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1 steer
I [stɪə(r)]nome agr. zool. giovenco m., manzo m.II [stɪə(r)] III 1. [stɪə(r)]1) (control direction of) guidare, condurre, pilotare [ car]; governare, pilotare [ boat]2) (guide) dirigere, guidare [ person]; fig. dirigere, pilotare [ conversation]2.to steer a course through — fig. farsi largo attraverso
1)to steer towards — dirigersi o incamminarsi verso
2) aut.the car steers well — la macchina si manovra bene o risponde bene ai comandi
3) mar. manovrarsi, governarsi••to steer clear of sth., sb. — tenersi o girare alla larga da qcs., qcn.
* * *I [stiə] noun(a young ox raised to produce beef.)II [stiə] verb(to guide or control the course of (eg a ship, car etc): He steered the car through the narrow streets; I steered out of the harbour; She managed to steer the conversation towards the subject of her birthday.)- steering- steering-wheel
- steer clear of* * *I [stɪə(r)]1. vt2) (handle controls of: ship) governare, (boat) portare2. vito steer towards or for sth — dirigersi verso qc
II [stɪə(r)] nto steer clear of sb/sth fig — tenersi alla larga da qn/qc
(animal) manzo* * *steer (1) /stɪə(r)/n.(zool.) giovenco; manzo.steer (2) /stɪə(r)/n.(fam. USA) indicazione; informazione; consiglio; dritta (fam.): to give sb. a bum steer, dare a q. un'indicazione sbagliata; tirare un bidone a q. (fig. fam.).(to) steer /stɪə(r)/A v. t.1 (naut.) governare; manovrare; pilotare: to steer a ship, governare una nave; (naut.) to steer the course, governare in rotta4 (fig.) dirigere; indirizzare; rivolgere: He steered my efforts in the right direction, ha indirizzato i miei sforzi nella giusta direzione5 (fig.) guidare; accompagnare: Who's steering Russia now?, chi guida la Russia ora?; The usherette steered me to my seat, la maschera mi ha accompagnato al mio postoB v. i.2 (autom.) guidare; stare al volante3 ( di nave, ecc.) fare rotta; governarsi; manovrarsi; rispondere al timone: to steer westing, fare rotta verso ovest; This boat steers well, questa barca risponde bene al timone4 ( d'automobile, ecc.) rispondere allo sterzo: This car steers easily, quest'automobile possiede una buona sterzatura5 (fig.: di persone) dirigersi; andare verso; incamminarsi: We steered for the pub, ci siamo incamminati verso il pub● (autom.) to steer the car round a corner, prendere una curva; fare una curva □ to steer one's course, (naut.) fare rotta; (fig.) volgere il corso (o il cammino), dirigersi; ( anche) muoversi con destrezza, destreggiarsi bene □ (fig.) to steer a middle course, tenere (o seguire) una via di mezzo.* * *I [stɪə(r)]nome agr. zool. giovenco m., manzo m.II [stɪə(r)] III 1. [stɪə(r)]1) (control direction of) guidare, condurre, pilotare [ car]; governare, pilotare [ boat]2) (guide) dirigere, guidare [ person]; fig. dirigere, pilotare [ conversation]2.to steer a course through — fig. farsi largo attraverso
1)to steer towards — dirigersi o incamminarsi verso
2) aut.the car steers well — la macchina si manovra bene o risponde bene ai comandi
3) mar. manovrarsi, governarsi••to steer clear of sth., sb. — tenersi o girare alla larga da qcs., qcn.
