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1 restore *** re·store vt
[rɪ'stɔː(r)]1) (repair: building) restaurare2) (give back: gen) restituire, (introduce again: confidence, custom, law and order) ripristinare -
2 ♦ (to) restore
♦ (to) restore /rɪˈstɔ:(r)/v. t.1 ristabilire; ripristinare: Service will be restored shortly, il servizio verrà rispristinato entro breve; The government sent troops to restore order in the country, il governo ha mandato delle truppe per ristabilire l'ordine nel paese; to restore democracy, restaurare la democrazia; Drastic action is needed to restore confidence among consumers, è necessario un intervento drastico per restituire fiducia ai consumatori; to restore sb. 's sight, ridare la vista a q.3 riportare: to restore st. ( to its former state), riportare qc. allo stato originale; The theatre will be restored to its former glory, il teatro sarà restituito all'antico splendore; It will take months to restore the bridge, ci vorranno mesi per ripristinare il ponte4 reintegrare: to restore sb. to a position [to an office], reintegrare q. in un posto [in una carica]; After the coup, the President was restored to power, dopo il colpo di stato, il presidente è tornato al potere; to restore a king ( to the throne), rimettere un re sul trono; to restore sb. to his rights, reintegrare q. nei suoi diritti5 restaurare: to restore a church [a painting], restaurare una chiesa [un dipinto]6 (form.) restituire; rendere: to restore property to its rightful owner, restituire dei beni ai legittimi proprietari7 (comput.) ripristinare● to restore sb. to health, rimettere q. in salute □ ( sport) to restore one's team's lead, riportare in vantaggio la propria squadra. -
3 ♦ (to) restore
♦ (to) restore /rɪˈstɔ:(r)/v. t.1 ristabilire; ripristinare: Service will be restored shortly, il servizio verrà rispristinato entro breve; The government sent troops to restore order in the country, il governo ha mandato delle truppe per ristabilire l'ordine nel paese; to restore democracy, restaurare la democrazia; Drastic action is needed to restore confidence among consumers, è necessario un intervento drastico per restituire fiducia ai consumatori; to restore sb. 's sight, ridare la vista a q.3 riportare: to restore st. ( to its former state), riportare qc. allo stato originale; The theatre will be restored to its former glory, il teatro sarà restituito all'antico splendore; It will take months to restore the bridge, ci vorranno mesi per ripristinare il ponte4 reintegrare: to restore sb. to a position [to an office], reintegrare q. in un posto [in una carica]; After the coup, the President was restored to power, dopo il colpo di stato, il presidente è tornato al potere; to restore a king ( to the throne), rimettere un re sul trono; to restore sb. to his rights, reintegrare q. nei suoi diritti5 restaurare: to restore a church [a painting], restaurare una chiesa [un dipinto]6 (form.) restituire; rendere: to restore property to its rightful owner, restituire dei beni ai legittimi proprietari7 (comput.) ripristinare● to restore sb. to health, rimettere q. in salute □ ( sport) to restore one's team's lead, riportare in vantaggio la propria squadra.
См. также в других словарях:
restore — re‧store [rɪˈstɔː ǁ ɔːr] verb [transitive] 1. to make something return to its former level or condition: • The government s first task will be to restore the economy. restore something to something • a bid to restore the company to profitability… … Financial and business terms
confidence — con‧fi‧dence [ˈkɒnfdns ǁ ˈkɑːn ] noun [uncountable] 1. the feeling that you can trust someone or something to do what they say, work properly etc: • We have every confidence in the team. • Our top priority is to maintain customer confidence in… … Financial and business terms
restore to confidence — index reassure Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
restore one's faith — index assure (give confidence to) Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
confidence — noun 1 belief in others ADJECTIVE ▪ absolute, complete, full, total ▪ The company needs the full confidence of its investors. ▪ great, high … Collocations dictionary
confidence — con|fi|dence W2S2 [ˈkɔnfıdəns US ˈka:n ] n ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(feeling somebody/something is good)¦ 2¦(belief in yourself)¦ 3¦(feeling something is true)¦ 4 gain/win/earn somebody s confidence 5¦(keep information secret)¦ 6 take somebody into your… … Dictionary of contemporary English
confidence — noun 1 FEELING SB/STH IS GOOD (U) the feeling that you can trust someone or something to be good, work well, or produce good results (+ in): Our first priority is to maintain the customer s confidence in our product. | have confidence in: We have … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
confidence — con|fi|dence [ kanfıdəns ] noun *** 1. ) uncount the belief that you are able to do things well: give someone confidence: Motherhood gave her confidence. gain/lose confidence: The more he fails, the more he loses confidence in his abilities. lack … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
confidence */*/*/ — UK [ˈkɒnfɪd(ə)ns] / US [ˈkɑnfɪdəns] noun Word forms confidence : singular confidence plural confidences 1) [uncountable] the belief that you are able to do things well have confidence: He s a nice boy, but he doesn t have much confidence.… … English dictionary
restore — verb (T) 1 FORMER SITUATION to make something return to its former level or condition: So far all attempts to restore normal relations between the two countries have failed. | restore sth to sth: The government promises to restore the economy to… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
restore — verb 1 bring back a situation/feeling ADVERB ▪ quickly, soon ▪ Order was quickly restored. VERB + RESTORE ▪ need to ▪ We need to restore public confiden … Collocations dictionary