and poured forth from a greater height, etc., Verg. E. 6, 38.—And absol.:folia nunc cadunt,
Plaut. Men. 2, 3, 24; Ter. Ad. 1, 1, 12; Lucr. 6, 297:ut pluere in multis regionibus et cadere imbres,
id. 6, 415:cadens nix,
id. 3, 21; 3, 402:velut si prolapsus cecidisset,
Liv. 1, 56, 12: quaeque ita concus [p. 259] sa est, ut jam casura putetur, Ov. P. 2, 3, 59:cadentem Sustinuisse,
id. M. 8, 148:saepius, of epileptics,
Plin. Val. 12, 58:casuri, si leviter excutiantur, flosculi,
Quint. 12, 10, 73.—Esp.a.Of heavenly bodies, to decline, set (opp. orior), Ov. F. 1, 295:b.oceani finem juxta solemque cadentem,
Verg. A. 4, 480; 8, 59; Tac. G. 45:soli subjecta cadenti arva,
Avien. Descr. Orb. 273; cf. Tac. Agr. 12:quā (nocte) tristis Orion cadit,
Hor. Epod. 10, 10:Arcturus cadens,
id. C. 3, 1, 27.—To separate from something by falling, to fall off or away, fall out, to drop off, be shed, etc.:c.nam tum dentes mihi cadebant primulum,
Plaut. Men. 5, 9, 57:dentes cadere imperat aetas,
Lucr. 5, 671; Sen. Ep. 12, 3; 83, 3:pueri qui primus ceciderit dens,
Plin. 28, 4, 9, § 41:barba,
Verg. E. 1, 29:quam multa in silvis autumni frigore primo Lapsa cadunt folia,
id. A. 6, 310; cf. Cat. 11, 22; Hor. A. P. 61:lanigeris gregibus Sponte suā lanae cadunt,
Ov. M. 7, 541:saetae,
id. ib. 14, 303:quadrupedibus pilum cadere,
Plin. 11, 39, 94, § 231:poma,
Ov. M. 7, 586:cecidere manu quas legerat, herbae,
id. ib. 14, 350:elapsae manibus cecidere tabellae,
id. ib. 9, 571:et colus et fusus digitis cecidere remissis,
id. ib. 4, 229.—Of a stream, to fall, empty itself:d.amnis Aretho cadit in sinum maris,
Liv. 38, 4, 3; 38, 13, 6; 44, 31, 4:flumina in pontum cadent,
Sen. Med. 406:flumina in Hebrum cadentia,
Plin. 4, 11, 18, § 50:tandem in alterum amnem cadit,
Curt. 6, 4, 6.—Of dice, to be thrown or cast; to turn up:e.illud, quod cecidit forte,
Ter. Ad. 4, 7, 23 sq.; Liv. 2, 12, 16.—Alicui (alicujus) ad pedes, to fall at one ' s feet in supplication, etc. (post-class. for abicio, proicio), Sen. Contr. 1, 1, 19; Eutr. 4, 7; Aug. Serm. 143, 4; Vulg. Joan. 11, 32 al.—f.Super collum allcujus, to embrace (late Lat.), Vulg. Luc. 15, 20.—B.In a more restricted sense.1.To fall, to fall down, drop, fall to, be precipitated, etc.; to sink down, to sink, settle (the usual class. signif. in prose and poetry):2.cadere in plano,
Ov. Tr. 3, 4, 17 sq.:deorsum,
Plaut. Rud. 1, 2, 89:uspiam,
Ter. Ad. 1, 1, 12:Brutus, velut si prolapsus cecidisset,
Liv. 1, 56, 12; cf. id. 5, 21, 16; 1, 58, 12:dum timent, ne aliquando cadant, semper jacent,
Quint. 8, 5, 32:sinistrā manu sinum ad ima crura deduxit (Caesar), quo honestius caderet,
Suet. Caes. 82:cadere supinus,
id. Aug. 43 fin.:in pectus pronus,
Ov. M. 4, 579:cadunt toti montes,
Lucr. 6, 546:radicitus exturbata (pinus) prona cadit,
Cat. 64, 109:concussae cadunt urbes,
Lucr. 5, 1236:casura moenia Troum,
Ov. M. 13, 375; id. H. 13, 71:multaque praeterea ceciderunt moenia magnis motibus in terris,
Lucr. 6, 588: languescunt omnia membra;bracchia palpebraeque cadunt,
their arms and eyelids fall, id. 4, 953; 3, 596; so,ceciderunt artus,
id. 3, 453:sed tibi tamen oculi, voltus, verba cecidissent,
Cic. Dom. 52, 133; cf.:oculos vigiliā fatigatos cadentesque in opere detineo,
Sen. Ep. 8, 1:patriae cecidere manus,
Verg. A. 6, 33:cur facunda parum decoro Inter verba cadit lingua silentio?
Hor. C. 4, 1, 36:cecidere illis animique manusque,
Ov. M. 7, 347; Val. Fl. 1, 300; cf. II. F. infra.—In a pregn. signif. (as in most langg., to fall in battle, to die), to fall so as to be unable to rise, to fall dead, to fall, die (opp. vivere), Prop. 2 (3), 28, 42 (usu. of those who die in battle;b.hence most freq. in the histt.): hostes crebri cadunt,
Plaut. Am. 1, 1, 79 sq.:aut in acie cadendum fuit aut in aliquas insidias incidendum,
Cic. Fam. 7, 3, 3; Curt. 4, 1, 28; Ov. M. 7, 142:ut cum dignitate potius cadamus quam cum ignominiā serviamus,
Cic. Phil. 3, 14, 35:pauci de nostris cadunt,
Caes. B. G. 1, 15; id. B. C. 3, 53:optimus quisque cadere aut sauciari,
Sall. J. 92, 8; so id. C. 60, 6; id. J. 54, 10; Nep. Paus. 1, 2; id. Thras. 2, 7; id. Dat. 1, 2; 6, 1; 8, 3; Liv. 10, 35, 15 and 19; 21, 7, 10; 23, 21, 7; 29, 14, 8; Tac. G. 33; Hor. Ep. 1, 12, 27; Ov. M. 7, 142:per acies,
Tac. A. 1, 2:pro patriā,
Quint. 2, 15, 29:ante diem,
Verg. A. 4, 620:bipenni,
Ov. M. 12, 611:ense,
Val. Fl. 1, 812.—Not in battle:inque pio cadit officio,
Ov. M. 6, 250.—With abl. of means or instrument:suoque Marte (i. e. suā manu) cadunt,
Ov. M. 3, 123; cf. Tac. A. 3, 42 fin.:suā manu cecidit,
fell by his own hand, id. ib. 15, 71:exitu voluntario,
id. H. 1, 40:muliebri fraude cadere,
id. A. 2, 71: cecidere justā Morte Centauri, cecidit tremendae Flamma Chimaerae, Hor. C. 4, 2, 14 sq.:manu femineā,
Sen. Herc. Oet. 1179:femineo Marte,
Ov. M. 12, 610.—With abl. of agent with ab:torqueor, infesto ne vir ab hoste cadat,
should be slain by, Ov. H. 9, 36; so id. M. 5, 192; Suet. Oth. 5:a centurione volneribus adversis tamquam in pugnā,
Tac. A. 16, 9.—And without ab:barbarae postquam cecidere turmae Thessalo victore,
Hor. C. 2, 4, 9; imitated by Claudian, IV. Cons. Hon. 89; Grat. Cyn. 315.—Of victims, to be slain or offered, to be sacrificed, to fall ( poet.):3.multa tibi ante aras nostrā cadet hostia dextrā,
Verg. A. 1, 334:si tener pleno cadit haedus anno,
Hor. C. 3, 18, 5; Tib. 1, 1, 23; 4, 1, 15; Ov. M. 7, 162; 13, 615; id. F. 4, 653.—In mal. part., = succumbo, to yield to, Plaut. Pers. 4, 4, 104; Tib. 4, 10, 2; Sen. Contr. 1, 3, 7.—4.Matre cadens, just born ( poet.), Val. Fl. 1, 355; cf. of the custom of laying the new-born child at the father's feet: tellure cadens. Stat. S. 1, 2, 209; 5, 5, 69.II.Trop.A.To come or fall under, to fall, to be subject or exposed to something (more rare than its compound incidere, but class.); constr. usually with sub or in, sometimes with ad:B.sub sensus cadere nostros,
i. e. to be perceived by the senses, Lucr. 1, 448:sub sensum,
Cic. Inv. 1, 30, 48: in cernendi sensum. id. Tim. 3:sub oculos,
id. Or. 3, 9:in conspectum,
to become visible, id. Tusc. 1, 22, 50:sub aurium mensuram,
id. Or. 20, 67:sponte suā (genus humanum) cecidit sub leges artaque jura,
subjected itself to law and the force of right, Lucr. 5, 1146; so id. 3, 848:ad servitia,
Liv. 1, 40, 3:utrorum ad regna,
Lucr. 3, 836; so,sub imperium dicionemque Romanorum,
Cic. Font. 5, 12 (1, 2):in potestatem unius,
id. Att. 8, 3, 2:in cogitationem,
to suggest itself to the thoughts, id. N. D. 1, 9, 21:in hominum disceptationem,
id. de Or. 2, 2, 5:in deliberationem,
id. Off. 1, 3, 9:in offensionem alicujus,
id. N. D. 1, 30, 85:in morbum,
id. Tusc. 1, 32, 79:in suspitionem alicujus,
Nep. Paus. 2, 6:in calumniam,
Quint. 9, 4, 57:abrupte cadere in narrationem,
id. 4, 1, 79:in peccatum,
Aug. in Psa. 65, 13.—In gen.: in or sub aliquem or aliquid, to belong to any object, to be in accordance with, agree with, refer to, be suitable to, to fit, suit, become (so esp. freq. in philos. and rhet. lang.):C.non cadit in hos mores, non in hunc pudorem, non in hanc vitam, non in hunc hominem ista suspitio,
Cic. Sull. 27, 75:cadit ergo in bonum virum mentiri, emolumenti sui causā?
