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21 verrinnen
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22 infiltrar
• infidelity• infiltration• ooze confidence• ooze out• seep into• send quickly• send sprawling -
23 водоносный пласт
водоносный пласт
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[ http://www.eionet.europa.eu/gemet/alphabetic?langcode=en]EN
aquifer
Layers of rock, sand or gravel that can absorb water and allow it to flow. An aquifer acts as a groundwater reservoir when the underlying rock is impermeable. This may be tapped by wells for domestic, agricultural or industrial use. A serious environmental problem arises when the aquifer is contaminated by the seepage of sewage or toxins from waste dumps. If the groundwater in coastal areas is over-used salt water can seep into the aquifer. (Source: WRIGHT)
[http://www.eionet.europa.eu/gemet/alphabetic?langcode=en]Тематики
EN
DE
FR
Русско-английский словарь нормативно-технической терминологии > водоносный пласт
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24 sickern
v/i seep; (tröpfeln) trickle ( aus out of; in + Akk into); ( auch an die Öffentlichkeit) sickern leak out; Blut sickert durch den Verband blood is seeping through the bandage; siehe auch durchsickern, einsickern* * *to trickle; to ooze; to seep* * *sị|ckern ['zɪkɐn]vi aux seinto seep; (dickere Flüssigkeit auch) to ooze; (in Tropfen) to drip; (fig) to leak out* * *1) (to flow slowly: The water oozed through the sand.) ooze2) (to have (something liquid) flowing slowly out: His wound was oozing blood.) ooze3) ((with in, into, through etc) (of a liquid) to penetrate: The blood from his wound has soaked right through the bandage.) soak* * *si·ckern[ˈzɪkɐn̩]vi Hilfsverb: sein (rinnen)das Wasser sickert in den Boden water seeps into the ground; (fig)vertrauliche Informationen \sickern immer wieder in die Presse confidential information is constantly leaked out to the press* * ** * *aus out of;sickern leak out;Blut sickert durch den Verband blood is seeping through the bandage; → auch durchsickern, einsickern* * ** * *v.to drip v.to ooze v.to seep v.to soak v.to trickle v. -
25 einsickern
v/i (trennb., ist -ge-): einsickern (in + Akk) seep oder trickle in(to); fig. Gäste, Meldungen etc.: trickle in(to); Spione etc.: infiltrate (into)* * *ein|si|ckernvi sep aux seinto seep in ( in +acc -to); (fig) to filter in ( in +acc -to)* * *1) ((of soldiers) to get through enemy lines a few at a time: to infiltrate (into) enemy territory.) infiltrate2) (to be absorbed: The surface water on the paths will soon sink in.) sink in* * *ein|si·ckernvi (Flüssigkeit) to seep in* * *intransitives Verb; mit sein seep in* * *einsickern v/i (trennb, ist -ge-):in +akk) seep oder trickle in(to); fig Gäste, Meldungen etc: trickle in(to); Spione etc: infiltrate (into)* * *intransitives Verb; mit sein seep in* * *v.to soak v. -
26 versickern
v/i1. seep (away) ( im Sand into the sand)2. fig. fizzle out* * *to drain; to seep* * *ver|sị|ckern ptp versi\#ckertvi aux seinto seep away; (fig) (Gespräch, Unterstützung) to dry up; (Interesse, Teilnahme) to peter out; (Geld) to trickle away* * *((of liquids) to flow slowly eg through a very small opening: Blood seeped out through the bandage round his head; All his confidence seeped away.) seep* * *ver·si·ckern *vi Hilfsverb: sein▪ [irgendwo] \versickern to seep away [somewhere]* * *intransitives Verb; mit sein <river etc.> drain or seep away* * *versickern v/i1. seep (away) (im Sand into the sand)2. fig fizzle out* * *intransitives Verb; mit sein <river etc.> drain or seep away* * *v.to trickle away v. -
27 colarse
1 (escabullirse) to slip in, gatecrash2 (en una cola) to push in, jump the queue, US jump the line3 familiar (equivocarse) to slip up, make a mistake4 (enamorarse) to fall ( por, for)* * *VPR1) (=filtrarse)el agua se cuela por las rendijas — the water seeps (in) through o gets in through the cracks
2) [personas] [sin pagar] to get in without paying; [en lugar prohibido] to sneak in; [en fiesta] to gatecrashun equipo de segunda división se había colado en las semifinales — a second division team had slipped through to the semifinals
3) [error]se le colaron varias faltas al revisar el texto — he overlooked several mistakes when revising the text
4) [en una cola] to jump the queue, cut in line (EEUU)¡oiga, no se cuele! — excuse me, there's a queue!
5) Esp * (=equivocarse) to get it wrong *¡huy! ¡me colé! — oops! I got it wrong! *
ahí te has colado porque yo no dije nada de eso — you got it wrong there, because I didn't say anything about that
6) Esp (=enamorarse)* * *= creep + past, sneak + past, sneak through, slither + Posesivo + way into, seep, creep (up) (in/into), sneak, weasel + Posesivo + way into, sneak into, worm + Posesivo + way through.Ex. Too frequently absurd errors creep past the abstractor who does not know the field.Ex. The more expensive media such as kits, models, and games are too large for someone to sneak past a vigilant charge out system = Los conjuntos documentales multimedia, las maquetas y los juegos son demasiado grandes para que alguien los pase sin ser visto por el sistema de préstamo.Ex. I think I am probably 99.9% effective at catching these spams but this was one of the.1% that snuck through.Ex. That's despite grumpy comments like those of William Hartston who said it was 'surely one of the ugliest words ever to slither its way into our dictionaries'.Ex. The outer edges of the sheet -- the deckle edges -- are rough and uneven where the stuff seeped between the deckle and the mould.Ex. Abstracting may not always be accorded a high priority by volunteer abstractors and undesirable delays may creep into the preparation of abstracts.Ex. With a no fine policy there'll no longer be a need for patrons to sneak books back on the shelves after they're due and then pretend they were there all the time = Sin una política de sanciones los usuarios ya no tendrán la necesidad de devolver los libros a los estantes sin ser vistos después de haber vencido su préstamo y luego fingir que estaban allí desde hace tiempo.Ex. He then rented a hidden camera and weaseled his way into the private ceremony to take a shot of the singer.Ex. The police said that he had sneaked into a her house and raped her nearly 200 times over a 13-month period.Ex. Corruption wormed its way through their ranks, as it did through the ranks of their kinfolk.----* colarse en = slip into.* colarse inadvertidamente = slip through.* * *= creep + past, sneak + past, sneak through, slither + Posesivo + way into, seep, creep (up) (in/into), sneak, weasel + Posesivo + way into, sneak into, worm + Posesivo + way through.Ex: Too frequently absurd errors creep past the abstractor who does not know the field.
