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1 recover
[rɪ'kʌvə(r)] 1.1) (get back) recuperare, ritrovare [money, vehicle]; riprendere [ territory]; (from water) ripescare, ritrovare [body, wreck]to recover one's sight, strength — recuperare la vista, le forze
2) (recoup) recuperare [ costs]; ottenere [ loan]; farsi rimborsare [ taxes]; rifarsi di [ losses]; dir. ottenere il risarcimento di [ damages]2.1) [ person] (from illness) rimettersi, ristabilirsi ( from dopo); (from defeat, mistake) riprendersi ( from da)2) econ. [economy, shares, currency] essere in ripresa3) dir. vincere una causa* * *1) (to become well again; to return to good health etc: He is recovering from a serious illness; The country is recovering from an economic crisis.) rimettersi, riprendersi2) (to get back: The police have recovered the stolen jewels; He will recover the cost of the repairs through the insurance.) recuperare3) (to get control of (one's actions, emotions etc) again: The actor almost fell over but quickly recovered (his balance).) ritrovare, recuperare•- recovery* * *recover /rɪˈkʌvə(r)/n.( scherma) il rimettersi in guardia.♦ (to) recover /rɪˈkʌvə(r)/A v. t.1 recuperare; riacquistare: to recover stolen goods, recuperare la refurtiva; to recover lost ground, riguadagnare terreno; to recover one's strength, recuperare le forze; to recover one's losses, rifarsi delle perdite; to recover sb. 's affection, riacquistare l'affetto di q.; to recover one's balance, ritrovare l'equilibrio; to recover one's breath, riprendere fiato; to recover one's voice, ritrovare la voce; to recover consciousness, riprendere conoscenza; to recover one's composure, ricomporsi; to recover land from the sea, bonificare terreni strappandoli al mare; He recovered the use of his arm after the stroke, ha riacquistato l'uso del braccio dopo l'ictus2 (leg.) ottenere ( dal tribunale): to recover damages, ottenere il risarcimento dei danni; to recover costs, ottenere il rimborso delle spese legaliB v. i.1 ristabilirsi; guarire: He recovered quickly after the operation, si è ristabilito velocemente dopo l'operazione; to recover from a bad cold, guarire da un brutto raffreddore2 riprendersi ( da una brutta esperienza): She never fully recovered from the shock, non si è mai ripresa completamente dallo shock3 (fin., econ.: dell'economia, ecc.) essere in ripresa: Industrial production is recovering, la produzione industriale è in ripresa● to recover oneself, tornare in séFALSI AMICI: to recover non significa ricoverare. NOTA D'USO: - recover o re-cover?-* * *[rɪ'kʌvə(r)] 1.1) (get back) recuperare, ritrovare [money, vehicle]; riprendere [ territory]; (from water) ripescare, ritrovare [body, wreck]to recover one's sight, strength — recuperare la vista, le forze
2) (recoup) recuperare [ costs]; ottenere [ loan]; farsi rimborsare [ taxes]; rifarsi di [ losses]; dir. ottenere il risarcimento di [ damages]2.1) [ person] (from illness) rimettersi, ristabilirsi ( from dopo); (from defeat, mistake) riprendersi ( from da)2) econ. [economy, shares, currency] essere in ripresa3) dir. vincere una causa -
2 recover *** re·cov·er
[rɪ'kʌvə(r)]1. vt(belongings, goods, wreck, lost time) ricuperare, (reclaim: money) ottenere il rimborso di, (Law: damages) ottenere il risarcimento di, (balance, appetite, health etc) ritrovare, ricuperareto recover one's senses — riprendere i sensi, fig ritornare in sé
2. vi(all senses) riprendersi, (from illness) ristabilirsiFALSE FRIEND: recover is not translated by the Italian word ricoverare -
3 shock
I 1. [ʃɒk]1) (psychological) shock m.to get o have a shock avere uno shock; to give sb. a shock provocare uno shock a o scioccare qcn.; her death came as a shock to us la sua morte ci ha scioccato; to recover from o get over the shock riprendersi da o superare uno shock; he's in for a nasty shock colloq. gli prenderà un colpo; to express one's shock (indignation) esprimere la propria indignazione; (amazement) esprimere il proprio stupore; shock! horror! — giorn. scherz. scandalo! orrore!