id. Off. 3, 20, 81; so id. Cael. 29, 69; id. Har. Resp. 26, 56:haec Academica... in personas non cadebant,
id. Att. 13, 19, 5:qui pedes in orationem non cadere quī possunt?
id. Or. 56, 188:neque in unam formam cadunt omnia,
id. ib. 11, 37; 57, 191; 27, 95; id. de Or. 3, 47, 182; Quint. 3, 7, 6; 4, 2, 37; 4, 2, 93; 6, prooem. § 5; 7, 2, 30 and 31; Plin. 35, 10, 36, § 82:heu, cadit in quemquam tantum scelus?
Verg. E. 9, 17; Cic. Or. 27, 95; 11, 37; Quint. 3, 5, 16; 3, 6, 91; 5, 10, 30; 6, 3, 52; 7, 2, 31; 9, 1, 7;9, 3, 92: hoc quoque in rerum naturam cadit, ut, etc.,
id. 2, 17, 32:in iis rebus, quae sub eandem rationem cadunt,
Cic. Inv. 1, 30, 47; Quint. 8, 3, 56.—To fall upon a definite time (rare):D.considera, ne in alienissimum tempus cadat adventus tuus,
Cic. Fam. 15, 14, 4:in id saeculum Romuli cecidit aetas, cum, etc.,
id. Rep. 2, 10, 18.—Hence, in mercantile lang., of payments, to fall due: in eam diem cadere ( were due) nummos, qui a Quinto debentur, Cic. Att. 15, 20, 4.—(Acc. to I. 1. e.) Alicui, to fall to one (as by lot), fall to one ' s lot, happen to one, befall; and absol. (for accidere), to happen, come to pass, occur, result, turn out, fall out (esp. in an unexpected manner; cf. accido; very freq. in prose and poetry).1.Alicui:2.nihil ipsis jure incommodi cadere possit,
Cic. Quint. 16, 51:hoc cecidit mihi peropportune, quod, etc.,
id. de Or. 2, 4, 15; id. Att. 3, 1:insperanti mihi, cecidit, ut, etc.,
id. de Or. 1, 21, 96; id. Att. 8, 3, 6; id. Mil. 30, 81:mihi omnia semper honesta et jucunda ceciderunt,
id. Q. Fr. 1, 3, 1:sunt, quibus ad portas cecidit custodia sorti,
Verg. G. 4, 165:haec aliis maledicta cadant,
Tib. 1, 6, 85:neu tibi pro vano verba benigna cadunt,
Prop. 1, 10, 24:ut illis... voluptas cadat dura inter saepe pericla,
Hor. S. 1, 2, 40: verba cadentia, uttered at random, id. Ep. 1, 18, 12.—Ab sol., Afran. ap. Charis. p. 195 P.;3.Cic. Leg.2, 13, 33: verebar quorsum id casurum esset,
how it would turn out, id. Att. 3, 24:aliorsum vota ceciderunt,
Flor. 2, 4, 5:cum aliter res cecidisset ac putasses,
had turned out differently from what was expected, Cic. Fam. 5, 19, 1:sane ita cadebat ut vellem,
id. Att. 3, 7, 1; id. Div. 2, 52, 107; Cael. ap. Cic. Fam. 8, 12, 3; Cic. Verr. 1, 2, 5; Caes. B. C. 3, 73, Nep. Milt. 2, 5 Dähne:cum, quae tum maxime acciderant, casura praemonens, a furioso incepto eos deterreret,
Liv. 36, 34, 3; 22, 40, 3; 35, 13, 9; 38, 46, 6; Plin. Pan. 31, 1; Tac. A. 2, 80; 6, 8; Suet. Tib. 14 al.; Verg. A. 2, 709:ut omnia fortiter fiant, feliciter cadant,
Sen. Suas. 2, p. 14:multa. fortuito in melius casura,
Tac. A. 2, 77.—With adj.:si non omnia caderent secunda,
Caes. B. C. 3, 73:vota cadunt, i.e. rata sunt,
are fulfilled, realized, Tib. 2, 2, 17 (diff. from Prop. 1, 17, 4; v. under F.).—With in and acc.: nimia illa libertas et populis et privatis in nimiam servitutem cadit (cf. metaballei), Cic. Rep. 1, 44, 68.—Esp.: in (ad) irritum or cassum, to be frustrated, fail, be or remain fruitless:E.omnia in cassum cadunt,
Plaut. Poen. 1, 2, 147; Lucr. 2, 1166:ad irritum cadens spes,
Liv. 2, 6, 1; so Tac. H. 3, 26:in irritum,
id. A. 15, 39; cf. with irritus, adj.:ut irrita promissa ejus caderent,
Liv. 2, 31, 5:haud irritae cecidere minae,
id. 6, 35, 10.—To fall, to become less (in strength, power, worth, etc.), to decrease, diminish, lessen:F. 1.cadunt vires,
Lucr. 5, 410:mercenarii milites pretia militiae casura in pace aegre ferebant,
Liv. 34, 36, 7.—More freq. in an extended signif. (acc. to I. B. 2.),In gen.: pellis item cecidit, vestis contempta ferina. declined in value, Lucr. 5, 1417:2.turpius est enim privatim cadere (i. e. fortunis everti) quam publice,
Cic. Att. 16, 15, 6; so id. Fam. 6, 10, 2:atque ea quidem tua laus pariter cum re publicā cecidit,
id. Off. 2, 13, 45:tanta civitas, si cadet,
id. Har. Resp. 20, 42:huc cecidisse Germanici exercitus gloriam, ut, etc.,
Tac. H. 3, 13:non tibi ingredienti fines ira cecidit?
