-
61 encourage
1) (to give support, confidence or hope to: The general tried to encourage the troops: You should not encourage him in his extravagance; I felt encouraged by his praise.) opmuntre2) (to urge (a person) to do something: You must encourage him to try again.) opmuntre; tilskynde•- encouragingly
- encouragement* * *1) (to give support, confidence or hope to: The general tried to encourage the troops: You should not encourage him in his extravagance; I felt encouraged by his praise.) opmuntre2) (to urge (a person) to do something: You must encourage him to try again.) opmuntre; tilskynde•- encouragingly
- encouragement -
62 incite
1) (to urge (someone) to do something: He incited the people to rebel against the king.) tilskynde; opildne2) (to stir up or cause: They incited violence in the crowd.) ophidse; provokere•* * *1) (to urge (someone) to do something: He incited the people to rebel against the king.) tilskynde; opildne2) (to stir up or cause: They incited violence in the crowd.) ophidse; provokere• -
63 encourage
1) (to give support, confidence or hope to: The general tried to encourage the troops: You should not encourage him in his extravagance; I felt encouraged by his praise.) animar2) (to urge (a person) to do something: You must encourage him to try again.) animar•- encouragingly
- encouragement
encourage vb animar / alentartr[ɪn'kʌrɪʤ]1 (cheer, inspire) animar, alentar■ when he saw his friends, it encouraged him to finish the race ver a sus amigos le animó a terminar la carrera■ don't encourage him! ¡no le des cuerda!2 (develop, stimulate) fomentar, favorecer, estimular1) hearten, inspire: animar, alentar2) foster: fomentar, promoverv.• abosar v.• acalorar v.• alentar v.• animar v.• avivar v.• encorajar v.• estimular v.ɪn'kɜːrɪdʒ, ɪn'kʌrɪdʒa) (give hope, courage to) animar, alentar*b) (stimulate, inspire)to encourage somebody to + INF: she/it encouraged me to carry on me animó a seguir adelante; to encourage somebody IN something: don't encourage him in bad habits — no le fomentes las malas costumbres
c) \<\<industry/competition/bad habit\>\> fomentar; \<\<growth\>\> fomentar, estimular; \<\<speculation\>\> intensificar*[ɪn'kʌrɪdʒ]VT [+ person] animar, alentar; [+ industry, growth] estimular, fomentarthe discovery encouraged him in his belief that she was still alive — el hallazgo reafirmó su creencia de que aún seguía viva
* * *[ɪn'kɜːrɪdʒ, ɪn'kʌrɪdʒ]a) (give hope, courage to) animar, alentar*b) (stimulate, inspire)to encourage somebody to + INF: she/it encouraged me to carry on me animó a seguir adelante; to encourage somebody IN something: don't encourage him in bad habits — no le fomentes las malas costumbres
c) \<\<industry/competition/bad habit\>\> fomentar; \<\<growth\>\> fomentar, estimular; \<\<speculation\>\> intensificar* -
64 framdrive
verb. impel, urge on verb. propel verb. force -
65 fremdrive
verb. impel, urge on verb. propel verb. force -
66 encourage
1) (to give support, confidence or hope to: The general tried to encourage the troops: You should not encourage him in his extravagance; I felt encouraged by his praise.) oppmuntre, sette mot i2) (to urge (a person) to do something: You must encourage him to try again.) oppfordre (til), fremme•- encouragingly
- encouragementfremme--------støtteverb \/ɪnˈkʌrɪdʒ\/, \/enˈkʌrɪdʒ\/1) oppmuntre, stimulere, sette mot i, oppfordre til, tilskynde til, anspore2) hjelpe frem, fremme -
67 incite
1) (to urge (someone) to do something: He incited the people to rebel against the king.) egge, provosere, tilskynde2) (to stir up or cause: They incited violence in the crowd.) hisse opp, provosere•verb \/ɪnˈsaɪt\/1) egge, hisse opp, anspore, drive, tilskynde, provosere2) fremkalle, vekkeincite to anspore til -
68 anføre
verb. [ påberope seg] submit, invoke verb. (jus) [ påberope seg] lead, mention, state, indicate, give, refer to, command, head, lead, allege, adduce, advance, urge, cite, quote -
69 nøde
-
70 provosere
verb. provoke verb. (jus) request, urge, challenge -
71 encourage
1) (to give support, confidence or hope to: The general tried to encourage the troops: You should not encourage him in his extravagance; I felt encouraged by his praise.) spodbujati2) (to urge (a person) to do something: You must encourage him to try again.) spodbujati•- encouragingly
- encouragement* * *[inkʌridž]transitive verb(o)hrabriti, podž(i)gati, bodriti, spodbuditi, spodbujati; pomagati; pospeševati -
72 incite
