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1 oblige
lekötelez, kötelez, szívességből csinál* * *1) (to force to do something: She was obliged to go; The police obliged him to leave.) kötelez2) (to do (someone) a favour or service: Could you oblige me by carrying this, please?) lekötelez•- obligatory
- obligatorily
- obliging
- obligingly
См. также в других словарях:
oblige — o|blige S3 [əˈblaıdʒ] v formal [Date: 1200 1300; : Old French; Origin: obliger, from Latin obligare, from ligare to tie ] 1.) [T usually passive] if you are obliged to do something, you have to do it because the situation, the law, a duty etc… … Dictionary of contemporary English
oblige — verb 1) we are obliged to accept the decision Syn: compel, force, require, bind, constrain 2) I ll be happy to oblige you Syn: do someone a favour, accommodate, help, assist, indulge … Synonyms and antonyms dictionary
oblige — o‧blige [əˈblaɪdʒ] verb 1. [transitive] to make it necessary for someone to do something: oblige be obliged to do something • As a result of falling profits, we were obliged to close the factory. 2. [intransitive, transitive] to do something that … Financial and business terms
oblige — 1 constrain, coerce, compel, *force Analogous words: *tie, bind 2 Oblige, accommodate, favor mean to do a service or courtesy. To oblige a person is to make him indebted by doing something that is pleasing to him {Punch was always anxious to… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
You Really Got Me — Single par The Kinks extrait de l’album Kinks Face A You Really Got Me Face B It s Alright Sortie … Wikipédia en Français
Oblige — O*blige ([ o]*bl[imac]j ; 277), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Obliged} ([ o]*bl[imac]jd ); p. pr. & vb. n. {Obliging} ([ o]*bl[imac] j[i^]ng).] [OF. obligier, F. obliger, L. obligare; ob (see {Ob }) + ligare to bind. See {Ligament}, and cf. {Obligate}.] 1 … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
oblige — [[t]əbla͟ɪʤ[/t]] obliges, obliging, obliged 1) VERB If you are obliged to do something, a situation, rule, or law makes it necessary for you to do that thing. [be V ed to inf] The storm got worse and worse. Finally, I was obliged to abandon the… … English dictionary
oblige — verb formal 1 (transitive usually passive) to make it necessary for someone to do something: be obliged to do sth: As a result of falling profits we were obliged to close the factory. | feel obliged to do sth (=feel that you have a duty to do… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
oblige */*/ — UK [əˈblaɪdʒ] / US verb Word forms oblige : present tense I/you/we/they oblige he/she/it obliges present participle obliging past tense obliged past participle obliged 1) [transitive, usually passive] formal to force someone to do something… … English dictionary
oblige — verb ADVERB ▪ duly (BrE) ▪ The fans were looking for another goal and Owen duly obliged (= he scored). ▪ kindly ▪ gladly, happily, willingly … Collocations dictionary
oblige — v. 1) (d; tr.) to oblige by (you would oblige me by not smoking) 2) (H) the contract obliges us to pay a penalty if we finish late * * * [ə blaɪdʒ] (H) the contract obliges us to pay a penalty if we finish late (d;tr.) to oblige by (you would… … Combinatory dictionary