Liv. 2, 40, 7; Pers. 5, 91:amicitia nec debilitari animos aut cadere patitur,
Cic. Lael. 7, 23:animus,
to fail, Liv. 1, 11, 3; Ov. M. 11, 537; cf. id. ib. 7, 347:non debemus ita cadere animis, etc.,
to lose courage, be disheartened, Cic. Fam. 6, 1, 4:tam graviter,
id. Off. 1, 21, 73; cf. Sen. Ep. 8, 3.—Esp., to fail in speaking:magnus orator est... minimeque in lubrico versabitur, et si semel constiterit numquam cadet,
Cic. Or. 28, 98:alte enim cadere non potest,
id. ib. —So in the lang. of the jurists, causā or formulā, to lose one ' s cause or suit:causā cadere,
Cic. Inv. 2, 19, 57; so id. de Or. 1, 36, 166 sq.; id. Fam. 7, 14, 1; Quint. 7, 3, 17; Luc. 2, 554; Suet. Calig. 39:formulā cadere,
Sen. Ep. 48, 10; Quint. 3, 6, 69.—With in:ita quemquam cadere in judicio, ut, etc.,
Cic. Mur. 28, 58.—Also absol.:cadere,
Tac. H. 4, 6; and:criminibus repetundarum,
id. ib. 1, 77:conjurationis crimine,
id. A. 6, 14:ut cecidit Fortuna Phrygum,
Ov. M. 13, 435:omniaque ingrato litore vota cadunt, i. e. irrita sunt,
remain unfulfilled, unaccomplished, Prop. 1, 17, 4 (diff. from Tib. 2, 2, 17; v. above, D. 2.); cf.:at mea nocturno verba cadunt zephyro,
Prop. 1, 16, 34:multa renascentur, quae jam cecidere, cadentque Quae nunc sunt in honore vocabula,
to fall into disuse, grow out of date, Hor. A. P. 70 —Hence of theatrical representations, to fall through, to fail, be condemned (opp. stare, to win applause;the fig. derived from combatants): securus cadat an recto stet fabula talo,
Hor. Ep. 2, 1, 176.— Impers.. periculum est, ne cadatur, Aug. Don. Persev. 1.—Esp. of the wind (opp. surgo), to abate, subside, die away, etc.:G.cadit Eurus et umida surgunt Nubila,
Ov. M. 8, 2:ventus premente nebulā cecidit,
Liv. 29, 27, 10:cadente jam Euro,
id. 25, 27, 11:venti vis omnis cecidit,
id. 26, 39, 8:ubi primum aquilones ceciderunt,
id. 36, 43, 11; cf.:sic cunctus pelagi cecidit fragor,
Verg. A. 1, 154:ventosi ceciderunt murmuris aurae,
id. E. 9, 58; id. G. 1, 354 Serv. and Wagn.—Rhet. and gram. t. t. of words, syllables, clauses, etc., to be terminated, end, close:verba melius in syllabas longiores cadunt,
Cic. Or. 57, 194; 67, 223: qua (littera [p. 260] sc. m) nullum Graece verbum cadit, Quint. 12, 10, 31:plerique censent cadere tantum numerose oportere terminarique sententiam,
Cic. Or. 59, 199; so id. Brut. 8, 34:apto cadens oratio,
Quint. 9, 4, 32:numerus opportune cadens,
id. 9, 4, 27:ultima syllaba in gravem vel duas graves cadit semper,
id. 12, 10, 33 Spald.: similiter cadentia = omoioptôta, the ending of words with the same cases or verbal forms, diff. from similiter desinentia = omoioteleuta, similar endings of any kind, Cic. de Or. 3, 54, 206; id. Or. 34, 135; Auct. Her. 4, 20, 28; Quint. 9, 4, 42; cf. id. 9, 4, 18; 9, 3, 78; 9, 3, 79; 1, 7, 23; Aquil. Rom. Figur. §§ 25 and 26. -
48 testa
f heada testa each, a headalla testa di at the head ofessere in testa lead* * *testa s.f.1 head: la testa mi duole terribilmente, my head aches dreadfully (o I have a splitting headache); mal di testa, headache; chinare la testa, to bend (o to bow) one's head; scrollare, sollevare la testa, to shake, to raise one's head; tagliare la testa a qlcu., to cut (o to chop) s.o.'s head off (o to behead s.o.); cadere a testa in giù, to fall headlong; tuffarsi a testa in giù, to dive head first; mi mise la testa sulla spalla, she laid her head on my shoulder; avere il cappello in testa, to be wearing one's hat; si mise in testa il cappello e uscì, he put his hat on and went out; si è ferito alla, rotto la testa contro lo spigolo del tavolo, he cut his head on the edge of the table; gli diedero una botta in testa, they hit him on the head; quando lo vide girò la testa da un'altra parte, when he saw him he looked the other way // testa di rapa, di legno, ( persona ottusa) block-head (o dolt o ass); testa dura, ( persona ostinata) stubborn person; testa quadrata, ( persona equilibrata) well-balanced person; testa vuota, fool: è una testa vuota, he has a thick head; essere una testa calda, to be hot-headed (o impulsive); avere una bella testa, ( essere intelligente) to have a fine brain // (mus.) voce di testa, first voice2 ( persona, individuo) head: ci sono troppe teste coinvolte nella decisione, there are too many people involved in the decision // a testa, per head (o a head o each): staremo svegli due ore a testa, we'll each stay awake for two hours; vi spettano tre copie a testa, there are three copies each (o per head o a head); si mangiarono un pollo a testa, they ate a chicken each; cento euro a testa, one hundred euros a head; pagare un tanto a testa, to pay so much per head (o each)3 ( testata) head: la testa del letto, the bedhead (o headboard); la testa di un chiodo, di uno spillo, the head of a nail, of a pin; testa d'aglio, head of garlic // (mil.): testa di ponte, bridgehead; testa di sbarco, beachhead // (mecc.): testa a croce, crosshead; testa di biella, big end; testa del cilindro, cylinder head; battere, picchiare in testa, to knock; battito in testa, knocking4 (ferr.) vettura di testa, the first carriage, the carriage at the front of the train; la carrozza ristorante è in testa, the restaurant car is at the front of the train; stazione di testa, terminal station◆ FRASEOLOGIA: avere la testa tra le nuvole, to have one's head in the clouds; il vino gli dà subito alla testa, wine goes straight to his head; speriamo che il successo non gli dia alla testa, let's hope that his success won't go to his head; non sa più dove andare a sbattere la testa, he doesn't know where to turn; mettere la testa a posto, to sort oneself out; spero che non vi passino altre idee strane per la testa, I hope you won't get any other strange ideas into your head; ma cosa ti è venuto, saltato in testa?, what has come over you?; avere la testa sulle spalle, to have one's (o a good) head on one's shoulders; avere debiti, lavoro fin sopra la testa, to be up to one's eyes in debt, in work; ne ho fin sopra la testa dei suoi discorsi, I have had all I can take of his speeches; mi ha fatto una testa così con le sue chiacchiere, he wore me out with his talking; mettere un'idea in testa a qlcu., to put an idea into s.o.'s head; mettersi un'idea in testa, to take an idea into one's head; fare di testa propria, to do sthg. off one's own bat (o to do sthg. one's own way); andare a testa alta, to hold one's head high; andò via a testa bassa, he walked away crestfallen (o hanging his head): la squadra lasciò il campo a testa bassa, the team were downhearted when they left the field; ''Ho perso il portafoglio!'' ''Ma dove hai la testa?'', ''I have lost my wallet'' ''What were you thinking of?''; essere fuori di testa, (fam.) non esserci con la testa, to be out of one's mind; andare fuori di testa, (fam.) to go off one's head, to go crazy; non avere la testa a posto, to be off one's head; nascondere la testa nella sabbia, to bury one's head in the sand; agire con la testa nel sacco, to act like a fool; perdere la testa, to lose one's head; piegare la testa di fronte all'evidenza, to bow to evidence; possiamo solo chinare la testa e obbedire, we'll just have to bow down (o to give in) and obey; non riesce a farsi entrare in testa la matematica, he just can't get maths into his head; non ha testa per la matematica, he has no head for maths; rompersi la testa per qlco., to rack one's brains for sthg.; tenere testa a qlcu., ( non sottomettersi) to stand up to s.o., ( mantenersi al passo) to keep up with s.o.; uscirne con la testa rotta, to have the worst of it // essere in testa, to be in the lead (o at the top): il nostro paese è in testa nella produzione di automobili, our country leads the field in car production; le Ferrari sono in testa, the Ferraris are in the lead; essere, passare in testa alla classifica, to be at, to move up to the top of the league; il suo nome è in testa alla lista dei ricercati, his name is at the top of the wanted list; andare in testa, to take the lead; essere in testa a tutti, to be ahead of everybody // essere alla testa di un corteo, to be heading a procession; essere alla testa di un esercito, di un'impresa commerciale, to be at the head of an army, of a business; essere alla testa di un partito, to be the leader of a party // testa a testa, neck and neck // teste di cuoio, special forces, anti-terrorist (police) forces, commando units; (in GB) SAS // (sport) testa di serie, seed, seeded player ∙ Per ulteriore esemplificazione vedere anche alla voce 'capo'.* * *['tɛsta]sostantivo femminile1) heada testa in giù, di testa — [cadere, tuffarsi] headfirst
