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1 relation
1) (a person who belongs to the same family as oneself either by birth or because of marriage: uncles, aunts, cousins and other relations.) sorodnik2) (a relationship (between facts, events etc).) zveza3) ((in plural) contact and communications between people, countries etc: to establish friendly relations.) odnos(i)* * *[riléišən]nounporočilo; pripoved(ovanje); juridically prijava, prijavno gradivo, referat; zveza, (logični, vzročni) odnos, odnošaj ( between med), razmerje, relacija; sorodnost, sorodstvo; sorodnik, -icain relation to — gledé, kar se tiče, v zvezi za faithful relation of all that happened — verno poročilo o vsem, kar se je zgodilopublic relation officer — oseba, ki vzdržuje stik med svojo ustanovo in javnostjo in si prizadeva ustvariti ugodno mnenje o svoji ustanoviwhat relation is he to you? — v kakšnem sorodstvu je on z vami?to be out of (all) relation, to bear no relation to — nobene zveze ne imeti zto entertain (to maintain) commercial (friendly) relations with — vzdrževati trgovinske (prijateljske) zveze zjuridically to have relation to June 1st — nanašati se na 1. junij, biti veljaven od (preteklega) 1. junija
См. также в других словарях:
maintain — (v.) mid 13c., to practice habitually, from Anglo Fr. meintenir (O.Fr. maintenir, 12c.) keep (a wife), sustain; persevere in, practice continually, from L. manu tenere hold in the hand, from manu, ablative of manus hand (see MANUAL (Cf. manual))… … Etymology dictionary
Wank oneself — maintain an illusion; deceive oneself … Dictionary of Australian slang
devote oneself — index adhere (maintain loyalty) Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
wank oneself — Australian Slang maintain an illusion; deceive oneself … English dialects glossary
Virtue — (Latin virtus ; Greek Polytonic|ἀρετή) is moral excellence. Personal virtues are characteristics valued as promoting individual and collective well being, and thus good by definition. The opposite of virtue is vice.Etymologically the word virtue… … Wikipedia
possess — possessor, n. possessorship, n. /peuh zes /, v.t. 1. to have as belonging to one; have as property; own: to possess a house and a car. 2. to have as a faculty, quality, or the like: to possess courage. 3. (of a spirit, esp. an evil one) to occupy … Universalium
live — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) v. i. exist, be alive; abide; subsist, survive. See life, abode. II (Roget s IV) modif. 1. [Active] Syn. energetic, vital, vivid; see active 2 . 2. [Not dead] Syn. aware, conscious, existing; see alive 1 … English dictionary for students
possess — /pəˈzɛs / (say puh zes) verb (t) 1. to have as property; to have belonging to one. 2. to have as a faculty, quality, or the like: to possess courage. 3. to have knowledge of: I possess a little French. 4. to keep or maintain (oneself, one s mind …
Two Treatises of Government — Infobox Book name = Two Treatises of Government title orig = translator = image caption = Title page from the first edition author = John Locke illustrator = cover artist = country = England language = English series = subject = Political… … Wikipedia
possess — v.tr. 1 hold as property; own. 2 have a faculty, quality, etc. (they possess a special value for us). 3 (also refl.; foll. by in) maintain (oneself, one s soul, etc.) in a specified state (possess oneself in patience). 4 a (of a demon etc.)… … Useful english dictionary
self-sustaining — adjective Date: 1799 1. maintaining or able to maintain oneself or itself by independent effort < a self sustaining community > 2. maintaining or able to maintain itself once commenced < a self sustaining nuclear reaction > … New Collegiate Dictionary