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2 middle
['mɪdl] 1.1) mezzo m., centro m.in the middle of — al centro di, in mezzo a
in the middle of the night — nel cuore della notte, a notte fonda
to be caught in the middle — essere messo in mezzo, trovarsi tra due fuochi
I was in the middle of a book when... — ero immerso nella lettura di un libro quando...
to split [sth.] down the middle — dividere [qcs.] in due parti [bill, work]; [ issue] spaccare in due [ group]
2) colloq. (waist) vita f., cintola f.2.aggettivo [door, shelf] di mezzo, centrale; [price, size] medio; [ difficulty] intermedio, medioto be in one's middle thirties — BE essere sui trentacinque
to steer o take o follow a middle course seguire o scegliere una via di mezzo; there must be a middle way — deve esserci una via di mezzo
••in the middle of nowhere — in capo al mondo, a casa del diavolo
* * *['midl] 1. noun1) (the central point or part: the middle of a circle.) centro, metà2) (the central area of the body; the waist: You're getting rather fat round your middle.) vita2. adjective(equally distant from both ends: the middle seat in a row.) intermedio, di mezzo- middling- middle age
- middle-aged
- Middle Ages
- Middle East
- middleman
- be in the middle of doing something
- be in the middle of something* * *['mɪdl] 1.1) mezzo m., centro m.in the middle of — al centro di, in mezzo a
in the middle of the night — nel cuore della notte, a notte fonda
to be caught in the middle — essere messo in mezzo, trovarsi tra due fuochi
I was in the middle of a book when... — ero immerso nella lettura di un libro quando...
to split [sth.] down the middle — dividere [qcs.] in due parti [bill, work]; [ issue] spaccare in due [ group]
2) colloq. (waist) vita f., cintola f.2.aggettivo [door, shelf] di mezzo, centrale; [price, size] medio; [ difficulty] intermedio, medioto be in one's middle thirties — BE essere sui trentacinque
to steer o take o follow a middle course seguire o scegliere una via di mezzo; there must be a middle way — deve esserci una via di mezzo
••in the middle of nowhere — in capo al mondo, a casa del diavolo
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3 tack
I [tæk]1) (nail) chiodo m., bulletta f.2) AE (drawing pin) puntina f. (da disegno)3) (approach) approccio m., tattica f.4) mar. bordata f.5) equit. bardatura f., finimenti m.pl.6) sart. (stitch) punto m. di imbastituraII 1. [tæk]1) (nail)to tack sth. to — inchiodare o attaccare qcs. a [ wall]
to tack sth. down — fissare qcs. con dei chiodi
2) sart. imbastire2.- tack on- tack up* * *[tæk] 1. noun1) (a short nail with a broad flat head: a carpet-tack.) bulletta, puntina2) (in sewing, a large, temporary stitch used to hold material together while it is being sewn together properly.) imbastitura3) (in sailing, a movement diagonally against the wind: We sailed on an easterly tack.) bordata4) (a direction or course: After they moved, their lives took a different tack.) direzione2. verb1) ((with down, on etc) to fasten (with tacks): I tacked the carpet down; She tacked the material together.) fissare; imbastire2) ((of sailing-boats) to move diagonally (backwards and forwards) against the wind: The boat tacked into harbour.) bordeggiare* * *[tæk]1. n2) (Naut: course) bordoto be on the port/starboard tack — avere le mura a sinistra/dritta
to change tack — virare di bordo, fig cambiare linea di condotta
to be on the right/wrong tack fig — essere sulla buona strada/sulla strada sbagliata
3) (stitch) punto d'imbastitura4) (for horse) selleria, equipaggiamento2. vt1) (nail) imbullettare2) Sewing imbastire(
fig: add) to tack sth on to (the end of) sth — (of letter, book) aggiungere qc alla fine di qc3. vi(Naut: change direction) virare di bordo (in prua), (go zigzag) bordeggiare* * *tack (1) /tæk/n.4 (naut.) bordata; virata6 (fig.) linea di condotta; strada; via; rotta, direzione; pista (fig.): to be on the right [wrong] tack, essere sulla strada buona [aver sbagliato strada]; (fig.) essere sulla pista giusta [sbagliata]; We must change tack, dobbiamo mutar rotta8 (fam.) alimenti; cibo9 (polit.) codicillo, articolo aggiunto● tack claw, estrattore di bullette □ (mecc.) tack-driver, macchina per piantare bullette; bullettatrice □ tack-hammer, martelletto da tappezziere □ tack puller, estrattore per bullette □ (metall.) tack weld, saldatura a punti; puntatura □ (fig.) to get down to brass tacks, venire al sodo □ (naut.) on the opposite tack, di controbordo □ (naut.) to be on the port tack, essere con le mure a sinistra □ (naut.) to be on the starboard tack, essere con le mure a dritta □ (naut.) to steer on the starboard tack [on the port tack], virare a dritta [a sinistra].tack (2) /tæk/n. [u](equit.) bardatura; finimenti.tack (3) /tæk/n. [u] ( USA)1 pacchianeria; volgarità2 oggetti pacchiani; ciarpame.