a testa in giù — [ essere sospeso] upside down
a testa alta — (senza vergogna) with one's head held high
a testa bassa — (vergognandosi) with one's head bowed; (con grande impegno) [ lanciarsi] headfirst, headlong
sulle nostre -e — (per aria) over our heads
testa a testa — [lottare, scontrarsi] head to head; [correre, arrivare] neck and neck, nip and tuck AE
mettere una taglia sulla testa di qcn. — fig. to put a price on sb.'s head
2) fig. (mente)avere qcs. in testa — to have sth. on one's mind
avere la testa altrove — to be miles away, to have one's mind elsewhere
è una bella testa — colloq. she's a great mind o a heavyweight
non ci sta (tanto) con la testa — colloq. he's not right in the head, he's not all there
3) (individuo)a testa — each, per o a head
4) (estremità) (di treno, convoglio) front; (di corteo, fila) head, front; (di chiodo, spillo, fiammifero, martello) headi vagoni di testa — the front carriages o cars
5) (comando)il gruppo di testa — the leaders, the leading group
essere alla testa di — to be at the head of, to head [movimento, partito]
in testa a o alla testa di un corteo at the front o head of a procession; essere in testa (in elezioni, sondaggio, gara, classifica) to lead, to be in the lead, to have the lead; essere in testa a to head [ lista]; to be at the top of [ classifica]; la squadra in testa al campionato the leading team in the championship; passare in testa — to go into the lead, to take the lead
6) aut.battere in testa — [ motore] to knock; [ automobile] to backfire
•testa di biella — tecn. stub-end
testa calda — hothead, hotspur
testa di cavolo — colloq. cabbagehead, pinhead
testa di cazzo — volg. dickhead, prick
fare a testa o croce — to call heads or tails, to toss up, to flip a coin
testa di cuoio — mil. = member of a special anti-terrorist police team
testa di legno — woodenhead, thickhead, blockhead
testa di morto — (teschio) death's head; entosostantivo maschile death's head moth
testa quadra — (persona testarda) bullhead, blackhead
testa quadrata — (persona razionale) squareheaded person
testa di rapa — colloq. testa di legno
testa di serie — sport seed
testa d'uovo — colloq. egghead
testa vuota — dimwit, rattle-brain, airhead AE, bubblehead AE
••fare una testa così a qcn., fare la testa come un pallone a qcn. — to talk sb.'s head off
averne fin sopra la testa — to be tired o sick to death (di of), to have it up to there (di with)
avere la testa tra le o nelle nuvole to have one's head in the clouds; avere la testa sulle spalle o sul collo o a posto to have one's head screwed on, to have a good head on one's shoulders, to have all one's buttons colloq.; dare alla testa o far girare la testa a qcn. [alcol, lodi] to go to sb.'s head; [ successo] to go to sb.'s head, to turn sb.'s head; montarsi la testa to get big-headed, to have a swollen head; non montarti la testa don't let it go to your head; tenere testa a qcn. to be a match for sb.; far entrare qcs. in testa a qcn. to drill sth. into sb., to get o beat o drive sth. into sb.'s head; mettere la testa a posto to get oneself sorted out, to buck up one's ideas colloq.; mettere qcs. in testa a qcn. to put sth. into sb.'s head; mettersi in testa di fare to take it into one's head to do, to set one's mind on doing; mettersi in testa che to get the notion into one's head that; mettitelo bene in testa! get that into your (thick) skull! get it into your head once and for all! perdere la testa to go off one's head; fare qcs. di testa propria to do sth. on one's own initiative; fare (sempre) di testa propria to (always) do it one's own way; rompersi la testa (scervellarsi) to rack one's brains; essere fuori di testa colloq. to be as nutty as a fruit cake, to be out to lunch; andare fuori di testa, uscire di testa colloq. to go off one's head, to flip, to go (a)round the bend, to go bananas; fare uscire di testa qcn. colloq. to drive sb. (a)round the bend; ma sei fuori di testa? are you off your head? are you out of your mind? tagliare la testa al toro — to clinch the question once and for all
* * *testa/'tεsta/ ⇒ 4sostantivo f.1 head; muovere la testa to move one's head; coprirsi la testa to cover one's head; lavarsi la testa to wash one's hair; dalla testa ai piedi from head to foot o toe; mal di testa headache; a testa in giù, di testa [cadere, tuffarsi] headfirst; a testa in giù [ essere sospeso] upside down; mettersi il cappello in testa to put on one's hat; a testa alta (senza vergogna) with one's head held high; a testa bassa (vergognandosi) with one's head bowed; (con grande impegno) [ lanciarsi] headfirst, headlong; sulle nostre -e (per aria) over our heads; testa a testa [lottare, scontrarsi] head to head; [correre, arrivare] neck and neck, nip and tuck AE; mettere una taglia sulla testa di qcn. fig. to put a price on sb.'s head2 fig. (mente) avere in testa di fare to have it in mind to do; avere qcs. in testa to have sth. on one's mind; usare la testa to use one's head; avere la testa altrove to be miles away, to have one's mind elsewhere; è una bella testa colloq. she's a great mind o a heavyweight; non ci sta (tanto) con la testa colloq. he's not right in the head, he's not all there4 (estremità) (di treno, convoglio) front; (di corteo, fila) head, front; (di chiodo, spillo, fiammifero, martello) head; i vagoni di testa the front carriages o cars5 (comando) il gruppo di testa the leaders, the leading group; essere alla testa di to be at the head of, to head [movimento, partito]; in testa a o alla testa di un corteo at the front o head of a procession; essere in testa(in elezioni, sondaggio, gara, classifica) to lead, to be in the lead, to have the lead; essere in testa a to head [ lista]; to be at the top of [ classifica]; la squadra in testa al campionato the leading team in the championship; passare in testa to go into the lead, to take the leadfare una testa così a qcn., fare la testa come un pallone a qcn. to talk sb.'s head off; averne fin sopra la testa to be tired o sick to death (di of), to have it up to there (di with); avere la testa tra le o nelle nuvole to have one's head in the clouds; avere la testa sulle spalle o sul collo o a posto to have one's head screwed on, to have a good head on one's shoulders, to have all one's buttons colloq.; dare alla testa o far girare la testa a qcn. [alcol, lodi] to go to sb.'s head; [ successo] to go to sb.'s head, to turn sb.'s head; montarsi la testa to get big-headed, to have a swollen head; non montarti la testa don't let it go to your head; tenere testa a