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21 disrepair
disrə'peə(the state of needing repair: The old house has fallen into disrepair.) forfallsubst. \/ˌdɪsrɪˈpeə\/dårlig stand, forfall -
22 disrepair
[disrə'peə](the state of needing repair: The old house has fallen into disrepair.) razpadanje* * *[disripʌ/ə]nounslabo stanje, razdejanost, trhlostto be in a state of disrepair — podirati se, razpadati -
23 disrepair
['dɪsrɪ'pɛə(r)]nto fall into disrepair — popadać (popaść perf) w ruinę
* * *[disrə'peə](the state of needing repair: The old house has fallen into disrepair.) zapuszczenie -
24 disrepair
[͵dısrıʹpeə] nветхость, обветшалость, плохое состояние; неисправностьto fall into disrepair - прийти в упадок, обветшать
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25 fall off
1. phr v отпадать, отваливаться2. phr v отступать, удаляться3. phr v уменьшаться; ослабевать4. phr v ухудшаться; приходить в упадокto fall into disrepair — прийти в упадок, обветшать
5. phr v мор. не слушаться руля; уваливатьсяСинонимический ряд:1. die (verb) abate; die; ease off; ebb; lapse; let up; moderate; relent; slacken; subside; wane2. fall (verb) decline; descend; dip; drop; fall; sink3. slip (verb) drop off; fall away; sag; slide; slip; slump4. worsen (verb) decay; decrease; degenerate; lessen; worsen -
26 disrepair
[ˌdisri΄peə] n անսարք/վատ վիճակ. The building was in disrepair Շենքն անսարք վի ճա կում էր. fall into disrepair հնանալ, խարխլվել -
27 disrepair dis·re·pair n
['dɪsrɪ'pɛə(r)]to fall into disrepair — (building) andare in rovina, (road) deteriorarsi
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28 disrepair
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29 disrepair
English-russian dctionary of contemporary Economics > disrepair
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30 disrepair
n ветхость, обветшалость, плохое состояние; неисправностьto fall into disrepair — прийти в упадок, обветшать
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31 disrepair
to fall into disrepair — обветшать (о здании, оборудовании)
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32 disrepair
ˈdɪsrɪˈpɛə сущ. ветхость;
плохое состояние, неисправность (здания и т. п.) a state of disrepair ≈ плохое состояние The building is in disrepair. ≈ Здание в предаварийном состоянии. ветхость, обветшалость, плохое состояние;
неисправность - to fall into * прийти в упадок, обветшать - the building was in bad * здание сильно обветшало disrepair ветхость;
плохое состояние, неисправность (здания и т. п.)Большой англо-русский и русско-английский словарь > disrepair
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33 estropearse
• fall into a state of disrepair• fall into disrepair• get damaged• get round• get running• get spilled with• get sprinkled all over• go overtime• go pitter-patter -
34 приходит в упадок
прийти в упадок, обветшать — to fall into disrepair
Русско-английский военно-политический словарь > приходит в упадок
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35 bakıma muhtaç hale gelme
n. fall into disrepair -
36 deteriorarse
• disimprove• fall into disrepair -
37 verfallen
