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1 weaken
verb (to (cause to) become weak, especially in physical strength or character: The patient has weakened; The strain of the last few days has weakened him.) novājēt; kļūt nespēcīgākam; novājināt* * *novājināt; vājināt; kļūt vājākam; piekāpties -
2 to weaken wine with water
atšķaidīt vīnu ar ūdeni -
3 deaden
verb (to lessen, weaken or make less sharp, strong etc: That will deaden the pain.) mazināt; apslāpēt; padarīt nejutīgu* * *padarīt nejutīgu; kļūt nejutīgam; nomērdēt; apslāpēt; padarīt nespodru -
4 impair
[im'peə](to damage, weaken or make less good: He was told that smoking would impair his health.) bojāt; kaitēt; vājināt; pasliktināties* * *pasliktināties, vājināt, bojāt -
5 sap
I [sæp] noun(the liquid in trees, plants etc: The sap flowed out when he broke the stem of the flower.) (auga) sulaII [sæp] past tense, past participle - sapped; verb(to weaken or destroy (a person's strength, confidence, courage etc): The disease slowly sapped his strength.) novārdzināt; izsūkt* * *sula; sapa; iekalējs, zubrītājs; kalšana, zubrīšana; graušana; enerģija, spars; garlaicīgs darbs; gremzdi; asinis; muļķis; ēdamais; kalt, zubrīt; rakt sapu; notecināt sulu; novārdzināt, nomocīt; graut; gremzdot; palikt par muļķi -
6 shake
[ʃeik] 1. past tense - shook; verb1) (to (cause to) tremble or move with jerks: The explosion shook the building; We were shaking with laughter; Her voice shook as she told me the sad news.) tricināt; trīcēt; drebēt2) (to shock, disturb or weaken: He was shaken by the accident; My confidence in him has been shaken.) satriekt; iedragāt (ticību u.tml.)2. noun1) (an act of shaking: He gave the bottle a shake.) Viņš sakratīja pudeli.2) (drink made by shaking the ingredients together vigorously: a chocolate milk-shake.) kokteilis•- shaking- shaky
- shakily
- shakiness
- shake-up
- no great shakes
- shake one's fist at
- shake one's head
- shake off
- shake up* * *purināšana, kratīšana; drebuļi, trīsas; šoks, satricinājums; mirklis; sprauga, plaisa; zemestrīce; piena kokteilis; izturēšanās; trilleris; šeiks; kratīt, purināt; trīcēt, drebēt; saviļņot, satraukt; iedragāt, satricināt -
7 undermine
1) (to make (eg a building) insecure by digging away or destroying the base or foundations: The road was being undermined by a stream.) parakties apakšā; izskalot2) (to weaken (eg a person's health or authority): Constant hard work had undermined his health.) graut; iedragāt* * *parakties apakšā; izskalot; iedragāt, graut; mazināt; mīnēt -
8 weak
[wi:k]1) (lacking in physical strength: Her illness has made her very weak.) vājš; nespēcīgs2) (not strong in character: I'm very weak when it comes to giving up cigarettes.) vājš; vājas gribas-3) ((of a liquid) diluted; not strong: weak tea.) vājš; viegls4) ((of an explanation etc) not convincing.) vājš; nepārliecinošs5) ((of a joke) not particularly funny.) vājš; čābisks; šķidrs•- weakly- weaken
- weakling
- weakness
- have a weakness for* * *vājš
См. также в других словарях:
weaken — weak‧en [ˈwiːkən] verb 1. [intransitive, transitive] FINANCE if investments, prices, currencies etc weaken, or something weakens them, they begin to fall in value: • A combination of low US interest rates and a rising Euro will weaken the dollar … Financial and business terms
Weaken — Weak en, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Weakened}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Weakening}.] [1913 Webster] 1. To make weak; to lessen the strength of; to deprive of strength; to debilitate; to enfeeble; to enervate; as, to weaken the body or the mind; to weaken the… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
weaken — weaken, enfeeble, debilitate, undermine, sap, cripple, disable can mean to lose or cause to lose, strength, vigor, or energy. Weaken, the most general term of this group, most frequently implies loss of the physical strength or functional… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
weaken — [wē′kən] vt., vi. to make or become weak or weaker weakener n. SYN. WEAKEN, the most general of these words, implies a lessening of strength, power, soundness, etc. [weakened by disease, to weaken an argument ]; DEBILITATE suggests a partial or… … English World dictionary
Weaken — Weak en, v. i. To become weak or weaker; to lose strength, spirit, or determination; to become less positive or resolute; as, the patient weakened; the witness weakened on cross examination. His notion weakens, his discernings are lethargied.… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
weaken — index adulterate, alleviate, attenuate, countervail, damage, debase, debilitate, denature, deplete … Law dictionary
weaken — 1520s, from WEAK (Cf. weak) + EN (Cf. en) (1). The earlier verb was simply weak (late 14c.). Related: Weakened; weakening … Etymology dictionary
weaken — [v] reduce the strength of abate, adulterate, break up, cripple, crumble, cut, debase, debilitate, decline, decrease, depress, devitalize, dilute, diminish, droop, dwindle, ease up, enervate, exhaust, fade, fail, faint, flag, give way, halt,… … New thesaurus
weaken — ► VERB ▪ make or become weak … English terms dictionary
weaken */*/ — UK [ˈwiːkən] / US [ˈwɪkən] verb Word forms weaken : present tense I/you/we/they weaken he/she/it weakens present participle weakening past tense weakened past participle weakened 1) a) [intransitive/transitive] to make someone physically less… … English dictionary
weaken — verb ADVERB ▪ considerably, greatly, seriously, severely, significantly, substantially ▪ badly ▪ The military was badly weakened by the sanctions … Collocations dictionary