qcn. to be a match for sb.; far entrare qcs. in testa a qcn. to drill sth. into sb., to get o beat o drive sth. into sb.'s head; mettere la testa a posto to get oneself sorted out, to buck up one's ideas colloq.; mettere qcs. in testa a qcn. to put sth. into sb.'s head; mettersi in testa di fare to take it into one's head to do, to set one's mind on doing; mettersi in testa che to get the notion into one's head that; mettitelo bene in testa! get that into your (thick) skull! get it into your head once and for all! perdere la testa to go off one's head; fare qcs. di testa propria to do sth. on one's own initiative; fare (sempre) di testa propria to (always) do it one's own way; rompersi la testa (scervellarsi) to rack one's brains; essere fuori di testa colloq. to be as nutty as a fruit cake, to be out to lunch; andare fuori di testa, uscire di testa colloq. to go off one's head, to flip, to go (a)round the bend, to go bananas; fare uscire di testa qcn. colloq. to drive sb. (a)round the bend; ma sei fuori di testa? are you off your head? are you out of your mind? tagliare la testa al toro to clinch the question once and for all\testa d'aglio head of garlic; testa d'asino mutton head; testa di biella tecn. stub-end; testa calda hothead, hotspur; essere una testa calda to be hot-headed; testa di cavolo colloq. cabbagehead, pinhead; testa di cazzo volg. dickhead, prick; testa o croce heads or tails; fare a testa o croce to call heads or tails, to toss up, to flip a coin; testa di cuoio mil. = member of a special anti-terrorist police team; testa dura → testa di legno; avere la testa dura to be strongheaded; testa di legno woodenhead, thickhead, blockhead; testa matta madcap; testa di moro dark chocolate; testa di morto (teschio) death's head; entosostantivo maschile death's head moth; testa quadra (persona testarda) bullhead, blackhead; testa quadrata (persona razionale) squareheaded person; testa di rapa colloq. → testa di legno; testa di serie sport seed; testa d'uovo colloq. egghead; testa vuota dimwit, rattle-brain, airhead AE, bubblehead AE; avere la testa vuota to be in a vacuum. -
49 upa|ść1
pf — upa|dać impf (upadnę, upadniesz, upadł, upadła, upadli — upadam) vi 1. (przewrócić się) to fall (down)- potknął się i upadł he tripped and fell (over)- upadł ciężko na ziemię he fell heavily to the ground- upaść głową do przodu to fall headlong a. head first- upadł jak długi he fell flat a. full length, he went sprawling- upaść na kolana to fall a. drop to one’s knees, to fall (down) on one’s knees- upaść na plecy/twarz to fall a. land on one’s back/to fall on one’s face- upadł tak nieszczęśliwie, że złamał rękę he landed so awkwardly that he broke his arm- upadła z hukiem/zemdlona na podłogę she fell to the floor with a thud/in a faint- upaść ze schodów to fall down the stairs2. (skończyć się niepowodzeniem) [imperium, cywilizacja, komunizm] to collapse; [rząd] to collapse, to topple; [powstanie] to fail, to collapse; [pomysł] to come to nothing; [inicjatywa] to founder- sztuka upada art is in a decline3. (zbankrutować) [firma] to collapse 4. książk. (stoczyć się) to decline morally- upadać coraz niżej to be reaching new (moral) lows- tak nisko jeszcze nie upadłem I would never stoop a. sink so low■ upadać na siłach/na zdrowiu przest. to lose (one’s) strength/to lose one’s health- upadać pod ciężarem a. pod brzemieniem zmartwień to be overwhelmed by one’s worries- upaść komuś do nóg to fall a. throw oneself at sb’s feet- upaść na duchu to lose heart a. hope- upaść na fotel/na krzesło to collapse a. drop into an armchair/onto a chair- upaść na łóżko to collapse onto a bed- chyba upadłeś na głowę! you must be out of your mind!; have you lost your marbles?- musiałbym upaść na głowę, żeby tam iść I’d have to be mad a. out of my mind to go there- wniosek upadł the motion was defeated a. rejected- projekt ustawy podatkowej upadł the tax bill was defeated a. voted downThe New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > upa|ść1
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50 despeñarse
1 (caer) to fall over a cliff2 figurado (perderse) to go off the straight and narrow* * *VPR1) [por un barranco] [persona] to throw o.s. over a cliff; [coche] to go over a cliff o off the side of the road2) (=caer) to fall headlong* * *verbo pronominal persona/mula to go o fall over a cliff (o precipice etc); coche to go over a cliff (o precipice etc)* * *verbo pronominal persona/mula to go o fall over a cliff (o precipice etc); coche to go over a cliff (o precipice etc)* * *despeñarse [A1 ]«persona/mula» to go o fall over a cliff ( o precipice etc); «coche» to run off the road, go over a cliff ( o precipice etc)* * *
despeñarse ( conjugate despeñarse) verbo pronominal
to go over a cliff (o precipice etc)
despeñarse verbo reflexivo to go o fall over a cliff: se ha despeñado la cabra, the goat fell off a cliff
* * *vprto fall over a cliff;se despeñó por un acantilado he fell off a cliff* * *v/r throw o.s. off a cliff -
51 hocicar
v.1 to break up the ground with the snout (cerdo), to nuzzle (person).El perro hocica al gato The dog nuzzles the cat.2 to fall headlong with the face to the ground (cerdo), to nuzzle (person), to pet (amantes).3 to stumble or slide into errors.4 to pitch.El bote hocica y guiña The ship pitches and yaws.5 to root about, to root around.El cerdo hocica por el corral The pig roots around near the corral.* * *1 (hozar) to root in, root among1 (dar con los hocicos) to hit one's face (con/contra/en, against)2 figurado (con un obstáculo) to run (con/contra/en, into)* * *1.VT [cerdo] to root among; [persona] to nuzzle2. VI1) [cerdo] to root; [persona] to nuzzle2) (Náut) to pitch3) (=caer) to fall on one's face4) (=enfrentarse) to run into trouble, come up against it5) † [amantes] to pethocicar con o en — to put one's nose against, put one's nose into
* * *hocicar [A2 ]vtto root among■ hocicarvi1 «persona» to fall flat on one's face ( colloq)2 ( Náut) to pitch* * *♦ vt[cerdo] to root among♦ vi1. [cerdo] to root around -
52 capitombolare
capitombolare v. intr. to fall* headlong, to tumble down: capitombolò per le scale, he fell headlong (o tumbled) down the stairs.* * *[kapitombo'lare]* * *capitombolare/kapitombo'lare/ [1](aus. essere) to tumble. -
53 tombolare
tombolare v. intr. -
54 nos
m 1. (część twarzy) nose- czubek nosa the tip of one’s nose- rozpłaszczyła nos o szybę she pressed her nose up against the window(pane)- włożyć na nos okulary to put on one’s glasses2. (czubek) nose, tip- czółno zaryło się nosem w piasku the nose of the canoe dug into the sand- pantofle o kwadratowych nosach square-toed shoes- nosy nart the tips of the skis■ autobus/pociąg/tramwaj uciekł mi/jej sprzed nosa I/she missed the bus/train/tram by a whisker- to jest pod nosem a. masz to pod nosem it’s a. you have it under your nose- dostać a. oberwać po nosie pot. to be hauled over the coals GB, to be taken a. brought down a peg (or two)- kręci a. wierci mnie/ją w nosie my/her nose is tickling- od kurzu aż w nosie wierci the dust makes my nose tickle- mieć kogoś/coś w nosie pot. to not care a. give a hoot a. two hoots about sb/sth- mieć nosa do czegoś pot. to have a nose for sth- miałem nosa, rzeczywiście przyszli I had a hunch (that) they’d come- robić coś na nosa pot. to follow one’s nose- mamrotać/mówić pod nosem to talk a. mumble under one’s breath- mówić przez nos to talk through one’s nose a. nasally- nie wychylać a. nie wyściubiać a. nie wyścibiać a. nie wytykać skądś nosa pot. to not poke one’s head out of sth- okazja przeszła mi/mu koło nosa pot. I/he missed the opportunity- pilnować swojego nosa pot. to mind one’s own business- pociągać nosem to sniffle, to sniff- przytrzeć a. utrzeć komuś nosa a. dać komuś po nosie pot. to take a. bring sb down a peg (or two), to cut sb down to size- robić coś (tuż) pod czyimś nosem pot. to do sth (right) under sb’s nose- nos w nos pot. face to face- spotkać się z kimś nos w nos to come face to face with sb- widzieć tylko koniec a. czubek swojego a. własnego nosa a. nie widzieć dalej niż czubek swojego a. własnego nosa pot. to see no further than (the end of) one’s nose pot.