(to) tack /tæk/A v. t.1 ( anche to tack down, up) fissare con bullette (o con chiodini); imbullettare: to tack a stairway carpet down, fissare a terra una guida con bullette; to tack (up) a notice, attaccare un avviso (con le puntine)3 (polit.) aggiungere: to tack an amendment to a finance bill, aggiungere un emendamento a un disegno di legge finanziariaB v. i.● to tack on, aggiungere; attaccare; ( sartoria) attaccare, imbastire: to tack the collar on to a jacket, imbastire il colletto su una giacca; to tack on a joke to one's speech, finire un discorso con una barzelletta.* * *I [tæk]1) (nail) chiodo m., bulletta f.2) AE (drawing pin) puntina f. (da disegno)3) (approach) approccio m., tattica f.4) mar. bordata f.5) equit. bardatura f., finimenti m.pl.6) sart. (stitch) punto m. di imbastituraII 1. [tæk]1) (nail)to tack sth. to — inchiodare o attaccare qcs. a [ wall]
to tack sth. down — fissare qcs. con dei chiodi
2) sart. imbastire2.- tack on- tack up
См. также в других словарях:
steer a course — steer a course/path ► to take a series of actions carefully in order to achieve a particular thing: »The government will steer a course of stability for the economy. Main Entry: ↑steer … Financial and business terms
steer a course/path — ► to take a series of actions carefully in order to achieve a particular thing: »The government will steer a course of stability for the economy. Main Entry: ↑steer … Financial and business terms
steer a course — 1) to behave in a particular way, especially when this involves making choices They tried to steer a middle course between overconfidence and undue pessimism. 2) to travel towards a place The fishermen were steering a direct course for Koepang … English dictionary
steer a course — … Useful english dictionary
steer — [stɪə ǁ stɪr] verb [transitive] 1. to guide the way a situation develops, by influencing people s ideas or actions: steer somebody to something • He managed to steer his colleagues to a compromise. steer somebody away from something • Farmers… … Financial and business terms
steer a path — steer a course/path ► to take a series of actions carefully in order to achieve a particular thing: »The government will steer a course of stability for the economy. Main Entry: ↑steer … Financial and business terms
steer — steer1 [stıə US stır] v ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(car/boat etc)¦ 2¦(change somebody/something)¦ 3¦(be in charge of)¦ 4¦(guide somebody to a place)¦ 5 steer clear (of somebody/something) 6 steer a course ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ [: Old English; Origin: stieran] 1.) ¦(CAR/BOAT… … Dictionary of contemporary English
steer — [[t]stɪ͟ə(r)[/t]] steers, steering, steered 1) VERB When you steer a car, boat, or plane, you control it so that it goes in the direction that you want. [V n] What is it like to steer a ship this size?... [V n prep] When I was a kid, about six or … English dictionary
steer — steer1 [ stır ] verb * 1. ) intransitive or transitive to control the direction in which a vehicle moves: Jack steered while Ken gave directions. steer something away from/toward/into/through etc. something: We steered the boat into the marina. a … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
steer — I UK [stɪə(r)] / US [stɪr] verb Word forms steer : present tense I/you/we/they steer he/she/it steers present participle steering past tense steered past participle steered * 1) a) [intransitive/transitive] to control the direction in which a… … English dictionary
steer — steer1 [stir] vt. [ME steren < OE stieran, akin to Ger steuern, ON styra < IE * steur , a support, post (> Gr stauros, ON staurr, post) < base * stā , to STAND] 1. to guide (a ship or boat) by means of a rudder 2. to direct the course … English World dictionary