Ex: The more expensive media such as kits, models, and games are too large for someone to sneak past a vigilant charge out system = Los conjuntos documentales multimedia, las maquetas y los juegos son demasiado grandes para que alguien los pase sin ser visto por el sistema de préstamo.Ex: I think I am probably 99.9% effective at catching these spams but this was one of the.1% that snuck through.Ex: That's despite grumpy comments like those of William Hartston who said it was 'surely one of the ugliest words ever to slither its way into our dictionaries'.Ex: The outer edges of the sheet -- the deckle edges -- are rough and uneven where the stuff seeped between the deckle and the mould.Ex: Abstracting may not always be accorded a high priority by volunteer abstractors and undesirable delays may creep into the preparation of abstracts.Ex: With a no fine policy there'll no longer be a need for patrons to sneak books back on the shelves after they're due and then pretend they were there all the time = Sin una política de sanciones los usuarios ya no tendrán la necesidad de devolver los libros a los estantes sin ser vistos después de haber vencido su préstamo y luego fingir que estaban allí desde hace tiempo.Ex: He then rented a hidden camera and weaseled his way into the private ceremony to take a shot of the singer.Ex: The police said that he had sneaked into a her house and raped her nearly 200 times over a 13-month period.Ex: Corruption wormed its way through their ranks, as it did through the ranks of their kinfolk.* colarse en = slip into.* colarse inadvertidamente = slip through.* * *
■colarse verbo reflexivo
1 (entrar sin ser visto) to slip in
(sin ser invitado) to gatecrash
(sin pagar) se coló en el autobús, he got onto the bus without paying
2 (saltarse el turno) to jump the queue, US to cut in the line
3 fam (meter la pata) to slip up, go too far
' colarse' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
colar
English:
cut in
- gatecrash
- jump
- push in
- queue
- thread
- worm
- crash
- gate
- line
- push
* * *vprel aire se cuela por esta rendija air passes through this crack;las llaves se colaron por la alcantarilla the keys dropped down the drain;el balón se coló por la portería sin que ningún jugador pudiera detenerlo the ball just slipped into the goal and no one could stop it2. [en cola] to Br jump the queue o US cut in line;¡eh, no te cueles! Br oi, don't jump the queue!, US hey, don't cut in line!3. [en sitio] to slip, to sneak (en into);se colaron en el tren they slipped o sneaked onto the train without paying;colarse en una fiesta to gatecrash a party;nos colamos por la puerta de atrás we sneaked in (by) the back doorte has colado, no es mi hermana you've got it wrong, she's not my sister* * *v/r fampush in3:colarse por alguien fam fall for s.o.* * *vr1) : to sneak in, to cut in line, to gate-crash2) : to slip up, to make a mistake* * *colarse vb1. (meterse en un lugar) to sneak inse coló en el concierto he sneaked into the concert / he got into the concert without paying2. (meterse en una cola) to push in3. (equivocarse en general) to slip up / to be wrong4. (equivocarse hablando) to put your foot in itte has colado, no debías decirle eso you've put your foot in it you shouldn't have said that -
28 infiltrer
infiltrer [ɛ̃filtʀe]➭ TABLE 11. transitive verb[+ groupe, réseau] to infiltrate2. reflexive verb* * *ɛ̃filtʀe
1.
verbe transitif to infiltrate [organisation]
2.
s'infiltrer verbe pronominal1) [liquide] to leak ( dans into); [lumière, froid] to filter in2) [personne]s'infiltrer dans — to infiltrate [groupe, lieu]
* * *ɛ̃filtʀe vt[organisation] to infiltrate* * *infiltrer verb table: aimerA vtr to infiltrate [organisation].B s'infiltrer vpr1 [liquide] to seep through; [lumière, froid] to filter in; le doute s'infiltra dans son esprit he began to have doubts;2 [personne] s'infiltrer dans to infiltrate [groupe, lieu].[ɛ̃filtre] verbe transitif2. [organisation, réseau] to infiltrate————————s'infiltrer verbe pronominal intransitif[air, brouillard, eau] to seep[lumière] to filter in -
29 sive
filter, ooze, seep, trickle* * *vb ooze, seep,( om lys) filter;(fig) filter ( fx ideas kept filtering back into the country),(T: liste af) slope off;[ sive bort](også fig) ooze (el. seep) away;( gå lidt efter lidt) trickle away ( fx people began to trickle away);[ sive ind] ooze (el. seep) in,(fig: blive forstået) sink in ( fx it took time for the warning to sink in),(am) soak in;[ sive ud] ooze (el. seep) out,( ved utæthed) leak out;(fig) filter out ( fx the news filtered out),( ved utæthed) leak out ( fx the secret (, the news) leaked out),(komme el. gå ud lidt efter lidt) trickle out ( fx information (, people) trickled out);[ lade det sive ud] leak it ( fx to the press). -
30 insinuare
insertfig dubbio, sospetto sow the seeds ofinsinuare che insinuate that* * *insinuare v.tr.1 (introdurre) to slip, to insert, to introduce: insinuò la mano nella fenditura, he slipped his hand into the crack2 (suggerire) to insinuate, to hint at (sthg.), to suggest; (instillare) to instil: vorresti insinuare che sono stato io?, are you insinuating that it was me?; c'era chi insinuava che egli fosse colpevole, it was insinuated (o there were those who hinted) that he was guilty; insinuare un dubbio nella mente di qlcu., to insinuate (o instil) a doubt in s.o.'s mind; insinuò strane idee nella sua mente, he instilled strange ideas into his mind3 (dir.) to prove, to tender a proof of (sthg.), to claim: insinuare un credito, to tender a proof of credit; insinuare un credito in un fallimento, to prove (o to claim) a credit in a bankruptcy.◘ insinuarsi v.rifl. o intr.pron.1 to insinuate oneself (anche fig.); (infilarsi) to slip (in), to worm one's way in: riesce a insinuare ovunque, he manages to worm his way in everywhere; insinuare tra la folla, to slip into the crowd2 (penetrare, introdursi) to seep, to creep*, to penetrate; to work one's way in: l'acqua si era insinuata nel muro, the water seeped into (o penetrated) the wall; a poco a poco la disperazione si insinuava nel suo animo, little by little desperation crept into his mind.* * *[insinu'are]1. vt1)insinuare qc in — to slip o slide sth into2) (alludere) to insinuate, implyfu lei ad insinuargli il sospetto che... — she was the one who created the suspicion in his mind o made him suspect that...