2) med. shock m.in (a state of) shock — in stato di o sotto shock
3) el. scossa f.to give sb. a shock — dare la scossa a qcn
4) (impact) (of collision) colpo m.; (of earthquake) scossa f.; (of explosion) urto m.6) colloq. shock absorber2.modificatore colloq. [ effect] shock; [decision, result] scioccanteII [ʃɒk]* * *I 1. [ʃok] noun1) (a severe emotional disturbance: The news gave us all a shock.)2) ((often electric shock) the effect on the body of an electric current: He got a slight shock when he touched the live wire.)3) (a sudden blow coming with great force: the shock of an earthquake.)4) (a medical condition caused by a severe mental or physical shock: He was suffering from shock after the crash.)2. verb(to give a shock to; to upset or horrify: Everyone was shocked by his death; The amount of violence shown on television shocks me.)- shocker- shocking
- shockingly
- shock-absorber II [ʃok] noun(a bushy mass (of hair) on a person's head.)* * *I 1. [ʃɒk]1) (psychological) shock m.to get o have a shock avere uno shock; to give sb. a shock provocare uno shock a o scioccare qcn.; her death came as a shock to us la sua morte ci ha scioccato; to recover from o get over the shock riprendersi da o superare uno shock; he's in for a nasty shock colloq. gli prenderà un colpo; to express one's shock (indignation) esprimere la propria indignazione; (amazement) esprimere il proprio stupore; shock! horror! — giorn. scherz. scandalo! orrore!
2) med. shock m.in (a state of) shock — in stato di o sotto shock
3) el. scossa f.to give sb. a shock — dare la scossa a qcn
4) (impact) (of collision) colpo m.; (of earthquake) scossa f.; (of explosion) urto m.6) colloq. shock absorber2.modificatore colloq. [ effect] shock; [decision, result] scioccanteII [ʃɒk] -
4 get over
2) superare, rimettersi da [illness, shock]I can't get over it — (in amazement) non me ne capacito
3) (surmount) superare [ problem]to get sth. over with — farla finita con qcs
she never got over him — non lo ha mai dimenticato; get [sb., sth.] over (cause to cross) fare passare [qcn., qcs.] su [ bridge]; fare superare a qcn., qcs. [wall etc.]
* * *1) (to recover from (an illness, surprise, disappointment etc): I've got over my cold now; I can't get over her leaving so suddenly.) rimettersi; superare2) (to manage to make (oneself or something) understood: We must get our message over to the general public.) far capire3) ((with with) to do (something one does not want to do): I'm not looking forward to this meeting, but let's get it over (with).) togliersi il pensiero* * *1. vi + adv(cross) attraversare2. vi + prep1) (cross) attraversare2) (recover from: illness) riprendersi da, rimettersi da, (disappointment) superare, (surprise, shock) riaversi da3) (overcome: difficulty) superare, (shyness) vincere3. vt + adv1) (transport across) far passare2) (have done with) finire una buona voltalet's get it over (with) — facciamolo, così ci togliamo il pensiero
3) (communicate: idea) comunicare, passare* * *2) superare, rimettersi da [illness, shock]I can't get over it — (in amazement) non me ne capacito
3) (surmount) superare [ problem]to get sth. over with — farla finita con qcs
she never got over him — non lo ha mai dimenticato; get [sb., sth.] over (cause to cross) fare passare [qcn., qcs.] su [ bridge]; fare superare a qcn., qcs. [wall etc.]
