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1 imitate
['imiteit] 1. verb(to (try to) be, behave or look the same as (a person etc): Children imitate their friends rather than their parents; He could imitate the song of many different birds.) imitere; efterligne2. adjective(made to look like something else: imitation wood.) imiteret- imitativeness
- imitator* * *['imiteit] 1. verb(to (try to) be, behave or look the same as (a person etc): Children imitate their friends rather than their parents; He could imitate the song of many different birds.) imitere; efterligne2. adjective(made to look like something else: imitation wood.) imiteret- imitativeness
- imitator -
2 to imitate
at imitere -
3 fake
[feik] 1. noun1) (a worthless imitation (especially intended to deceive); a forgery: That picture is a fake.) forfalskning; efterligning2) (a person who pretends to be something he is not: He pretended to be a doctor, but he was a fake.) bedrager; svindler2. adjective1) (made in imitation of something more valuable, especially with the intention of deceiving: fake diamonds.) forfalsket; imiteret; uægte2) (pretending to be something one is not: a fake clergyman.) falsk; bedragerisk3. verb(to pretend or imitate in order to deceive: to fake a signature.) forfalske; efterligne* * *[feik] 1. noun1) (a worthless imitation (especially intended to deceive); a forgery: That picture is a fake.) forfalskning; efterligning2) (a person who pretends to be something he is not: He pretended to be a doctor, but he was a fake.) bedrager; svindler2. adjective1) (made in imitation of something more valuable, especially with the intention of deceiving: fake diamonds.) forfalsket; imiteret; uægte2) (pretending to be something one is not: a fake clergyman.) falsk; bedragerisk3. verb(to pretend or imitate in order to deceive: to fake a signature.) forfalske; efterligne -
4 mimic
['mimik] 1. past tense, past participle - mimicked; verb(to imitate (someone or something), especially with the intention of making him or it appear ridiculous or funny: The comedian mimicked the Prime Minister's way of speaking.) efterligne; parodiere2. noun(a person who mimics: Children are often good mimics.) parodist; mimiker- mimicry* * *['mimik] 1. past tense, past participle - mimicked; verb(to imitate (someone or something), especially with the intention of making him or it appear ridiculous or funny: The comedian mimicked the Prime Minister's way of speaking.) efterligne; parodiere2. noun(a person who mimics: Children are often good mimics.) parodist; mimiker- mimicry -
5 parrot
['pærət](a kind of bird found in warm countries, especially in South America, with a hooked bill and usually brightly-coloured feathers, that can be taught to imitate human speech.) papegøje* * *['pærət](a kind of bird found in warm countries, especially in South America, with a hooked bill and usually brightly-coloured feathers, that can be taught to imitate human speech.) papegøje -
6 take off
1) (to remove (clothes etc): He took off his coat.) tage af2) ((of an aircraft) to leave the ground: The plane took off for Rome (noun take-off).) lette3) (not to work during (a period of time): I'm taking tomorrow morning off.) tage fri4) (to imitate someone (often unkindly): He used to take off his teacher to make his friends laugh (noun take-off).) efterligne; parodiere* * *1) (to remove (clothes etc): He took off his coat.) tage af2) ((of an aircraft) to leave the ground: The plane took off for Rome (noun take-off).) lette3) (not to work during (a period of time): I'm taking tomorrow morning off.) tage fri4) (to imitate someone (often unkindly): He used to take off his teacher to make his friends laugh (noun take-off).) efterligne; parodiere -
7 talk
[to:k] 1. verb1) (to speak; to have a conversation or discussion: We talked about it for hours; My parrot can talk (= imitate human speech).) tale2) (to gossip: You can't stay here - people will talk!) snakke3) (to talk about: They spent the whole time talking philosophy.) tale om2. noun1) ((sometimes in plural) a conversation or discussion: We had a long talk about it; The Prime Ministers met for talks on their countries' economic problems.) snak; drøftelse; diskussion2) (a lecture: The doctor gave us a talk on family health.) forelæsning3) (gossip: Her behaviour causes a lot of talk among the neighbours.) sladder4) (useless discussion; statements of things a person says he will do but which will never actually be done: There's too much talk and not enough action.) tom snak•- talking book
- talking head
- talking-point
- talk show
- talking-to
- talk back
- talk big
- talk down to
- talk someone into / out of doing
- talk into / out of doing
- talk someone into / out of
- talk into / out of
- talk over
- talk round
- talk sense/nonsense
- talk shop* * *[to:k] 1. verb1) (to speak; to have a conversation or discussion: We talked about it for hours; My parrot can talk (= imitate human speech).) tale2) (to gossip: You can't stay here - people will talk!) snakke3) (to talk about: They spent the whole time talking philosophy.) tale om2. noun1) ((sometimes in plural) a conversation or discussion: We had a long talk about it; The Prime Ministers met for talks on their countries' economic problems.) snak; drøftelse; diskussion2) (a lecture: The doctor gave us a talk on family health.) forelæsning3) (gossip: Her behaviour causes a lot of talk among the neighbours.) sladder4) (useless discussion; statements of things a person says he will do but which will never actually be done: There's too much talk and not enough action.) tom snak•- talking book
- talking head
- talking-point
- talk show
- talking-to
- talk back
- talk big
- talk down to
- talk someone into / out of doing
- talk into / out of doing
- talk someone into / out of
- talk into / out of
- talk over
- talk round
- talk sense/nonsense
- talk shop
См. также в других словарях:
Imitate — Im i*tate, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Imitated}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Imitating}.] [L. imitatus, p. p. of imitari to imitate; of unknown origin. Cf. {Image}.] 1. To follow as a pattern, model, or example; to copy or strive to copy, in acts, manners etc.… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
imitate — [im′i tāt΄] vt. imitated, imitating [< L imitatus, pp. of imitari, to imitate, akin to aemulus: see EMULATE] 1. to seek to follow the example of; take as one s model or pattern 2. to act the same as; impersonate; mimic 3. to reproduce in form … English World dictionary
imitate — ► VERB 1) follow as a model. 2) copy (a person s speech or mannerisms), especially for comic effect. 3) reproduce; simulate: synthetic fabrics that imitate silk. DERIVATIVES imitable adjective imitator noun. ORIGIN Latin imitari, related to … English terms dictionary
imitate — I verb adopt, caricature, copy, counterfeit, duplicate, echo, emulate, fabricate, fake, follow suit, forge, impersonate, match, mimic, mirror, parallel, parody, parrot, plagiarize, portray, pose, pretend, reflect, repeat, represent, reproduce,… … Law dictionary
imitate deceptively — index feign Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
imitate falsely — index forge (counterfeit) Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
imitate fraudulently — index forge (counterfeit) Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
imitate insultingly — index disparage, jape Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
imitate — (v.) 1530s, a back formation from IMITATION (Cf. imitation) or imitator, or else from L. imitatus. Related: Imitated; imitating. An Old English word for this was æfterhyrigan … Etymology dictionary
imitate — *copy, mimic, ape, mock Analogous words: impersonate (see ACT vb): simulate, feign, counterfeit (see ASSUME): caricature, burlesque, parody, travesty (see under CARICATURE n) … New Dictionary of Synonyms
imitate — has a derivative form imitable meaning ‘able to be imitated’ … Modern English usage