2. vip (insinuarsi)(umidità, acqua)insinuarsi (in qc) — to seep in(to sth), penetrate (sth), (dubbio)
3. vr (insinuarsi)insinuarsi in — to worm one's way into, insinuate o.s. into
* * *[insinu'are] 1.verbo transitivo1) (infilare) to insert, to slip in2) (far nascere) to insinuate, to instil BE, to instill AE [dubbio, sospetto]3) (accusare) to imply, to insinuate2.* * *insinuare/insinu'are/ [1]1 (infilare) to insert, to slip in3 (accusare) to imply, to insinuate; come osi insinuare che how dare you suggest thatII insinuarsi verbo pronominale[ persona] to insinuate oneself; [sentimento, idea] to creep* into. -
31 dringen
v/i; dringt, drang, gedrungen1. (ist) Person, gewaltsam: force one’s way ( oder break) ( aus out of oder from; durch through; in + Akk into); Messer, Licht, Kugel etc.: penetrate, pierce; Wasser etc.: leak ( oder seep) ( aus out from; durch through; in + Akk into); dringen bis zu reach, get as far as; aus der Küche drang lautes Gelächter you could hear loud laughter coming from the kitchen, loud laughter emanated from the kitchen; kein Laut drang an mein Ohr not a sound reached my ear; an die Öffentlichkeit dringen fig. leak ( oder get) out, become public2. (hat): auf etw. (Akk) dringen press for s.th., urge s.th.; darauf dringen, dass etw. getan wird press for s.th. to be done3. (ist): in jemanden dringen press s.o.; mit Bitten: plead with s.o.; mit Fragen: ply ( oder press) s.o. with questions; er drang nicht weiter in sie he didn’t press the point (any further)* * *to impose; to permeate; to thrust* * *drịn|gen ['drɪŋən] pret dra\#ng [draŋ] ptp gedru\#ngen [gə'drʊŋən]vi1) aux sein to penetrate, to come through; (fig Nachricht, Geheimnis) to penetrate, to get through (an or in +acc to)(durch etw) dringen — to come through (sth), to penetrate (sth)
jdm ans Herz dringen (liter) — to go to or touch sb's heart
hinter die Ursache/ein Rätsel dringen — to get to the bottom of this/a puzzle
2) aux sein (geh)mit Bitten/Fragen in jdn dringen — to ply or press sb with requests/questions
3)er drang darauf, einen Arzt zu holen or dass man einen Arzt holte — he insisted that a doctor should be sent for
* * *drin·gen<drang, gedrungen>[ˈdrɪŋən]vidurch die Bewölkung/den Nebel/in den Nachthimmel \dringen to pierce the clouds/fog/the night sky3. Hilfsverb: sein (vordringen)an die Öffentlichkeit \dringen to leak to the publicauf mehr Gehalt \dringen to demand more pay [or a higher salary]▪ darauf \dringen, etw zu tun/dass etw getan wird to insist on sth being done/that sth be done5. Hilfsverb: sein (bestürmen)mit Bitten/Fragen in jdn \dringen to bombard sb with requests/questions* * *unregelmäßiges intransitives Verb1) mit sein (gelangen) <water, smell, etc.> penetrate, come through; < news> get throughin etwas (Akk.) dringen — get into or penetrate something
durch etwas dringen — come through or penetrate something; < person> push one's way through something
2) mit seinin jemanden dringen — (geh.) press or urge somebody
3)auf etwas (Akk.) dringen — insist upon something
* * *durch through;aus out from;durch through;in +akk into);dringen bis zu reach, get as far as;aus der Küche drang lautes Gelächter you could hear loud laughter coming from the kitchen, loud laughter emanated from the kitchen;kein Laut drang an mein Ohr not a sound reached my ear;2. (hat):auf etwas (akk)dringen press for sth, urge sth;darauf dringen, dass etwas getan wird press for sth to be done3. (ist):in jemanden dringen press sb; mit Bitten: plead with sb; mit Fragen: ply ( oder press) sb with questions;er drang nicht weiter in sie he didn’t press the point (any further)* * *unregelmäßiges intransitives Verb1) mit sein (gelangen) <water, smell, etc.> penetrate, come through; < news> get throughin etwas (Akk.) dringen — get into or penetrate something
durch etwas dringen — come through or penetrate something; < person> push one's way through something
2) mit seinin jemanden dringen — (geh.) press or urge somebody
3)auf etwas (Akk.) dringen — insist upon something
* * *v.(§ p.,pp.: drang, ist/hat gedrungen)= to get through v. -
32 durchdringen
v/i (unreg., trennb., ist -ge-)1. ( auch durchdringen durch) get through; Flüssigkeit: auch seep through; Nachricht: get out, leak (out); durchdringen zu Nachricht: reach, get to—v/t (unreg., untr., hat)1. penetrate; er durchdrang mich mit seinem Blick his look went right through me2. fig. mit dem Verstand: fathom, grasp3. (erfüllen) pervade, permeate; durchdrungen* * *to permeate; to pervade; to penetrate; to pierce; to imbue* * *dụrch|drin|gen ['dʊrçdrɪŋən]vi sep irreg aux sein1) (= hindurchkommen) to penetrate (durch etw sth); (Flüssigkeit, Kälte, Sonne) to come through (durch etw sth); (Stimme, Geräusch) to be heard (durch etw through sth)bis zu jdm durchdringen (fig) — to go or get as far as sb
2) (= sich durchsetzen, sich verständlich machen) to get throughbei, in +dat by)mit einem Vorschlag durchdringen — to get a suggestion accepted (
* * *das1) penetration2) (to move, go or make a way into, past, or through (something): The bullet penetrated his shoulder; Their minds could not penetrate the mystery.) penetrate3) ((of a liquid, gas etc) to pass or spread into or through: The water had permeated (through/into) the soil.) permeate4) ((of pointed objects) to go into or through (something): The arrow pierced his arm; A sudden light pierced the darkness.) pierce* * *durch|drin·gen1[ˈdʊrçdrɪŋən]vi irreg Hilfsverb: sein1. (durch etw dringen)2. (vordringen)▪ [bis zu jdm] \durchdringen to carry through [as far as sb]ihre Stimmen drangen durch die dünne Wand bis zu den Nachbarn durch their voices carried through the thin wall as far as the[ir] neighbours [or reached the neighbours through the thin wall3. (erreichen)▪ zu jdm \durchdringen to get as far as sbder Präsident ist zu gut abgeschirmt, zu ihm kann kein Attentäter \durchdringen the president is too well protected for any [potential] assassin to get close to him4. (sich durchsetzen)durch·drin·gen *2[dʊrçˈdrɪŋən]▪ etw \durchdringen to penetrate sth2. (geh)▪ jdn \durchdringen to pervade sb* * *IIIdurch etwas durchdringen — penetrate something; come through something
unregelmäßiges transitives Verb penetrate* * *'durchdringen v/i (irr, trennb, ist -ge-)1. ( auchdurchdringen zu Nachricht: reach, get to2. fig Person: succeed (mit with);mit etwas durchdringen auch get sth accepteddurch'dringen v/t (irr, untrennb, hat)1. penetrate;er durchdrang mich mit seinem Blick his look went right through me2. fig mit dem Verstand: fathom, grasp* * *Iunregelmäßiges intransitives Verb; mit sein <rain, sun> come throughIIdurch etwas durchdringen — penetrate something; come through something