- wetknąć a. wsadzić a. wściubić nos w coś a. siedzieć z nosem w czymś pot. to have one’s nose in sth pot., to bury one’s head in sth- wodzić nosem po czymś pot. to bury one’s nose in sth- wtykać a. wsadzać a. wścibiać nos w nie swoje a. w cudze sprawy pot. to stick a. poke one’s nose into other people’s business- nie wtykaj nosa w nie swoje sprawy don’t poke your nose into other people’s business- zadzierać nosa pot. to put on a. give oneself airs- zaryć nosem w ziemię pot. to fall flat on one’s face, to fall headlong- nie nosdla tabakiery, ale tabakiera dla nosa przysł. let your letter stay for the post, not the post for the letter przysł.- nie wsadzaj a. nie wtykaj nosa do cudzego prosa a. trzosa, pilnuj swego nosa, a nie cudzego prosa przysł. keep your nose out of other people’s business, don’t stick a. poke your nose into other people’s business* * *kręcić na coś nosem — (przen) to turn up one's nose at sth
wtykać nos w nie swoje sprawy — (przen) to poke one's nose into other people's affairs
mam to w nosie — (przen) I don't give a hoot
mam tego po dziurki w nosie — (przen) I've had it up to here
mieć nosa — (przen) to have a hunch
* * *miGen. -a1. (= narząd powonienia) nose; orli nos Roman nose, hook nose; zadarty nos pug nose; pod nosem (= blisko) (right) under one's nose; (= niewyraźnie) ( powiedzieć coś) under one's breath; (= w czyjejś bliskości) in one's face; dać komuś po nosie cut sb down to size, take sb down a peg (or two); kręcić nosem (na coś) tun one's nose up (at sth); mieć mleko pod nosem be wet behind the ears; mieć muchy w nosie (z powodu czegoś) be ticked off (about sth); mieć (dobrego) nosa (do czegoś) have a (good) nose (for sth); mieć kogoś/czegoś po dziurki w nosie be sick and tired of sb/sth; mieć kogoś/coś w nosie not care less about sb/sth, not give a darn l. hoot about sb/sth; mówić przez nos talk through one's nose; nie widzieć dalej niż czubek własnego nosa not see past the end of one's nose; pilnować własnego nosa mind one's own business; podtykać coś komuś pod nos put sth in sb's face; przytrzeć l. utrzeć komuś nosa rake sb over the coals; sprzątnąć coś komuś sprzed nosa grab sth (out) from under sb's nose; wodzić kogoś za nos lead sb (around) by the nose, play with sb; wtykać l. wściubiać nos w coś (= wtrącać się) stick l. poke one's nose into sth; zadzierać nosa go around with one's nose (up) in the air; zatrzasnąć komuś drzwi przed nosem slam the door in sb's face; zaryć nosem fall on one's face; zwąchać pismo nosem smell a rat; zwiesić nos na kwintę hang one's head down; idzie jak krew z nosa it is a real drag.The New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > nos
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55 अतट _ataṭa
अतट a. [न. ब.]-1 Having no shore or beach; +preci- pitate, steep-टः 1 A precipice, a steep crag.-2 N. of a hill.-3 The lower part of the earth.-Comp -प्रपातः a steep precipice; a fall headlong form a precipice; a precipitate fall; मनोरथानामतटप्रपातः Ś.6.1. of my hopes there is a precipitate fall. (Some read the line -as मनोरथा नाम तटप्रपातः and take it to mean 'verily our desires are like the crumblings of river banks'.) -
56 полетіти
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57 упасть головой вперёд
Makarov: fall head first, fall headlongУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > упасть головой вперёд
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58 haut
haut, e [ˈo, ˈot]━━━━━━━━━1. adjective5. adverb6. compounds━━━━━━━━━1. <a. high ; [herbe, arbre, édifice] tall• avoir une haute opinion de soi-même to have a high opinion of o.s.• être haut en couleur ( = rougeaud) to have a high colour ; ( = coloré, pittoresque) to be colourfulb. ( = ancien) le haut Moyen Âge the Early Middle Ages2. <a. ( = hauteur) le mur a 3 mètres de haut the wall is 3 metres high• combien fait-il de haut ? how high is it?b. ( = partie supérieure) top• « haut » "this way up"c. ( = vêtement) topd. (locutions)• être au plus haut (dans les sondages) [personne] to be riding high ; [cote, popularité] to be at its peak• voir les choses de haut ( = avec détachement) to take a detached view of things• prendre qch de haut ( = avec mépris) to react indignantly to sth• prendre qn de haut to look down on sb► de haut en bas, du haut en bas [couvrir, fouiller] from top to bottom ; [s'ouvrir] from the top downwards• du haut en bas de la hiérarchie at all levels of the hierarchy► du haut [tiroir, étagère, dents] top• des ordres qui viennent d'en haut orders from above► en haut ( = au sommet) at the top ; (dans un immeuble) upstairs• en haut de [+ immeuble, escalier, côte, écran] at the top of3. <4. <5. <a. ( = en hauteur) [monter, sauter, voler] high• haut les mains ! hands up!b. ( = fort) lire tout haut to read aloudc. ( = dans les aigus) monter haut to hit the top notese. ( = en arrière) voir plus haut see above6. <* * *
1.
haute ’o, ’ot adjectif1) [montagne, mur, talon] high; [arbre, monument] tall; [herbe] long, tallattention, la première marche est haute — be careful, the first step is steep
2) ( situé en altitude) high3) ( dans une échelle de valeurs) [température, salaires, précision] high; [note, ton] high, high-pitched4) ( dans une hiérarchie) (before n) [personnage, poste] high-ranking; [clergé, magistrat] senior; [société] high; [responsabilités] big; [dirigeant, responsable] senior, high-rankinghaut Comité/Conseil — National Committee/Council
5) Géographie upper6) Histoire
2.
1) ( à un niveau élevé) [monter, voler] high2) ( dans le temps) far back3) ( dans un texte)4) ( fort) loudlyparler haut et clair — fig to speak unambiguously
3.
nom masculin1) ( partie élevée) top2) ( hauteur)faire 50 mètres de haut — to be 50 metres [BrE] high
4.
en haut locution ( à l'étage supérieur) upstairs; ( à un étage supérieur) on an upper floor; (de rideau, mur, page) at the top; (le ciel, le paradis) abovepasser par en haut — ( par la route) to take the top road
les voleurs sont entrés par en haut — ( par l'étage) the thieves got in upstairs
5.
hauts nom masculin pluriel Géographie heightsPhrasal Verbs:••voir les choses de haut — ( avec sérénité) to have a detached view of things
avoir or connaître des hauts et des bas — to have one's ups and downs
l'emporter or gagner or vaincre haut la main — to win hands down
prendre quelqu'un de haut — to look down one's nose at somebody; cri, pavé
* * *'o, 'ot haut, -e1. adj1) (situation) highplus haut (en altitude, sur un mur) — higher up, further up, (dans un texte) above
2) (dimensions) (immeuble) tall, (paroi) high3) (son, ton, voix) high, high-pitchedà haute voix — aloud, out loud
haut en couleur (chose) — colourful Grande-Bretagne colorful USA brightly coloured Grande-Bretagne brightly colored USA (personnage) colourful Grande-Bretagne colorful USA
2. adv1) [situé, placé] highen haut (dans une armoire, sur une pente) — at the top, (dans une maison) upstairs
La salle de bain est en haut. — The bathroom is upstairs.