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5 resilient
[rɪ'zɪlɪənt]1) (morally) determinato; (physically) resistente2) [material, substance] resiliente* * *resilient /rɪˈzɪlɪənt/a.1 (fis., ind. costr., mecc.) resiliente; elastico2 (fig.) to be resilient, avere buone capacità di recupero; Older people are less resilient and take longer to recover from illness, gli anziani hanno minore capacità di recupero e impiegano più tempo per rimettersi dalle malattieresiliently avv.* * *[rɪ'zɪlɪənt]1) (morally) determinato; (physically) resistente2) [material, substance] resiliente -
6 ♦ shock
♦ shock (1) /ʃɒk/n.1 colpo; cozzo; urto: the shock of a fall, il colpo di una caduta; the shock of the waves against the rocks, l'urto delle onde contro gli scogli; shock waves, onde d'urto ( di un'esplosione o di un terremoto); (fig.) ripercussioni2 (fig.) colpo; forte impressione; violenta emozione; choc; shock: to come as a shock, essere uno shock; scioccare; The news came as a terrible shock to us, la notizia è stata per noi un colpo terribile; to recover from a shock, riprendersi da uno shock; DIALOGO → - Bereavement and time off work- It came as a complete shock, è stato un vero shock; to get a bit of a shock, rimanere un po' impressionato5 [u] (med.) shock; choc; collasso: traumatic shock, shock traumatico; to be in shock, essere in stato di shock● (mecc.) shock absorber, ammortizzatore □ (elettr.) shock excitation, eccitazione a impulso □ ( sport) shock goal, gol beffa □ shock-horror show [story], spettacolo [racconto] orripilante □ (fam., USA) shock jock, dee-jay radiofonico provocatorio ( che esprime opinioni sui fatti del giorno) □ (econ.) shock model, modello econometrico con funzioni affette da errori casuali □ shock-resistant, resistente agli urti □ (mil. e sport) shock tactics, tattica d'urto ( cariche di cavalleria, impiego di carri armati, ecc.) □ (psic.) shock therapy (o shock treatment), shockterapia, terapia d'urto □ shock workers, lavoratori d'assalto; stacanovisti □ (fig.) to send shock waves through, gettare lo scompiglio in; mettere sottosopra.shock (2) /ʃɒk/n.bica, barca, mucchio ( di covoni di grano).shock (3) /ʃɒk/n. [cu](generalm. shock of hair) massa di capelli arruffati; folta chioma, zazzera● shock-head, testa piena di capelli (o dai capelli arruffati) □ shock-headed, zazzeruto; dai capelli arruffati.♦ (to) shock (1) /ʃɒk/A v. t.1 urtare; scuotere; impressionare vivamente; shoccare, shockare, scioccare; indignare; scandalizzare; sconvolgere; traumatizzare: I was shocked by ( o at) his behaviour, rimasi scioccato dal suo comportamento; The news of the riots shocked the financial world, la notizia dei tumulti sconvolse il mondo della finanzaB v. i.1 scontrarsi; urtarsi; collidere2 (fig.) scandalizzarsi; rimanere scioccato; essere sconvolto: That girl shocks easily, quella ragazza si scandalizza con poco● to get shocked, prendere la scossa (elettrica).(to) shock (2) /ʃɒk/v. t.abbicare, abbarcare, ammucchiare ( il grano). -
7 effect ***** ef·fect
[ɪ'fɛkt]1. n1) (result) effettoto have an effect on sb/sth — avere or produrre un effetto su qn/qc
to have no effect — non avere or produrre alcun effetto
to put into effect — (rule) rendere operativo, (plan) attuare
to take effect — (drug) fare effetto
to come into or take effect Law — entrare in vigore
in effect — in realtà, effettivamente, in effetti
his letter is to the effect that... frm — il tenore della sua lettera è che...