unregelmäßiges transitives Verb penetrate* * *v.to penetrate v.to permeate v.to pervade v.to soak v.to thrill v. -
33 infiltrare
infiltrate* * *[infil'trare] 1.verbo transitivo to infiltrate2.verbo pronominale infiltrarsi1) [liquido, luce] to infiltrate, to seep (in into)2)- rsi in — [ spia] to infiltrate, to penetrate [ organizzazione]
* * *infiltrare/infil'trare/ [1]to infiltrateII infiltrarsi verbo pronominale1 [liquido, luce] to infiltrate, to seep (in into) -
34 infiltrar
v.1 to inject.2 to infiltrate (ideas).Ella infiltra sus espías She infiltrates her spies.El medicamento infiltra los tejidos The medicine infiltrates the tissues.Ella infiltra el edificio She infiltrates the building.* * *1 to infiltrate1 to infiltrate (en, -)* * *1. VT1) [+ espía, policía] to infiltrate2) (Med) to infiltrate2.See:* * *1.verbo transitivo to infiltrate2.infiltrarse v pron1) (en partido, organización) to infiltrate2) ideas/vocablos3) luz to filter* * *= infiltrate.Ex. Black librarians in the UK were urged to join the Association, get themselves organized, and ' infiltrate' to change things from the inside.----* infiltrarse = creep (up) (in/into), infiltrate, make + Posesivo + way (into/onto), weasel + Posesivo + way into, worm + Posesivo + way through.* * *1.verbo transitivo to infiltrate2.infiltrarse v pron1) (en partido, organización) to infiltrate2) ideas/vocablos3) luz to filter* * *= infiltrate.Ex: Black librarians in the UK were urged to join the Association, get themselves organized, and ' infiltrate' to change things from the inside.
* infiltrarse = creep (up) (in/into), infiltrate, make + Posesivo + way (into/onto), weasel + Posesivo + way into, worm + Posesivo + way through.* * *infiltrar [A1 ]vtA ‹partido/organización› to infiltrate; ‹agente› to infiltrateinfiltraron un agente en la célula terrorista they infiltrated an agent into the terrorist cell, they infiltrated the terrorist cellB ( Med) to infiltrateA (en un partido, una organización) to infiltratesoldados infiltrados en las filas enemigas soldiers who have/had infiltrated the enemy lineslas tropas se infiltraron en territorio enemigo the troops infiltrated (into) enemy territoryB«ideas/vocablos»: palabras nuevas que se han ido infiltrando en la lengua new words which have been filtering into the languageC «luz» to filterla humedad se infiltraba en la pared the damp seeped into the wall* * *
infiltrar ( conjugate infiltrar) verbo transitivo
to infiltrate;
infiltrar a algn en algo to infiltrate sb into sth
infiltrarse verbo pronominal
to infiltrate;
infiltrarse en algo ‹en partido/organización› to infiltrate sth
infiltrar verbo transitivo to infiltrate
' infiltrar' also found in these entries:
English:
plant
* * *♦ vt1. [espía] to infiltrate;infiltraron un agente en la organización they infiltrated an agent into the organization2. [líquido] to inject;lo infiltraron antes del partido they gave him an injection before the game* * *I v/t infiltrate* * *infiltrar vt: to infiltrate -
35 проникать
1) General subject: (the boy came running into the room - мальчик вбежал в комнату come, come (the boy came running into the room - мальчик вбежал в комнату; the moonshine came streaming in through the open window - в открытое окно лился лунный свет), come through, elbow (in, into), enter, filter, filter (тж. перен.), find one's way, get, infilter, infiltrate (тж.перен.), insinuate, interfuse, leak (о жидкости, газе и т.п.), leak in (о жидкости, газе), needle, penetrate, perforate (into, through), perforate into, perforate through, permeate, pervade, pierce (в тайны и т. п.; through, into), plumb (в тайну и т. п.), search, seep out, sink, spread, strike, work, work in, worm, get into a place (куда-л.), (куда-либо) pierced2) Biology: inpour (напр. в организм), (постепенно) insinuate, permeate (сквозь)4) Military: infiltrate (о расположение противника)5) Rare: transpierce6) Chemistry: take7) Mathematics: obtain an understanding of, permeate (through)8) Railway term: sink into9) Literature: come in10) Oil: dive, make through (в породу) -
36 просачиваться
1) General subject: bore, drain, filter, infilter, infiltrate, leak, leak (об информации), leak in, leak out (об информации), ooze, percolate, scape, seep (тж. перен.), silt through, soak, strain, transpire (о газе), transude, leak out, filter (one's) way to (speaking of information)3) Biology: inpour (напр. в организм), transudate4) Naval: search6) Dialect: sew9) Construction: trickle through11) Railway term: leak through13) Diplomatic term: seep out (информация)14) Metallurgy: penetrate15) Automation: drip -
37 colare
"to cast;Giessen;coar"* * *1. v/t strainpasta drain2. v/i drip( perdere) leakdi naso rundi cera meltcolare a fondo o a pico sink, go down* * *colare v.tr.1 ( filtrare) to filter, to percolate; ( scolare) to strain (off), to drain, to colander: colare il brodo, il vino, to strain broth, wine; colare il latte in un panno, to strain milk through a cloth; colare la pasta, to drain (o strain) pasta2 ( fondere) to cast; to pour: colare la ghisa in pani, to pig; colare metallo in uno stampo, to pour (o to run) metal into a mould; colare una statua in bronzo, to cast a statue in bronze◆ v. intr.1 ( gocciolare) to drip*, to trickle, to drop*; to ooze; ( di candela) to gutter, to melt*: le lacrime le colavano lungo le gote, tears trickled down her cheeks; un filo d'acqua colava dal rubinetto, a trickle of water was running from the tap; il sudore gli colava dalla fronte, beads of perspiration were dripping from his forehead; far colare il caffè, to percolate coffee; il sangue è colato dalla ferita, blood oozed from the wound2 (mar.) to founder, to go* down, to sink*, to go* to the bottom: la nave colò a picco in pochi secondi, the ship sank in a few seconds.* * *[ko'lare]1. vt2) (metalli) to cast, (oro fuso) to pour1) (cadere a gocce) to drip, (cera, formaggio) to run2) (perdere: botte) to leak3)colare a picco — to sink straight to the bottom* * *[ko'lare] 1.verbo transitivo1) (filtrare) to strain [ brodo]2) (scolare) to strain, to drain [pasta, riso]3) metall. to cast*, to pour [ metallo fuso]2.1) (gocciolare) (aus. essere) [ liquido] to drip, to trickle, to seepl'acqua colava giù dai muri — water was streaming o pouring down the walls
2) (perdere liquido) (aus. avere) [ recipiente] to leak3) (affondare) (aus. essere)colare a picco — [ nave] to sink, to go down o to the bottom