Le nid est tout en haut de l'arbre. — The nest is right at the top of the tree.
tomber de haut — to fall from a height, figto come back to earth with a bump
dire qch tout haut — to say sth aloud, to say sth out loud
4)haut les mains! — hands up!, stick 'em up! *
3. nm1) (partie supérieure) topLe haut de l'immeuble a été endommagé. — The top of the building was damaged., The upper floors of the building were damaged.
2) (hauteur)de haut en bas (mouvement) — downwards, (en intégralité) from top to bottom
* * *A adj1 ⇒ Les mesures de longueur ( étendu verticalement) [montagne, mur, talon] high; [arbre, monument, bâtiment] tall; [herbe] long, tall; homme de haute taille tall man; un objet plus haut que large an object that is higher than it is wide; un bâtiment haut de 20 étages a building 20 storeys GB ou stories US high, a 20-storey GB ou 20-story US building; un mât haut de 10 mètres a mast ten metresGB high, a ten-metreGB mast; plus haut/moins haut que higher/lower than; l'immeuble dans lequel il habite est très haut he lives in a block of high-rise flats GB ou a high-rise apartment block US; attention, la première marche est haute be careful, the first step is steep;2 ( situé en altitude) high; une haute branche a high branch; la partie haute d'un bâtiment/mur/arbre the top part of a building/wall/tree; l'étagère la plus haute the top shelf; une robe à taille haute a high-waisted dress;3 ( dans une échelle de valeurs) [fréquence, pression, température, prix, capacité, précision] high; [note, ton] high, high-pitched; les hauts salaires/revenus high salaries/incomes; parler à haute voix to speak loudly; dire/lire qch à haute voix to say/read sth out loud; jouer une carte plus haute to play a higher card; être à haut risque to be very risky; être du plus haut ridicule to be highly ridiculous; au plus haut point immensely, intensely; aimer qch au plus haut point to like sth immensely; produit de haute qualité high-quality product; avoir une haute opinion de qn/soi-même to have a high opinion of sb/oneself; tenir qn en haute estime to hold sb in high esteem ou regard;4 ( dans une hiérarchie) (before n) [personnage, situation, poste] high-ranking; [clergé, magistrat] senior; [société, rang] high; [responsabilités] big; [dirigeant, responsable] senior, high-ranking; les plus hautes instances the highest authorities; bénéficier de hautes protections to have friends in high places; le haut Comité/Conseil pour the National Committee/Council for; haute surveillance close supervision;6 Hist dater de la plus haute antiquité to date from earliest antiquity; le haut Moyen Âge the early Middle Ages.B adv1 ( à un niveau élevé) [monter, s'élever, voler, sauter] high; voler très haut dans le ciel to fly high in the sky; un personnage haut placé a person in a high position; viser trop haut to aim too high; la lune est haut dans le ciel the moon is high up in the sky; haut perché sur perched high on; le plus haut the highest; sauter le plus haut to jump the highest; de haut from above;2 ( dans le temps) far back; aussi haut qu'on remonte dans l'antiquité however far back in history we go;3 ( dans un texte) plus haut above; comme indiqué plus haut as noted above; colle-le plus haut sur la page stick it higher up on the page; voir plus haut see above;4 ( fort) loudly; parler haut to talk loudly; parlez moins haut! keep your voice down!; parlez plus haut! speak up!; dire qch bien haut to say sth loud(ly); mettre la radio plus haut to turn the radio up; tout haut out loud; parler haut et clair fig to speak unambiguously; ne dire or n'avoir jamais un mot plus haut que l'autre never to raise one's voice.C nm1 ( partie élevée) top; le haut du mur the top of the wall; le haut du visage the top part of the face; le haut du corps the top half of the body; dans le haut (de) at the top (of); l'appartement/l'étagère du haut the top flat/shelf; les pièces du haut the upstairs rooms; sur le haut de la colline/côte at the top of the hill/slope; commencer par le haut to start at the top; prendre qch par le haut to get hold of the top of sth; du haut de from the top of; de or du haut en bas from top to bottom; parler du haut d'un balcon/d'une tribune to speak from a balcony/a platform; le haut de son maillot de bain the top of her swimsuit;2 ( hauteur) mesurer or faire 50 mètres de haut to be 50 metresGB high; une tour de 35 m de haut a 35 m tower; être à son plus haut to be at its highest level.D en haut loc ( à l'étage supérieur) upstairs; ( à un étage supérieur) on an upper floor; (de rideau, mur, page) at the top; (le ciel, le paradis) above; le bruit vient d'en haut the noise is coming from above; tout en haut right at the top; jusqu'en haut up to the top, right to the top; passer par en haut ( par la route) to take the top road; les voleurs sont entrés par en haut ( par l'étage) the thieves got in upstairs; ordre qui vient d'en haut order from the top; mettez la date en haut de la page à droite put the date in the top right-hand corner of the page.haut en couleur [personnage, tableau, texte] colourfulGB; haut fait heroic deed; haut fonctionnaire senior civil servant; haut lieu de centreGB of ou for; en haut lieu in high places; une décision prise en haut lieu a decision taken at a high level; haut plateau high plateau; haute définition TV high definition; télévision (à) haute définition high definition TV; écran à haute définition graphique Ordinat screen with high resolution graphics; haute école lit, Équit haute école, classical equitation; c'est un exercice de haute école fig it's a very advanced exercise; haute mer Naut open sea; Haute Cour (de Justice) High Court of Justice; hautes eaux high water (sg); hautes sphères high social circles; hautes terres Géog highlands; hautes voiles Naut upper sails; hauts fourneaux blast furnace.marcher la tête haute to walk with one's head held high; prendre or regarder or voir les choses de haut ( sans s'arrêter aux détails) to see things in broad terms; ( avec sérénité) to have a detached view of things; tomber de haut to be dumbfounded; regarder qn de haut en bas to look sb up and down; avoir or connaître des hauts et des bas to have one's ups and downs; haut les mains! hands up!; l'emporter or gagner or vaincre haut la main to win hands down; prendre qn/qch de haut to look down one's nose at sb/sth; ⇒ cri, pavé.les hautes colonnes du temple the lofty ou towering columns of the temple[qui a poussé] high2. [d'une certaine dimension]3. [situé en hauteur] high4. [extrême, intense] highc'est de la plus haute importance it's of the utmost ou greatest importancede haut niveau top-level, high-levella haute coiffure haute coiffure, designer hairdressingde hautes études commerciales/militaires advanced business/military studiesles hauts fonctionnaires top ou top-ranking civil servantsles hauts salaires the highest ou top salaries6. [dans une échelle de valeurs] hightenir quelqu'un/quelque chose en haute estime to hold somebody/something in high esteem9. HISTOIRE————————adverbe1. [dans l'espace] highlevez haut la jambe raise your leg (up) high ou high up2. [dans le temps] far (back)[dans un livre]3. [fort, avec puissance]parlez plus haut speak up, speak louderdites-le haut et clair ou bien haut tell (it to) everyone, say it out loud5. [dans une hiérarchie] highnous l'avons toujours placé très haut dans notre estime (figuré) we've always held him in high regard————————nom masculin1. [partie supérieure] top[sur une caisse, un emballage]‘haut’ ‘(this way ou side) up’2. [vêtement & gén] top[de robe] bodice3. [hauteur]a. [chuter] to fall headlongb. [être déçu] to come down (to earth) with a bumpc. [être surpris] to be flabbergasted————————hauts nom masculin pluriel1. [dans des noms de lieux] heights2. (locution)avoir ou connaître des hauts et des bas to have one's ups and downs————————haute nom fémininde haut locution adverbialeprendre ou regarder ou voir les choses de haut to look at things with an air of detachment2. [avec mépris]3. (locution)a. [être surpris] to be flabbergastedb. [être déçu] to come down (to earth) with a bumpde haut en bas locution adverbiale1. [sans mouvement] from top to bottom3. [avec mépris]regarder ou considérer quelqu'un de haut en bas to look somebody up and downd'en haut locution adverbiale1. [depuis la partie élevée] from abovedu haut locution adjectivalea. [de la partie haute du village] the people up the top end (of the village)b. [des étages supérieurs] the people upstairsdu haut de locution prépositionnelle1. [depuis la partie élevée de - échelle, colline] from the top of2. (figuré)en haut locution adverbiale1. [à l'étage supérieur] upstairs2. [dans la partie élevée] at the topnous sommes passés par en haut [par la route du haut] we came along the high road3. [en l'air] up in the skyen haut de locution prépositionnelle -