v/i (unreg.)1. go to ruin; Haus, Wirtschaft etc.: fall into disrepair; stärker: go to ruin; Reich, Kultur etc.: decline; (zusammenbrechen) fall; Kranker: waste away2. (ablaufen) expire; (ungültig werden) auch become invalid; die Kreditkarte verfällt in zwei Monaten the credit card expires in two months3. einem Laster: take to doing s.th., get hooked on umg.; auch einer Person: become a slave to; dem Zauber eines Anblicks etc.: be bewitched by4. verfallen in (+ Akk) fall into; wieder: lapse ( oder slip) back into; in Wut verfallen become furious ( oder enraged); immer verfällst du in den gleichen Fehler, zu gutgläubig zu sein etc. you always make the same mistake of being too trusting etc.5. auf eine Idee etc. verfallen hit (up)on an idea etc.; wie ist er nur darauf verfallen? what on earth made him do that?—I P.P. verfallen1II Adj.1. decayed; Gebäude: dilapidated, attr. auch tumbledown..., ramshackle...; körperlich: emaciated, präd. auch a wreck umg.3. einem Rauschgift etc. verfallen addicted to, hooked on umg.; dem Zauber eines Anblicks etc. verfallen bewitched by; der Liebe verfallen smitten umg.; er ist ihr völlig verfallen he is totally captivated by her* * *(ablaufen) to expire ( Verb);* * *ver|fạl|len I ptp verfa\#llenvi irreg aux sein1) (= zerfallen) to decay; (Bauwerk) to fall into disrepair, to become dilapidated; (Zellen) to die; (körperlich und geistig) to deteriorate; (Sitten, Kultur, Reich) to decline2) (= ungültig werden) (Briefmarken, Geldscheine, Gutschein) to become invalid; (Scheck, Fahrkarte) to expire; (Strafe, Recht, Termin, Anspruch, Patent) to lapse3) (= in jds Besitz übergehen) to be forfeitedjdm verfallen — to be forfeited to sb, to become the property of sb
4)(= abhängig werden)
jdm/einer Sache verfallen/verfallen sein — to become/be a slave to sb/sth; dem Alkohol etc to become/be addicted to sth; dem Wahnsinn to fall/have fallen victim to; jds Zauber etc to become/be enslaved by stheinem Irrtum verfallen — to make a mistake, to be mistaken
5)verfallen — to think of sth; (aus Verzweiflung) to resort to sth
6)II [fɛɐ'falən]adjGebäude dilapidated, ruined; Mensch (körperlich) emaciated; (geistig) senile; (= abgelaufen) Karten, Briefmarken invalid; Strafe lapsed; Scheck expired* * *(no longer able to be (legally) used; no longer valid: Your ticket is out of date / very out-of-date; an out-of-date directory.) out of date* * *ver·fal·len *1vi irreg Hilfsverb: sein1. (zerfallen) to decay, to fall into disrepair2. (immer schwächer werden) to deteriorate3. (ungültig werden) Eintritts-, Fahrkarte, Ticket, Gutschein to expire; Anspruch, Recht to lapse5. (erliegen)▪ [jdm] \verfallen to be captivated [by sb]wer ist denn auf so einen verrückten Plan \verfallen? whoever thought up such an insane plan?▪ darauf \verfallen, etw zu tun to give sb the idea of doing sth7. (kommen auf)▪ [auf jdn] \verfallen to think of sbwir suchten einen Spezialisten, da sind wir auf ihn \verfallen we were looking for a specialist and we thought of him8. JUR▪ jdm \verfallen to be forfeited to sbver·fal·len21. (völlig baufällig) dilapidated2. (abgelaufen) expired* * *unregelmäßiges intransitives Verb; mit sein1) (baufällig werden) fall into disrepair; become dilapidated2) (körperlich) < strength> decline4) (ungültig werden) expire5)6) (übergehen)das Pferd verfiel in [einen] Trab — the horse broke into a trot
7)auf jemanden/etwas verfallen — think of somebody/something
* * *verfallen1 v/i (irr)1. go to ruin; Haus, Wirtschaft etc: fall into disrepair; stärker: go to ruin; Reich, Kultur etc: decline; (zusammenbrechen) fall; Kranker: waste awaydie Kreditkarte verfällt in zwei Monaten the credit card expires in two months3. einem Laster: take to doing sth, get hooked on umg; auch einer Person: become a slave to; dem Zauber eines Anblicks etc: be bewitched by4.in Wut verfallen become furious ( oder enraged);immer verfällst du in den gleichen Fehler, zu gutgläubig zu sein etc you always make the same mistake of being too trusting etc5.auf eine Idee etcverfallen hit (up)on an idea etc;wie ist er nur darauf verfallen? what on earth made him do that?7. (zufallen):jemandem verfallen go ( oder pass) to sbverfallen2A. pperf → verfallen1B. adj1. decayed; Gebäude: dilapidated, attr auch tumbledown …, ramshackle …; körperlich: emaciated, präd auch a wreck umg3. einem Rauschgift etcverfallen addicted to, hooked on umg;dem Zauber eines Anblicks etcverfallen bewitched by;der Liebe verfallen smitten umg;er ist ihr völlig verfallen he is totally captivated by her* * *unregelmäßiges intransitives Verb; mit sein1) (baufällig werden) fall into disrepair; become dilapidated2) (körperlich) < strength> decline4) (ungültig werden) expire5)6) (übergehen)das Pferd verfiel in [einen] Trab — the horse broke into a trot
7)auf jemanden/etwas verfallen — think of somebody/something
* * *adj.addicted adj.decayed adj.dilapidated adj. v.to decay v.to decompose v.to expire v. -
38 verwahrlosen
v/i1. Haus etc.: be ( oder get) neglected; stärker: go to rack and ruin; Garten: be ( oder get) neglected, run wild2. Person: go to seed; moralisch: go off the rails; er verwahrlost immer mehr he’s letting himself go more and more* * *ver|wahr|lo|sen [fɛɐ'vaːɐloːzn] ptp verwahrlostvi aux seinto go to seed, to go to pot (inf); (Gebäude auch) to fall into disrepair, to become dilapidated; (Park) to become neglected; (Mensch) to let oneself go, to neglect oneself; (= verwildern) to run wild; (= auf die schiefe Bahn geraten) to get into bad habits* * *ver·wahr·lo·sen *[fɛɐ̯ˈva:ɐ̯lo:zn̩]vi Hilfsverb: sein to get into a bad state; Grundstück, Gebäude to fall into disrepair, to become dilapidated; Mensch to let oneself go, to go to pot, to run to seed fam▪ etw \verwahrlosen lassen to let sth fall into disrepair [or become dilapidated], to neglect sth▪ verwahrlost dilapidatedein verwahrloster Garten a neglected [or an overgrown] gardenverwahrloste Kleidung ragged [or BRIT tatty] [or tattered] clothes* * *intransitives Verb; mit sein1) get in a bad state; <house, building> fall into disrepair, become dilapidated; <garden, hedge> grow wild, become overgrown; < person> let oneself go, (coll.) go to potetwas verwahrlosen lassen — neglect something; allow something to get in a bad state
2) (sittlich verwahrlosen) fall into bad ways[sittlich] verwahrlost — depraved
* * *verwahrlosen v/i1. Haus etc: be ( oder get) neglected; stärker: go to rack and ruin; Garten: be ( oder get) neglected, run wilder verwahrlost immer mehr he’s letting himself go more and more* * *intransitives Verb; mit sein1) get in a bad state; <house, building> fall into disrepair, become dilapidated; <garden, hedge> grow wild, become overgrown; < person> let oneself go, (coll.) go to potetwas verwahrlosen lassen — neglect something; allow something to get in a bad state
2) (sittlich verwahrlosen) fall into bad ways[sittlich] verwahrlost — depraved
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39 Verfall
m; -(e)s, kein Pl.1. (Zerfallsprozess) decay, ruin; auch MED. decline; eines Gebäudes: dilapidation; einer Kultur etc.: decline; (Zusammenbruch) fall; (Entartung) degeneracy; sittlicher: decay, corruption; dem Verfall preisgeben let s.th. go to (rack and) ruin; der Verfall hat schon eingesetzt the rot has set in; den Verfall des Kranken mit ansehen müssen have to join in watching the patient deteriorate2. (Fristablauf) expiry, Am. expiration; eines Wechsels: maturity; bei Verfall upon expiry (Am. expiration); Wechsel: at maturity* * *der Verfall(Niedergang) descent; decline;(Sitten) fall;(Ungültigwerden) expiration; expiry; maturity;(Zerfallsprozess) decay; dilapidation; ruin* * *Ver|fạllmno plin Verfall geraten (Gebäude) — to become dilapidated; (stärker) to fall into ruins