* * *colare/ko'lare/ [1]1 (filtrare) to strain [ brodo]2 (scolare) to strain, to drain [pasta, riso]3 metall. to cast*, to pour [ metallo fuso]1 (gocciolare) (aus. essere) [ liquido] to drip, to trickle, to seep; l'acqua colava giù dai muri water was streaming o pouring down the walls; mi cola il naso my nose is running -
38 passare
1. v/i ( trasferirsi) go (in into)sports passdi legge be passed, passdi tempo go by or past, passpassare attraverso delle difficoltà have a difficult timepassare da/per Milano go through Milanpassare dal panettiere drop by the baker'smi è passato di mente it slipped my mindpassare di moda go out of fashionpassare inosservato go unnoticed2. v/t confine cross( sorpassare) overstep( porgere) pass( trascorrere) spendtelecommunications ti passo Claudio here's Claudio* * *passare v. intr.1 to pass; ( vicino) to pass by, to go* by, to get* by; ( attraverso) to go* through, to pass through, to get* through: lasciami passare, let me pass; si fece da parte per far passare l'auto, he moved aside to let the car pass; egli passò senza fermarsi, he passed without stopping; per andare a Roma da Milano si passa per Bologna, to go to Rome from Milan you pass through Bologna; la strada passa per il bosco, the road passes (o goes o runs) through the wood; passiamo per il centro?, shall we go (o pass) through the centre?; l'Arno passa da Firenze, the Arno flows through Florence; l'autobus passa davanti alla stazione, the bus goes past the station; passa sotto il ponte e gira a destra, go under the bridge and turn right; in quel cavo passa la corrente, there's electricity in that cable; si abbassò per passare dalla porta, he bent to get through the doorway; per far passare il frigorifero bisogna spostare l'armadio, we'll have to move the cupboard to get the fridge to pass; questa corda è troppo grossa, non ci passa, this string is too thick, it won't go through2 ( penetrare) to come* in, to pass through: la luce passava attraverso le persiane, the light came in through the shutters3 (trasferirsi da una persona all'altra, da un luogo all'altro) to pass: la palla passava da un giocatore all'altro, the ball passed from one player to the other; passare di padre in figlio, to be handed down (o passed on) from father to son; passare in altre mani, to pass into other hands; passiamo in salotto per il caffè, let's have our coffee in the drawing room // passava da un argomento all'altro con grande facilità, he passed from one subject to another with the greatest of ease // è tempo di passare dalle parole ai fatti, it's time for action (o it's time to pass from words to action)4 ( trascorrere) to pass, to elapse, to go* by: i giorni passarono, the days went by; la gioventù passa presto, youth soon passes; man mano che passano gli anni..., as the years go by...; il tempo non passa mai quando si aspetta qlcu., time goes slowly when you're waiting for s.o.; sono già passati due anni, two years have already passed; facciamo una partita a carte tanto per far passare il tempo, let's have a game of cards, just to pass the time5 ( cessare) to pass (away), to cease: il mal di denti mi è passato, my toothache has passed off (o gone); la sua collera passò presto, his anger soon passed (o cooled); il temporale è passato, the storm is over (o has passed o has ceased); passare di moda, to go out of fashion // passerà anche questa, it won't last for ever; tutto passa, everything comes to an end; per lui è stato un brutto colpo ma spero gli passerà presto, it was a tough blow for him but I hope he'll get over it quickly // cerca di farti passare il malumore, try to snap out of it6 ( andare, venire) to call on (s.o.), to call at (a place): devo passare dal suo ufficio, I must call at his office; passerà di qui fra poco, he will come here soon (o before long); passerò a prenderti, I'll call for you; passerò da te questa sera, I'll drop in (on you) tonight; passare da un cliente, to call on a client; passa a portarmi quel libro, come here and bring me the book8 ( essere scambiato per) to be taken for, to pass off as; ( essere reputato) to be believed, to be considered: così vestito potrebbe passare per un prete, dressed like that he could be taken for a priest; lo hanno fatto passare per pazzo, they passed him off as mad; si è fatto passare per un professore di chimica e tutti ci hanno creduto, he passed himself off as a chemistry teacher and everyone believed him; passa per bella, intelligente, she is considered (o thought) beautiful, intelligent; passare per ricco, to be thought rich9 ( essere accettato, aver corso) to be passed, to get* through: il progetto di legge passò il mese scorso, the bill was passed last month; passare a un esame, to get through an examination; non è un capolavoro ma può passare, it's not a masterpiece but it'll do12 ( a carte) to pass◆ v.tr.1 ( attraversare) to pass, to cross; ( oltrepassare) to pass, to go* beyond: passare il confine, to pass (o to cross) the border; i fuggitivi sono 11riusciti a passare il fiume, the fugitives succeeded in crossing the river; dopo che hai passato il tabaccaio è la prima casa a destra, when you pass the tobacconist's it's the first house on your right; ho passato l'edicola senza vederla, I went beyond the newstand without seeing it2 ( far passare) to pass: passare il filo nell'ago, to pass the thread through the eye of the needle; si fece passare una corda in vita, he passed the rope round his waist3 ( essere più di) to be over: quel tipo passa i 2 metri, that fellow is over two metres tall; per me ha passato i 50 anni, I think he's over fifty; questa lettera passa il peso, this letter is overweight4 ( trascorrere) to spend*, to pass: dove passerai le vacanze?, where are you going to spend your holidays?; passeremo il Natale insieme, we'll spend (o pass) Christmas together; sta passando un brutto periodo, he's having (o going through) a bad time; ho passato una serata molta bella, I've had a lovely evening; ha passato tre anni in prigione, he spent three years in prison5 ( cospargere di) to put*, to spread*: passati un po' di crema in viso, put a bit of cream on your face; passare la cera sul pavimento, to wax the floor6 ( pulire) to wipe, to clean; passare uno straccio sulla lavagna, to wipe the blackboard with a cloth; passare lo straccio sul pavimento, to wipe the floor; si passò il fazzoletto sul collo, he mopped (o wiped) his neck with his handkerchief7 ( dare) to pass, to give*, to hand: l'albergo non