2) (impression) effetto, impressione fSee:2. vt(bring about) effettuare, (saving, transformation, reunion) operare -
8 sleep off
sleep off [sth.], sleep [sth.] offto sleep it off — colloq. smaltire la sbornia con una dormita
* * *(to recover from (something) by sleeping: She's in bed sleeping off the effects of the party.) (recuperare dormendo)* * *vt + adv* * *sleep off [sth.], sleep [sth.] offto sleep it off — colloq. smaltire la sbornia con una dormita
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9 rally
I 1. ['rælɪ]1) (meeting) raduno m., manifestazione f.2) (car race) rally m.3) (in tennis) scambio m., serie f. di passaggi4) (recovery) miglioramento m., recupero m.; econ. ripresa f.2.modificatore [ car] da rally; [circuit, driver] di rallyII 1. ['rælɪ]2.to rally to his side — portare dalla propria [ public opinion]
1) (come together) [ people] radunarsi2) (recover) [ dollar] essere in ripresa; [ patient] ristabilirsi; [ sportsperson] rimettersi in forma•* * *['ræli] 1. verb1) (to come or bring together again: The general tried to rally his troops after the defeat; The troops rallied round the general.) riunire, riorganizzare2) (to come or bring together for a joint action or effort: The supporters rallied to save the club from collapse; The politician asked his supporters to rally to the cause.) unirsi3) (to (cause to) recover health or strength: She rallied from her illness.) riprendersi, recuperare2. noun1) (a usually large gathering of people for some purpose: a Scouts' rally.) raduno2) (a meeting (usually of cars or motorcycles) for a competition, race etc.) rally3) (an improvement in health after an illness.) recupero, ripresa4) ((in tennis etc) a (usually long) series of shots before the point is won or lost.) scambio (di colpi)•* * *I 1. ['rælɪ]1) (meeting) raduno m., manifestazione f.2) (car race) rally m.3) (in tennis) scambio m., serie f. di passaggi4) (recovery) miglioramento m., recupero m.; econ. ripresa f.2.modificatore [ car] da rally; [circuit, driver] di rallyII 1. ['rælɪ]2.to rally to his side — portare dalla propria [ public opinion]
1) (come together) [ people] radunarsi2) (recover) [ dollar] essere in ripresa; [ patient] ristabilirsi; [ sportsperson] rimettersi in forma• -
10 pick up
1) (improve) [trade, market] essere in ripresa; [weather, performance, health] migliorare; [ sick person] ristabilirsi2) (resume) riprendereto pick up (from) where one left off — riprendere da dove ci si era fermati; pick [sb., sth.] up, pick up [sb., sth.]
3) (lift, take hold of) (to tidy) raccogliere; (to examine) prendere (in mano) [ object]; (after fall) tirare su; (for cuddle) prendere fra le braccia [ person]4) (collect) dare un passaggio a [ hitcher]; caricare [ cargo]; fare salire [ passenger]; (andare a) ritirare [ticket, keys]could you pick me up? — puoi venirmi a prendere? pick [sth.] up, pick up [sth.]
5) (buy) prendere, comprare [milk, bread, newspaper]9) (detect) [person, animal] trovare [trail, scent]; [searchlight, radar] segnalare la presenza di, individuare [aircraft, person, object]; rad. tel. captare [ signal]11) (resume) riprendere [conversation, career]you'll soon pick up your Italian again — ricomincerai in fretta a parlare italiano; pick [sb.] up, pick up [sb.]
14) (meet) spreg. abbordare [ person]; rimorchiare [ partner]; caricare (in macchina) [ prostitute]15) (find fault with) riprendere, fare delle critiche a [ person] (on su); pick oneself up16) (get up) alzarsi17) fig. (recover) riprendersi, rimettersi* * *1) (to learn gradually, without formal teaching: I never studied Italian - I just picked it up when I was in Italy.) imparare2) (to let (someone) into a car, train etc in order to take him somewhere: I picked him up at the station and drove him home.) prendere su3) (to get (something) by chance: I picked up a bargain at the shops today.) trovare4) (to right (oneself) after a fall etc; to stand up: He fell over and picked himself up again.) rialzarsi5) (to collect (something) from somewhere: I ordered some meat from the butcher - I'll pick it up on my way home tonight.) prendere6) ((of radio, radar etc) to receive signals: We picked up a foreign broadcast last night.) ricevere7) (to find; to catch: We lost his trail but picked it up again later; The police picked up the criminal.) ritrovare; prendere* * *1. vt + adv1) (lift: sth dropped) raccogliere, raccattare, (sb fallen) tirar suto pick o.s. up — rialzarsi
2) (collect: goods, person) passare a prenderewe'll come to the airport to pick you up — veniamo a prenderti all'aeroporto, (subj : bus etc) far salire, caricare, (rescue) raccogliere, (from sea) ripescare, (arrest) arrestare
the car picked up speed — la macchina ha acquistato velocità or ha accelerato
3) (acquire: sale bargain) trovare, (information, points in exam, germ) prendere, (learn: habit, ideas) prendere, (skill, language, tricks) impararecan you pick up some information while you're there? — puoi prendere delle informazioni mentre sei lì?