2) (= Niedergang) (von Kultur, der Sitten, sittlich) decline; (des Römischen Reichs) fall; (von Reichtum, Vermögen) fall (von in)3) (= das Ungültigwerden) (von Schuldansprüchen, Rechnung etc) lapsing; (von Scheck, Karte) expiry* * *der1) (the act or process of decaying: tooth decay; in a state of decay.) decay2) (the state of needing repair: The old house has fallen into disrepair.) disrepair* * *Ver·fall<-s>[fɛɐ̯ˈfal]der \Verfall historischer Gebäude the dilapidation of historical buildingsin \Verfall geraten to fall into decaybei \Verfall FIN at [or on] maturityder \Verfall der Moral the decline in morals nplder \Verfall des Römischen Reiches the fall of the Roman Empire* * *der; o. Pl1) decay; dilapidation2) (Auflösung) decline3) (das Ungültigwerden) expiry* * *1. (Zerfallsprozess) decay, ruin; auch MED decline; eines Gebäudes: dilapidation; einer Kultur etc: decline; (Zusammenbruch) fall; (Entartung) degeneracy; sittlicher: decay, corruption;dem Verfall preisgeben let sth go to (rack and) ruin;der Verfall hat schon eingesetzt the rot has set in;den Verfall des Kranken mit ansehen müssen have to join in watching the patient deteriorate* * *der; o. Pl1) decay; dilapidation2) (Auflösung) decline3) (das Ungültigwerden) expiry* * *-¨e m.decadence n.dilapidation n.disrepair n.expiration n.fall (of a regime, society) n.fall into disrepair n. -
40 deteriorarse
1 (estropearse) to get damaged; (gastarse) to wear out2 figurado to deteriorate, go downhill* * *2) get damaged* * *VPR1) (=estropearse) to get damaged2) (=empeorarse)su salud se está deteriorando — her health is getting worse o deteriorating
las relaciones entre ambos países se han deteriorado — relations between the two countries have deteriorated
3) (Mec) to wear, get worn* * *(v.) = decay, deteriorate, creak, go + downhill, fall into + disrepair, grow + worse, fall + apart, dilapidate, go to + seed, degenerate (into)Ex. A data base must respond to a dynamic reality in which terms, 'strain, crack and sometimes break under the burden, under the tension, slip, slide, perish, decay with imprecision, will not stay in place, will not stay still'.Ex. But the relationship between the source of most of the shared cataloging data, the Library of Congress, and nonresearch libraries shows signs of deteriorating rather than improving.Ex. Such recommendations can be viewed as attempts to shortcircuit a system which has creaked more noticeably with the passage of time.Ex. The late James Bennet Childs, one-time head of Descriptive Cataloging at LC and long-time documents specialist, has often pointed out how the quality of documents cataloging went downhill after the special cataloging unit was abolished.Ex. His bodily frame, verging on obesity, appeared to have fallen into disrepair, as though he had ceased to be interested in it.Ex. As we all know, the situation has only grown worse since then.Ex. Most of the packaging for cassettes provided by commercial vendors that are known nationwide is lousy, falls apart, looks bad, and so on.Ex. The mission was in the process of building a new wing onto the convent, so the old house was allowed to dilapidate.Ex. She berated him for having ' gone to seed' and lambasted him for not living up to his ideals.Ex. The assistant's position frequently degenerates into a 'catch-all' position, with the assistant ending up with a number of miscellaneous odd-jobs (sometimes 'keep-busy' type jobs, well below his or her capabilities).* * *(v.) = decay, deteriorate, creak, go + downhill, fall into + disrepair, grow + worse, fall + apart, dilapidate, go to + seed, degenerate (into)Ex: A data base must respond to a dynamic reality in which terms, 'strain, crack and sometimes break under the burden, under the tension, slip, slide, perish, decay with imprecision, will not stay in place, will not stay still'.