passa la colazione, the hotel does not give breakfast; guarda queste fotografie e passale agli altri, look at these photographs and pass them on to the others; passami il sale, per favore, can you pass me the salt, please?; mi passa un assegno mensile, he gives me a monthly cheque; passare gli alimenti alla moglie, to pay one's wife alimony; (comm.) passare un ordine, to place an order; (sport) passare la palla, to pass the ball8 ( sopportare) to undergo*, to pass through (sthg.): ha passato un mucchio di guai, she has gone through (o she has had) a lot of trouble; ne ho passate tante, ne ho passate di tutti i colori, te lo assicuro, I have been through a lot, I can tell you9 ( trafiggere) to pass through; to run* through, to transfix: lo passò da parte a parte, he ran him through10 ( approvare, promuovere; superare) to pass: ho passato tutti i miei allievi, I have passed all my pupils; passare un progetto di legge, to pass a bill; hai passato l'esame di guida?, did you pass your driving test?11 (cuc.) ( setacciare) to sieve; ( al passaverdura) to purée // passa il pesce nella farina prima di friggerlo, flour the fish before frying; passare nell'uovo, to dip in beaten egg; passare gli spinaci nel burro, to sauté the spinach; passare nel pangrattato, to coat with breadcrumbs.◆ FRASEOLOGIA: passare a miglior vita, to pass away // passare inosservato, to go (o to pass) unnoticed // passare di mente, to go out of one's mind; passare per la mente, to cross (o to come into) one's mind // sarà due chili e passa, it's probably two kilos or more; avrà trent'anni e passa, he must be over thirty // non posso passare sopra a così tanti errori, I can't overlook so many mistakes // faccia la coda, non cerchi di passare davanti a tutti, don't try to pass ahead of everyone (o to jump the queue); è passato in testa al gruppo, alla classifica, he moved up to the top // passi la sua ignoranza, ma non la cattiva educazione, I'm prepared to overlook his ignorance but not his bad manners // passa via!, get (o go) away, scram! // passarla liscia, to get away with sthg. (o to get off scot-free) // passarsela bene, male, ( finanziariamente) to be well off, badly off // passar parola, to pass the word on (o round) // passare qlco. sotto silenzio, to pass over sthg. in silence // non gliene passa una, she picks him up on everything ∙ Questo verbo è usato in molte frasi idiomatiche per la cui traduzione si rinvia agli altri elementi. Per esempio: passare per le armi → arma; passare in rivista → rivista; passare dei guai → guaio; passare al setaccio → setaccio ecc.* * *[pas'sare]1) (persona, veicolo) to go by, pass (by)siamo passati davanti a casa tua — we went past your house, we walked (o drove) past your house
passare a casa di qn o da qn — to call o drop in on sb
passare a trovare/salutare qn — to drop by to see sb/say "hello" to sb
passare a prendere qc/qn — to come and pick sth/sb up
passare in banca/ufficio — to call in at the bank/office
3) (filtrare attraverso: aria, sole, luce) to pass, get through, (acqua) to seep through4)passare da...a — to pass from... topassare di mano in mano — to be passed o handed round
passare di padre in figlio — to be handed o passed down o from father to son
passare ad altro — to change the subject, (in una riunione) to discuss the next item
passare alla storia — to pass into history, fig to become a legend
5) (trascorrere: giorni, tempo) to pass, go by6) (allontanarsi: temporale, dolore, voglia) to pass, go awayfar passare a qn la voglia di qc/di fare qc — to stifle sb's desire for sth/to do sth
7) (essere accettato: proposta di legge) to be passed, (candidato) to pass8) Culin9) Carte to pass10)11)ci passa una bella differenza tra i 2 quadri — there's a big difference between the 2 pictures12)passare per uno stupido/un genio — to be taken for a fool/a genius
passare per buono — to be taken as valid, be accepted
farsi passare per — to pass o.s. off as, pretend to be
13)passare attraverso, per anche fig — to go through
passare sopra — to pass over o above, (fig : lasciar correre) to pass over, overlook
cosa ti passa per la testa? — (a che pensi?) what is going through your mind?, (come puoi pensarlo?) what are you thinking of!
per dove si passa per arrivare in centro? — which way do I (o we) go to get into town?
lasciar passare qn/qc — to let sb/sth through
far passare qn per o da — to let sb in (o out) by
2. vt1) (attraversare) to cross3) (approvare) to pass, approve4)passare qn/qc da parte a parte — to pass right through sb/sth5) (trascorrere) to spend, passnon passerà la notte — he (o she) won't survive the night
non passa giorno che non ne combini una delle sue — hardly a day goes by without him getting up to something
6) (oltrepassare, sorpassare) to go beyond, (fig : andare oltre i limiti) to exceed, go beyondha passato la quarantina — he (o she) is over 40
7) (dare: oggetto) to pass, give, hand, (Sport: palla) to passpassare qc a qn — to pass sth to sb, give sb sth, (trasmettere: messaggio) to pass sth (on) to sb
potresti passarmi il sale? — could you pass me the salt, please?
passare indietro qc — to pass o give o hand sth back
mi passi Maria? — (al telefono) can I speak to Maria?
le passo il signor Rossi — I'm putting you through to Mr Rossi, here's Mr Rossi
8) (brodo, verdura) to strain9)passare l'aspirapolvere — to hoover Brit, vacuum Am
10)passarsela bene/male — to get on well/badly, (economicamente) to manage well/badlycome te la passi? — how are you getting on o along?
ne ha passate tante — he's been through a lot, he's had some difficult times
3. smcol passare del tempo... — with the passing of time...
col passare degli anni — (riferito al presente) as time goes by, (riferito al passato) as time passed o went by
* * *I 1. [pas'sare]verbo transitivo1) (attraversare) to go* past, to go* across, to get* across, to get* over, to pass, to cross [fiume, ponte]; to go* through, to get* through [ dogana]passato il semaforo, giri a destra — turn right after the lights
2) (infilare) to run*; (trafiggere) to run* throughpassare la corda nell'anello — to pass o run the rope through the ring
3) (trasferire) to movepassare qcn. a un altro ufficio — to move sb. to another office
passare una telefonata a qcn. — to put a call through to sb.
mi passi il direttore commerciale, per favore — give me the sales manager, please
glielo passo — I'll put him on, I'm putting you through
passare la palla — sport to feed o pass the ball
passare le dita su qcs. — to run one's fingers over sth.