4) Radio TV Telec captare2. vi + adv1) (improve: gen) migliorare, (wages) aumentare, (invalid, business) riprendersi, (weather) rimettersi2) (continue) continuare, riprendere* * *1) (improve) [trade, market] essere in ripresa; [weather, performance, health] migliorare; [ sick person] ristabilirsi2) (resume) riprendereto pick up (from) where one left off — riprendere da dove ci si era fermati; pick [sb., sth.] up, pick up [sb., sth.]
3) (lift, take hold of) (to tidy) raccogliere; (to examine) prendere (in mano) [ object]; (after fall) tirare su; (for cuddle) prendere fra le braccia [ person]4) (collect) dare un passaggio a [ hitcher]; caricare [ cargo]; fare salire [ passenger]; (andare a) ritirare [ticket, keys]could you pick me up? — puoi venirmi a prendere? pick [sth.] up, pick up [sth.]
5) (buy) prendere, comprare [milk, bread, newspaper]9) (detect) [person, animal] trovare [trail, scent]; [searchlight, radar] segnalare la presenza di, individuare [aircraft, person, object]; rad. tel. captare [ signal]11) (resume) riprendere [conversation, career]you'll soon pick up your Italian again — ricomincerai in fretta a parlare italiano; pick [sb.] up, pick up [sb.]
14) (meet) spreg. abbordare [ person]; rimorchiare [ partner]; caricare (in macchina) [ prostitute]15) (find fault with) riprendere, fare delle critiche a [ person] (on su); pick oneself up16) (get up) alzarsi17) fig. (recover) riprendersi, rimettersi -
11 to ***** weak form
[tə]1. prephave you ever been to India? — sei mai stata in India?
a letter to his wife — una lettera a sua moglie
2) (next to, with position) awith one's back to the wall — con le spalle al muro
the door is to the left (of) — la porta è a sinistra (di)
at right angles to sth — ad angolo retto con qc
3) (as far as) fino ahere to London — da qui (fino) a Londra40 to 50 people — da 40 a 50 personeit's twenty-five to 3 — mancano venticinque minuti alle 3, sono le 2 e trentacinque
it to me — dammeloa monument to the fallen — un monumento ai caduti
a solution to the problem — una soluzione al problema
6) (in relation to) (in confronto) aA is to B as C is to D — A sta a B come C sta a D
to the others — superiore agli altrigoals to two — tre reti a due7)that's all there is to it — questo è tutto, è tutto quiwhat do you say to this? — che cosa ne pensi?
8) (according to) secondowe danced to the music of... — abbiamo ballato con la musica di...
9)2. particle (with verb)1)to go/eat — andare/mangiare2)to start to cry — incominciare or mettersi a piangere3) (purpose, result) perhe did it to help you — l'ha fatto per aiutarti
he came to see you — è venuto per vederti
4)you ought to — dovresti (farlo)he's not the sort to do that — non è il tipo da fare una cosa del genere
now is the time to do it — è ora di farlo
6)to believe — difficile da credereto go — pronto (-a) a partire3. adv1)2)to come to — (recover consciousness) riprendere conoscenza
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12 knock out
knock [sb., sth.] out, knock out [sb., sth.]1) (dislodge) [person, blow] fare saltare via [ tooth]; togliere, cavare [ nail]; [ person] vuotare (battendo) [ contents]2) (make unconscious) [person, blow] fare perdere i sensi a; [ drug] stordire, narcotizzare; [ boxer] mettere KO, mandare al tappeto [ opponent]don't drink the punch, it will knock you out! — non bere il punch, ti stende!