Ex: But the relationship between the source of most of the shared cataloging data, the Library of Congress, and nonresearch libraries shows signs of deteriorating rather than improving.Ex: Such recommendations can be viewed as attempts to shortcircuit a system which has creaked more noticeably with the passage of time.Ex: The late James Bennet Childs, one-time head of Descriptive Cataloging at LC and long-time documents specialist, has often pointed out how the quality of documents cataloging went downhill after the special cataloging unit was abolished.Ex: His bodily frame, verging on obesity, appeared to have fallen into disrepair, as though he had ceased to be interested in it.Ex: As we all know, the situation has only grown worse since then.Ex: Most of the packaging for cassettes provided by commercial vendors that are known nationwide is lousy, falls apart, looks bad, and so on.Ex: The mission was in the process of building a new wing onto the convent, so the old house was allowed to dilapidate.Ex: She berated him for having ' gone to seed' and lambasted him for not living up to his ideals.Ex: The assistant's position frequently degenerates into a 'catch-all' position, with the assistant ending up with a number of miscellaneous odd-jobs (sometimes 'keep-busy' type jobs, well below his or her capabilities).* * *
■deteriorarse verbo reflexivo
1 (echarse a perder, ajarse) to get damaged
2 (desgastarse, dejar de funcionar bien) wear out
3 (ir a peor) to deteriorate, get worse
' deteriorarse' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
deteriorar
- estropear
English:
decay
- decline
- deteriorate
- perish
- degenerate
* * *vpr1. [estropearse] to deteriorate;para que no se deteriore la pintura to prevent the paint from deteriorating2. [empeorar] to deteriorate, to get worse;la situación se fue deteriorando the situation gradually deteriorated o got gradually worse* * *v/r deteriorate* * *vr1) : to get damaged, to wear out2) : to deteriorate, to worsen* * *deteriorarse vb to deteriorate
См. также в других словарях:
disrepair — noun (U) buildings, roads etc that are in disrepair are in bad condition because they have not been repaired or looked after: be in disrepair/fall into disrepair: a fine Georgian mansion that had been allowed to fall into disrepair … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
disrepair — dis|re|pair [ ,dısrı per ] noun uncount FORMAL a broken or damaged state: The place is in such a state of disrepair that it is dangerous. fall into disrepair: We ve made a study of the number of school buildings falling into disrepair … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
disrepair — UK [ˌdɪsrɪˈpeə(r)] / US [ˌdɪsrɪˈper] noun [uncountable] formal a broken or damaged state The place is in such a state of disrepair that it is dangerous. fall into disrepair: We ve made a study of the number of school buildings falling into… … English dictionary
disrepair — dis|re|pair [ˌdısrıˈpeə US ˈper] n [U] buildings, roads etc that are in disrepair are in bad condition because they have not been cared for ▪ buildings allowed to fall into disrepair ▪ The castle is in a state of disrepair … Dictionary of contemporary English
fall — [[t]fɔ͟ːl[/t]] ♦ falls, falling, fell, fallen 1) VERB If someone or something falls, they move quickly downwards onto or towards the ground, by accident or because of a natural force. [V prep] Her father fell into the sea after a massive heart… … English dictionary
fall — fall1 W1S1 [fo:l US fo:l] v past tense fell [fel] past participle fallen [ˈfo:lən US ˈfo:l ] ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(move downwards)¦ 2¦(stop standing/walking etc)¦ 3¦(decrease)¦ 4¦(become)¦ 5¦(belong to a group)¦ 6 fall short of something 7 fall victim/prey… … Dictionary of contemporary English
fall — fall1 [ fɔl ] (past tense fell [ fel ] ; past participle fall|en [ fɔlən ] ) verb intransitive *** ▸ 1 move downward quickly ▸ 2 become lower in amount ▸ 3 change to another state ▸ 4 lose power/control ▸ 5 hang down ▸ 6 belong to group/activity… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
fall — 1 verb, past tense fell past participle fallen 1 MOVE DOWNWARDS (I) to move downwards from a higher position to a lower position: The rain had started falling again. (+out of/from/on): Wyatt fell from a second floor window. (+down): I m always… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
fall */*/*/ — I UK [fɔːl] / US [fɔl] verb [intransitive] Word forms fall : present tense I/you/we/they fall he/she/it falls present participle falling past tense fell UK [fel] / US past participle fallen UK [ˈfɔːlən] / US [ˈfɔlən] 1) to move quickly downwards… … English dictionary
disrepair — noun VERB + DISREPAIR ▪ fall into ▪ The building had fallen into disrepair. PREPOSITION ▪ in disrepair ▪ Much of the old building was still in disrepair … Collocations dictionary
fall — verb (past fell; past participle fallen) 1》 move from a higher to a lower level, typically rapidly and without control. ↘(fall off) become detached and drop to the ground. ↘hang down. ↘slope downwards. ↘(of a person s face) show… … English new terms dictionary