passare uno straccio su qcs. — to run a duster over sth
7) (trascorrere) to spend*, to pass8) (superare) to pass, to get* through [esame, test]; to live out [ inverno]9) (approvare) to get* through, to carry, to pass [legge, decreto]10) (perdonare)11) gastr. (con il frullatore) to whizz up; to mash (up), to puree [frutta, verdura]passare qcs. al tritacarne — to put sth. through the mincer
12) (spalmare) to rub [ crema]13) (pagare)passare gli alimenti — dir. to pay maintenance
14) rad. telev.15) (oltrepassare)2.passare la cinquantina — to be over fifty years old, to be in one's fifties
1) (transitare) [persona, veicolo] to passriesci a passare? — can you fit o get through?
passando per o da by way of; passare per il centro della città, davanti alla scuola to go through the town centre, past the school; andare in Polonia passando per la Germania to travel through Germany to Poland; passare per i campi to cut across the fields; l'autobus è appena passato the bus has just gone; passate da quella porta go straight through that door; passare dalla scala di servizio — to use the backstairs o service stairs AE
2) (snodarsi)passare per — [ strada] to go through; (scorrere) [ acqua] to flow through
3) (andare momentaneamente) to drop in, to drop round, to pop in BE colloq.passare da — to call at [ negozio]; to call (in) on [amico, parente]; to go round to [scuola, ufficio]
passare a prendere qcn., qcs. — to pick sb., sth. up
4) (penetrare) to get* throughfare passare — to let in [acqua, luce]
5) (svolgersi)passare inosservato — to go o pass unnoticed
6) (spostarsi) to go*, to movepassare davanti a qcn. in una coda — to cut in front of sb. in a queue
7) (pensare)non mi era mai passato per la testa che... — it never crossed o entered my mind that
passare di padre in figlio, di generazione in generazione — to be handed down from father to son, from generation to generation
9) (variare, cambiare) to changepassare al (campo) nemico — to desert to the enemy camp, to go over to the enemy
10) fig. (procedere) to go* on, to move on, to pass onpassare all'offensiva — to go on o take the offensive
passare alle vie di fatto — to use force, to come to blows
11) (essere approvato) [legge, regolamento] to go* through12) (essere ammesso) [ candidato] to pass13) (cessare) [crisi, sentimento] to pass; [dolore, effetto] to pass off, to subside; [ temporale] to blow* itself out, to blow* over, to spend* itself, to die out; [amore, rabbia] to diepasserà — it'll pass, things will get better
14) (trascorrere) [ tempo] to draw* on, to go* (by), to passpassarono tre ore prima che... — three hours went by before
15) (sopportare)farne passare di tutti colori a qcn. — to put sb. through the mill
passare sopra a — to overlook, to pass over [comportamento, errore]
passi per i giovani, ma... — that's all right for young people but...
per questa volta passi — I'll let you off o I'll turn a blind eye this time, this time I'll let it go
17) (dimenticare)mi era completamente passato di mente — it went right o clean o completely out of my mind
fare passare qcn. per bugiardo — to make sb. out to be a liar
19) (spacciarsi)facendosi passare per un poliziotto — impersonating a o posing as a policeman
20) (intercorrere) to pass between3.verbo pronominale passarsi1) (far scivolare) to run*, to draw*••passare parola — to spread o pass the word
come te la passi? — how are things, how are you getting along?
passarsela male — to have a hard o bad time, to go through the o jump through hoops
II [pas'sare]passare a miglior vita — eufem. to pass away
sostantivo maschile passage, passingcon il passare degli anni — with the passing of the years, as years go by
* * *passare1/pas'sare/ [1]1 (attraversare) to go* past, to go* across, to get* across, to get* over, to pass, to cross [fiume, ponte]; to go* through, to get* through [ dogana]; passato il semaforo, giri a destra turn right after the lights2 (infilare) to run*; (trafiggere) to run* through; passare la corda nell'anello to pass o run the rope through the ring3 (trasferire) to move; passare qcn. a un altro ufficio to move sb. to another office4 (al telefono) passare una telefonata a qcn. to put a call through to sb.; mi passi il direttore commerciale, per favore give me the sales manager, please; glielo passo I'll put him on, I'm putting you through5 (porgere) to hand, to pass [ oggetto]; passami il piatto pass me your plate; potete (fare) passare il sale? could you pass the salt along please? passare la palla sport to feed o pass the ball6 (far scorrere) passare le dita su qcs. to run one's fingers over sth.; passare uno straccio su qcs. to run a duster over sth.7 (trascorrere) to spend*, to pass; passare una bella giornata to have a nice day; passare la giornata a fare to spend the day doing; passare un brutto momento to have a thin time of it8 (superare) to pass, to get* through [esame, test]; to live out [ inverno]9 (approvare) to get* through, to carry, to pass [legge, decreto]10 (perdonare) non me ne passa una he doesn't let me get away with anything11 gastr. (con il frullatore) to whizz up; to mash (up), to puree [frutta, verdura]; passare qcs. al tritacarne to put sth. through the mincer14 rad. telev. passo! over; passo e chiudo! over and out! passiamo ora la linea ai nostri studi di Roma now over to our Rome studios15 (oltrepassare) passare la cinquantina to be over fifty years old, to be in one's fifties; hai proprio passato il limite! you're way out of line! colloq.(aus. essere)1 (transitare) [persona, veicolo] to pass; riesci a passare? can you fit o get through? passando per o da by way of; passare per il centro della città, davanti alla scuola to go through the town centre, past the school; andare in Polonia passando per la Germania to travel through Germany to Poland; passare per i campi to cut across the fields; l'autobus è appena passato the bus has just gone; passate da quella porta go straight through that door; passare dalla scala di servizio to use the backstairs o service stairs AE3 (andare momentaneamente) to drop in, to drop round, to pop in BE colloq.; passare da to call at [ negozio]; to call (in) on [amico, parente]; to go round to [scuola, ufficio]; devi passare a trovarci you must come by and see us; passare a prendere qcn., qcs. to pick sb., sth. up; passerà oggi he's coming round today; sono solo passata a salutare I've just popped in to say hello4 (penetrare) to get* through; fare passare to let in [acqua, luce]6 (spostarsi) to go*, to move; passare dalla sala da pranzo in salotto to move from the dining room to the lounge; passare davanti a qcn. in una coda to cut in front of sb. in a queue7 (pensare) dire quello che passa per la mente to say things off the top of one's head; mi domando cosa le passi per la testa I wonder what's going on in her head; non mi era mai passato per la testa che... it never crossed o entered my mind that...8 (essere trasferito, trasmesso) [ proprietà] to pass; [ titolo] to pass down; passare alla storia come to go down in history as; passare di padre in figlio, di generazione in generazione to be handed down from father to son, from generation to generation9 (variare, cambiare) to change; passare dal riscaldamento a gas a quello elettrico to change over from gas to electric heating; passare sotto