59 cadere lungo disteso (per terra)
Dizionario Italiano-Inglese > cadere lungo disteso (per terra)
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60 misurare
"to measure;Messen;medir"* * *measurevestito try onmisurare le spese limit one's spending* * *misurare v.tr.1 to measure; (la capacità, il contenuto, il calibro) to gauge: misurare la dimensione di qlco., to measure the size of sthg.; misurare la lunghezza di una stoffa, to measure the length of a piece of cloth; misurare un terreno, to survey a piece of land; misurare la pioggia, to measure (o to gauge) the rainfall; misurare la stanza a occhio, to take a rough measurement of the room; misurare la distanza a occhio, to gauge (o to judge) the distance with one's eye; misurare la temperatura a qlcu., to take s.o.'s temperature // misurare le scale, (scherz.) (ruzzolare) to fall headlong down the stairs; misurare la stanza, (scherz.) (cadere) to fall flat on one's face // misurare un ceffone a qlcu., (darglielo) to give s.o. a slap2 (provare facendo indossare) to fit s.o. for (sthg.); (provare indossando) to try on (sthg.): ieri il sarto mi ha misurato l'abito, yesterday the tailor fitted me for the suit; misurare un cappello, i guanti, to try on a hat, the gloves; misurati le scarpe prima di comprarle, try on the shoes before you buy them3 (valutare, giudicare) to estimate, to evaluate, to judge: misurare le difficoltà, gli ostacoli, to estimate the difficulties, the obstacles; misurare le difficoltà di un progetto, to evaluate the difficulties of a plan; misurare la gravità di una situazione, to judge the gravity of a situation; misurare le proprie forze, to try one's strength4 (limitare) to limit, to moderate, to keep* within limits; (razionare) to ration; (soppesare) to weigh: cercò di misurare le spese, he tried to limit his expenses (o to keep his expenses down); mi misurano il pane, they keep me short of bread; misurare il cibo a qlcu., to ration s.o.'s food // misurare le parole, i termini, to weigh one's words5 (percorrere a passi eguali) to pace: misurò la stanza tutta la notte, he paced (up and down) the room all night◆ v. intr. to measure: questa stanza misura quindici piedi di larghezza, this room measures fifteen feet across (o is fifteen feet wide); questo libro misura dodici centimetri per otto, this book measures twelve centimetres by eight; quanto misura quell'armadio?, how much does that wardrobe measure?◘ misurarsi v.rifl.1 (contenersi) to limit oneself; to ration oneself: misurare nello spendere, to limit oneself in spending; il dottore mi ha detto di misurarmi nel mangiare, the doctor told me to ration myself in eating2 (cimentarsi) to measure oneself; (competere) to compete: non ardisco misurarmi con lui, I dare not compete (o measure myself) with him; misurare in una gara, to compete in a race3 (venire alle mani) to come to blows.* * *[mizu'rare]1. vt1) (gen) to measure, (vista, udito) to test, (valore) to estimate, (capacità) to judge, (terreno) to surveymisurare a occhio — to measure roughly, give a rough estimate
2) (fig : limitare: spese) to limit3)misurare o misurarsi qc — (abito, scarpe, cappotto) to try sth on2. viquanto misura questa stanza? — how big is this room?, what are the measurements of this room?
3. vr (misurarsi)1) (contenersi, regolarsi)misurarsi con qn — to compete with sb, pit o.s. against sb
* * *[mizu'rare] 1.verbo transitivo1) to measure [lunghezza, altezza, peso, oggetto]; to gauge [diametro, distanza]; to meter [elettricità, gas, acqua]; to take* [temperatura, pressione]3) (percorrere)4) fig. (valutare) to measure [valore, efficacia, rischi]misurare la propria forza contro o con qcn. — to pit one's strength against sb
5) (contenere)6) (razionare)2.misurare il cibo a qcn. — to ration sb.'s food
misurare 2 metri di altezza, larghezza — to measure 2 metres in height, width o to be 2 metres high, wide
3.misurare 1 metro e 70 — [ persona] to be 1.70 metre tall
verbo pronominale misurarsi1) (contenersi)- rsi nel bere — to drink moderately o in moderation
-rsi con qcn. — to measure o pit oneself against sb.
* * *misurare/mizu'rare/ [1]1 to measure [lunghezza, altezza, peso, oggetto]; to gauge [diametro, distanza]; to meter [elettricità, gas, acqua]; to take* [temperatura, pressione]; misurare 2 metri di tessuto to measure off 2 metres of fabric3 (percorrere) misurare una stanza a grandi passi to pace (up and down) a room4 fig. (valutare) to measure [valore, efficacia, rischi]; misurare la propria forza contro o con qcn. to pit one's strength against sb.5 (contenere) misurare le parole to weigh one's words6 (razionare) misurare il cibo a qcn. to ration sb.'s food(aus. avere) to measure; misurare 2 metri di altezza, larghezza to measure 2 metres in height, width o to be 2 metres high, wide; misurare 20 metri di profondità to be 20 metres deep; misurare 1 metro e 70 [ persona] to be 1.70 metre tallIII misurarsi verbo pronominale2 (confrontarsi) -rsi con qcn. to measure o pit oneself against sb.; - rsi con un problema to tackle a problem.
См. также в других словарях:
Headlong — Head long ( l[o^]ng ; 115), adv. [OE. hedling, hevedlynge; prob. confused with E. long, a. & adv.] [1913 Webster] 1. With the head foremost; headforemost; head first; as, to fall headlong. Acts i. 18. [1913 Webster] 2. Rashly; precipitately;… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
fall — Synonyms and related words: Niagara, Scotch mist, Waterloo, abate, abatement, ablate, accept, apostasy, ascend, assail, assault, associate with, attack, autumn, backslide, backsliding, bag, bank, bate, be destroyed, be eaten away, be found, be… … Moby Thesaurus
fall flat — Synonyms and related words: bomb, break down, capsize, careen, collapse, come a cropper, come to naught, come to nothing, crash, fall, fall dead, fall down, fall headlong, fall in, fall over, fall prostrate, fall short, fall stillborn, fall… … Moby Thesaurus
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Headlong — Single par Queen extrait de l’album Innuendo Pays Royaume Uni … Wikipédia en Français
headlong — [[t]he̱dlɒŋ, AM lɔːŋ[/t]] 1) ADV: ADV after v If you move headlong in a particular direction, you move there very quickly. He ran headlong for the open door. ADJ: ADJ n Headlong is also an adjective. The army was in headlong flight. 2) ADV: ADV… … English dictionary
fall — I n. dropping, coming down 1) to have, take a fall 2) to break a fall 3) a bad, nasty fall (she had a bad fall and broke her ankle) 4) a free fall (of a parachutist) 5) a fall from (a fall from a horse) autumn (AE) 6) an early; late fall 7) in… … Combinatory dictionary
fall — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun 1 accident ADJECTIVE ▪ bad, nasty, terrible ▪ She took a bad fall while out riding. ▪ accidental VERB + FALL … Collocations dictionary
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headlong — head|long1 [ hed,lɔŋ ] adverb MAINLY LITERARY 1. ) with your head in such a position that it hits something before the rest of your body: He was hurled headlong down the stairs. 2. ) very quickly and without looking where you are going: He ran… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
headlong — I UK [ˈhedˌlɒŋ] / US [ˈhedˌlɔŋ] adverb mainly literary 1) with your head in such a position that it hits something before the rest of your body He was hurled headlong down the stairs. 2) very quickly and without looking where you are going He ran … English dictionary