3) (destroy) fare saltare [tank, factory]4) sport (eliminate) eliminare [opponent, team]5) aut. (straighten) raddrizzare [dent, metal]* * *1) (to make unconscious by a blow, or (in boxing) unable to recover within the required time: The boxer knocked his opponent out in the third round.) mettere k.o.2) (to defeat and cause to retire from a competition: That team knocked us out in the semi-finals (noun knock-out).) eliminare* * *vt + adv1) (stun) stordire, stendere, Boxing mettere k.o. or fuori combattimento2) (nails) far uscire, levare, (in fight: teeth) spaccare3) (eliminate: in competition) eliminare* * *knock [sb., sth.] out, knock out [sb., sth.]1) (dislodge) [person, blow] fare saltare via [ tooth]; togliere, cavare [ nail]; [ person] vuotare (battendo) [ contents]2) (make unconscious) [person, blow] fare perdere i sensi a; [ drug] stordire, narcotizzare; [ boxer] mettere KO, mandare al tappeto [ opponent]don't drink the punch, it will knock you out! — non bere il punch, ti stende!
3) (destroy) fare saltare [tank, factory]4) sport (eliminate) eliminare [opponent, team]5) aut. (straighten) raddrizzare [dent, metal]
См. также в других словарях:
recover from a trauma — recover from shock, get over a shock … English contemporary dictionary
recover from — phr verb Recover from is used with these nouns as the object: ↑accident, ↑anaesthetic, ↑effect, ↑illness, ↑infection, ↑injury, ↑ordeal, ↑shock, ↑strain, ↑trauma, ↑wreckage … Collocations dictionary
recover from a defeat — recuperate from a loss … English contemporary dictionary
recover from the battlefield — send back from the battlefield … English contemporary dictionary
recover — re‧cov‧er [rɪˈkʌvə ǁ ər] verb 1. [intransitive] to increase or improve after falling in value or getting worse: • Its shares plunged at the start of trading, but recovered to close only slightly down. 2. [transitive] FINANCE to get back money… … Financial and business terms
Recover — Re*cov er (r?*k?v ?r), v. i. 1. To regain health after sickness; to grow well; to be restored or cured; hence, to regain a former state or condition after misfortune, alarm, etc.; often followed by of or from; as, to recover from a state of… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
recover — 01. It took my grandmother a long time to [recover] from the death of my grandfather. 02. Doctors believe my mother s quick [recovery] from her illness was partly due to her desire to see her grandchildren again. 03. Police have announced that… … Grammatical examples in English
recover — [[t]rɪkʌ̱və(r)[/t]] ♦♦♦ recovers, recovering, recovered 1) VERB When you recover from an illness or an injury, you become well again. [V from n/ ing] He is recovering from a knee injury... A policeman was recovering in hospital last night after… … English dictionary
recover — re|cov|er W2 [rıˈkʌvə US ər] v [Date: 1200 1300; : Old French; Origin: recovrer, from Latin recuperare; RECUPERATE] 1.) to get better after an illness, accident, shock etc ▪ After a few days of fever, she began to recover. recover from ▪ He s in… … Dictionary of contemporary English
recover — recoverer, n. /ri kuv euhr/, v.t. 1. to get back or regain (something lost or taken away): to recover a stolen watch. 2. to make up for or make good (loss, damage, etc., to oneself). 3. to regain the strength, composure, balance, or the like, of… … Universalium
recover — 1 verb 1 GET BETTER (I) 2 a) to get better after an illness, accident, shock etc: After a few days of fever, he began to recover. (+ from): My boss is recovering from a heart attack. b) if something recovers after a period of trouble or… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English