il controllo dell'ONU to be taken over by the UN; passare al (campo) nemico to desert to the enemy camp, to go over to the enemy10 fig. (procedere) to go* on, to move on, to pass on; passiamo ad altro let's move on; passare all'offensiva to go on o take the offensive; passare alle vie di fatto to use force, to come to blows11 (essere approvato) [legge, regolamento] to go* through12 (essere ammesso) [ candidato] to pass; passare alla classe superiore to go up a class; è passato generale he's been promoted to general13 (cessare) [crisi, sentimento] to pass; [dolore, effetto] to pass off, to subside; [ temporale] to blow* itself out, to blow* over, to spend* itself, to die out; [amore, rabbia] to die; passerà it'll pass, things will get better; gli passerà he'll get over it; questo mal di testa non vuole passare! this headache just won't go away! mi è passata la voglia di giocare I don't feel like playing any more14 (trascorrere) [ tempo] to draw* on, to go* (by), to pass; sono appena passate le sei it's just gone six o'clock; passarono tre ore prima che... three hours went by before...15 (sopportare) farne passare di tutti colori a qcn. to put sb. through the mill; dopo tutto quello che mi hai fatto passare after all you've put me through; ci siamo passati tutti we've all gone through it16 (chiudere un occhio) lasciare passare to let it pass; passare sopra a to overlook, to pass over [comportamento, errore]; passi per i giovani, ma... that's all right for young people but...; per questa volta passi I'll let you off o I'll turn a blind eye this time, this time I'll let it go17 (dimenticare) mi era completamente passato di mente it went right o clean o completely out of my mind18 (essere considerato) passare per un genio to pass for a genius; fare passare qcn. per bugiardo to make sb. out to be a liar20 (intercorrere) to pass between; che differenza passa tra i due? what's the difference between the two?III passarsi verbo pronominale1 (far scivolare) to run*, to draw*; - rsi il pettine tra i capelli to run a comb through one's hair; - rsi un fazzoletto sulla fronte to draw a handkerchief across one's forehead; si passò la mano sul viso he passed his hand over his facepassare parola to spread o pass the word; come te la passi? how are things, how are you getting along? passarsela bene to be well off; passarsela male to have a hard o bad time, to go through the o jump through hoops; non mi passa più! there's no end to it! non la passerai liscia! you'll never get away with it! passare a miglior vita eufem. to pass away.————————passare2/pas'sare/sostantivo m.passage, passing; con il passare degli anni with the passing of the years, as years go by; con il passare delle ore as the day progressed. -
39 przedosta|ć się
pf — przedosta|wać się impf (przedostanę się — przedostaję się) v refl. 1. (dotrzeć) to get, to find a. make one’s way- przedostać się na drugi brzeg/na drugą stronę ulicy to get across to the other bank/the opposite side of the street- przedostać się przez góry/bagna to get across a. through the mountains/marshes- przedostać się do środka to get in, to gain access- przedostał się do ogrodu/parku przez płot he got into the garden/park through a hole in the fence- przedostać się przez tłum/do baru to make one’s way through the crowd/to the bar2. (przeniknąć) [ciecz, dźwięk, zapach] to penetrate; [ciecz] to seep in; [zapach] to permeate- pył przedostawał się do płuc dust was penetrating into the lungs- zawarte w kremach substancje przedostają się do skóry the substances contained in face creams penetrate into the skin- przez zasłonięte okno przedostawało się światło sunlight was filtering a. getting in through the curtained window- żaden dźwięk nie przedostawał się przez zamknięte drzwi not a sound could be heard through the closed door- woda przedostawała się do wnętrza łodzi water was leaking into the boat- przedostawanie się zarazków do organizmu człowieka the penetration of germs into the body3. przen. (zostać ujawnionym) [informacja, fakty] to be leaked- skandal przedostał się do mediów the scandal leaked out to the mediaThe New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > przedosta|ć się
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40 просачиваться
несов. - проса́чиваться, сов. - просочи́ться1) ( постепенно протекать сквозь что-л) percolate; ( наружу) leak, ooze; seep out; exudate ( внутрь) soak; ( каплями) trickle (through); filter2) (в вн.; незаметно проникать куда-л) filter (into), infiltrate (into)в вою́ющую страну́ просочи́лись аге́нты проти́вника — enemy agents filtered into the embattled country
све́дения просочи́лись в пре́ссу — the information filtered / leaked into the press
См. также в других словарях:
seep — [ sip ] verb intransitive 1. ) to flow into or out of something through small holes, usually when this should not happen: seep through: The rain had seeped through his clothes. seep into: Poisonous chemicals from the factory are seeping into our… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
seep — [si:p] v [I always + adverb/preposition] [: Old English; Origin: sipian] 1.) to flow slowly through small holes or spaces seep into/through/down etc ▪ Blood seeped down his leg. 2.) to move or spread gradually seep away/into/through etc ▪ His… … Dictionary of contemporary English
seep — UK [siːp] / US [sɪp] verb [intransitive] Word forms seep : present tense I/you/we/they seep he/she/it seeps present participle seeping past tense seeped past participle seeped 1) to flow into or out of something through small holes, usually when… … English dictionary
seep — [[t]si͟ːp[/t]] seeps, seeping, seeped 1) VERB If something such as liquid or gas seeps somewhere, it flows slowly and in small amounts into a place where it should not go. [V prep/adv] Radioactive water had seeped into underground reservoirs...… … English dictionary
seep — verb ADVERB ▪ gradually, slowly ▪ away, back, out, through, up ▪ The power had gradually seeped away … Collocations dictionary
seep — I. intransitive verb Etymology: alteration of earlier sipe, from Middle English sipen, from Old English sipian; akin to Middle Low German sipen to seep Date: 1790 1. to flow or pass slowly through fine pores or small openings ; ooze < water… … New Collegiate Dictionary
seep — [siːp] verb [I] to flow into or out of something through small holes Chemicals from the factory were seeping into the earth.[/ex] … Dictionary for writing and speaking English
seep in — Synonyms and related words: absorb, adsorb, assimilate, blot, blot up, chemisorb, chemosorb, digest, drink, drink in, drink up, engross, filter in, imbibe, infiltrate, ingest, leak in, osmose, percolate in, percolate into, slurp up, soak in, soak … Moby Thesaurus
seep — v. (P; intr.) the water seeped in to the basement * * * [siːp] (P;intr.) the water seeped into the basement … Combinatory dictionary
seep — verb (intransitive always + adv/prep) to flow slowly through small holes or spaces (+ in/into/through etc): Whenever it rained water started seeping in … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
seep — verb a brown substance is seeping into the basement Syn: ooze, trickle, exude, drip, dribble, flow, issue, escape, leak, drain, bleed, filter, percolate, soak … Thesaurus of popular words