1) (to urge (someone) to do something: He incited the people to rebel against the king.) spodbadati2) (to stir up or cause: They incited violence in the crowd.) spodbujati•* * *[insáit]transitive verbspodbadati, dražiti, spodbujati, hujskati (to k); juridically nahujskati, napeljati (to k) -
73 anspore
verb. spur, spur on, stimulate, incite, instigate, urge, fire, inspire -
74 drive frem
verb. impel (overført) drive forward, impel, urge on -
75 egge
verb. incite, instigate, stir, urge on -
76 tilskynde
verb. urge, prompt, stimulate -
77 encourage
1) (to give support, confidence or hope to: The general tried to encourage the troops: You should not encourage him in his extravagance; I felt encouraged by his praise.) hvetja, telja kjark í2) (to urge (a person) to do something: You must encourage him to try again.) hvetja•- encouragingly
- encouragement -
78 incite
1) (to urge (someone) to do something: He incited the people to rebel against the king.) hvetja, ÿta undir, egna2) (to stir up or cause: They incited violence in the crowd.) kynda undir, egna til• -
79 encourage
1) (to give support, confidence or hope to: The general tried to encourage the troops: You should not encourage him in his extravagance; I felt encouraged by his praise.) incentivar2) (to urge (a person) to do something: You must encourage him to try again.) animar•- encouragingly
- encouragement* * *en.cour.age[ink'∧rid9] vt 1 encorajar, animar, alentar. 2 apoiar, favorecer, promover, ajudar. 3 incitar. -
80 incite
1) (to urge (someone) to do something: He incited the people to rebel against the king.) incitar2) (to stir up or cause: They incited violence in the crowd.) incitar•* * *in.cite[ins'ait] vt incitar, estimular, encorajar.
См. также в других словарях:
urge — ► VERB 1) encourage or entreat earnestly to do something. 2) strongly recommend. ► NOUN ▪ a strong desire or impulse. ORIGIN Latin urgere press, drive … English terms dictionary
urge on — verb 1. spur on or encourage especially by cheers and shouts The crowd cheered the demonstrating strikers • Syn: ↑cheer, ↑root on, ↑inspire, ↑urge, ↑barrack, ↑exhort, ↑pep up … Useful english dictionary
urge — I verb activate, adjure, advance, advise, advocate, appeal to, beg, beseech, coax, drive, encourage, entreat, evoke, exhort, expostulate, goad, hurry, impel, impellere, implore, importune, incitare, incite, insist, instigate, invite, motivate,… … Law dictionary
urge — verb encourage or entreat earnestly to do something. ↘strongly recommend. ↘encourage to move more quickly. ↘(urge someone on) encourage someone to continue. noun a strong desire or impulse. Derivatives urging noun Origin C16: from L. urgere press … English new terms dictionary
urge — [[t]ɜ͟ː(r)ʤ[/t]] ♦♦ urges, urging, urged 1) VERB If you urge someone to do something, you try hard to persuade them to do it. [V n to inf] They urged parliament to approve plans for their reform programme... [V n to inf] He urged employers and… … English dictionary
urge — [c]/ɜdʒ / (say erj) verb (urged, urging) –verb (t) 1. to endeavour to induce or persuade, as by entreaties or earnest recommendations; entreat or exhort earnestly: urge a person to take more care. 2. to press by persuasion or recommendation, as… …
urge — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun ADJECTIVE ▪ desperate, great, incredible, intense, irresistible, overpowering, overwhelming, powerful, strong, uncontrollable … Collocations dictionary
urge — urge1 [ ɜrdʒ ] verb transitive ** 1. ) to advise someone very strongly about what action or attitude they should take: urge someone to do something: The United Nations has urged them to honor the peace treaty. urge that: We urge that systems be… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
urge — 1 verb (T) 1 to strongly advise someone to do something: urge sb to do sth: Brown urged her to reconsider her decision. | urge that: I urge that you read this report carefully. 2 formal to strongly suggest that something should be done: The UN… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
urge — I UK [ɜː(r)dʒ] / US [ɜrdʒ] verb [transitive] Word forms urge : present tense I/you/we/they urge he/she/it urges present participle urging past tense urged past participle urged ** 1) a) to advise someone very strongly about what action or… … English dictionary
urge — I. verb (urged; urging) Etymology: Latin urgēre to press, push, entreat more at wreak Date: circa 1555 transitive verb 1. to present, advocate, or demand earnestly or pressingly < his conviction was upheld on a theory never urged at his…trial… … New Collegiate Dictionary