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1 ♦ confidence
♦ confidence /ˈkɒnfɪdəns/n. [u]1 fiducia: to have full confidence in sb. [st.], avere piena fiducia in q. [qc.]; to look at the future with confidence, guardare al futuro con fiducia; to inspire confidence, ispirare fiducia; complete confidence, fiducia assoluta; to place one's confidence in sb., riporre la propria fiducia in q.; to shake sb. 's confidence in st., scuotere la fiducia di q. in qc.; consumer confidence, la fiducia dei consumatori2 (= self-confidence) fiducia in sé stesso; sicurezza (di sé): He is full of confidence, ha una gran fiducia in sé; è molto sicuro di sé; to lack in confidence, non avere fiducia in sé; essere insicuro; to boost sb. 's confidence, dare più fiducia a q.; rendere q. più sicuro di sé; to undermine sb. 's confidence, minare la fiducia in se stesso di q.3 certezza; sicurezza: I can say with confidence that…, posso affermare con certezza che…4 confidenza: in confidence, in confidenza; in via riservata; in strict confidence, in via strettamente confidenziale5 confidenza; segreto: to exchange confidences, scambiarsi segreti; to make a confidence to sb., fare una confidenza a q.6 (stat.) confidenza: confidence belt, fascia di confidenza; confidence interval, intervallo di confidenza● confidence crisis, crisi di fiducia □ (org. az.) confidence level, grado di affidabilità ( dei prodotti) □ (antiq.) confidence man, truffatore □ confidence trick ( USA: confidence game), truffa all'americana □ confidence trickster, truffatore; imbroglione □ to be in sb. 's confidence, godere la fiducia di q. □ to take sb. into one's confidence, confidarsi con q. □ (polit.) vote of confidence [of no confidence], voto di fiducia [di sfiducia]. -
2 ♦ complete
♦ complete /kəmˈpli:t/a.1 completo; intero: a complete edition, un'edizione completa; a complete list, un elenco completo; The day didn't seem complete without him, la giornata non sembrava completa senza di lui; to make st. complete, rendere qc. completo; completare qc.; complete with, completo di; far from complete, lontano dall'essere completo2 compiuto; finito; completato; concluso: My work is now complete, la mia opera è ormai conclusa; (demogr.) complete years, anni compiuti3 assoluto; perfetto; totale: complete confidence, fiducia assoluta; a complete stranger, un perfetto sconosciuto; He's a complete fool, è un perfetto stupido; complete surrender, resa totale; complete failure, fallimento totale; It came as a complete surprise, è stata un'assoluta sorpresa♦ (to) complete /kəmˈpli:t/A v. t.1 completare; finire: to complete a collection, completare una raccolta; to complete a sentence, completare (o finire) una frase2 portare a termine; finire: to complete a task, portare a termine un incarico; to complete a degree, finire un corso di laureaB v. i.(leg. GB) perfezionare un contratto di vendita; firmare● to complete a full ticket, fare tombola ( gioco) □ (leg.) to complete a jail sentence, finire di scontare una condanna (al carcere) □ (fig.) to complete the picture, per completare il quadro □ (equit.) to complete the round, ultimare il percorso. -
3 every
['evrɪ]1) (each)every time I go there — ogni volta o tutte le volte che vado lì
that goes for every one of you! — questo è valido per ognuno di voi o per tutti!
in every way — (from every point of view) sotto ogni aspetto; (using every method) in tutti i modi
2) (emphatic)every bit as much as — proprio tanto quanto, esattamente quanto
every day — ogni giorno, tutti i giorni
every other day — ogni due giorni, un giorno sì e uno no
every other Sunday — ogni due domeniche, una domenica sì e una no, una domenica su due
••••every now and then every now and again every so often every once in a while di tanto in tanto, di quando in quando, a volte; it's every man for himself ciascuno per sé; every man for himself! si salvi chi può! every which way — in ogni senso
Note:Every is usually used in front of a singular countable noun: every student = ogni studente. When every precedes a plural countable noun, it means that something happens at regular periods of time, after a certain distance, etc.: he smokes a cigarette every two hours = fuma una sigaretta ogni due ore; you'll have to fill up with petrol every 450 miles = dovrai fare il pieno di benzina ogni 450 miglia. - Every is most frequently translated by tutti / tutte + plural noun: every day = tutti i giorni. When every is emphasized to mean every single, it can also be translated by ogni o ciascuno. For examples and exceptions, see the entry below* * *['evri]1) (each one of or all (of a certain number): Every room is painted white; Not every family has a car.) ogni2) (each (of an indefinite number or series): Every hour brought the two countries nearer war; He attends to her every need.) ogni3) (the most absolute or complete possible: We have every reason to believe that she will get better.) ogni4) (used to show repetition after certain intervals of time or space: I go to the supermarket every four or five days; Every second house in the row was bright pink; `Every other day' means èvery two days' or `on alternate days'.) ogni•- everyone
- everyday
- everything
- everywhere
- every bit as
- every now and then / every now and again / every so often
- every time* * *['evrɪ]1) (each)every time I go there — ogni volta o tutte le volte che vado lì
that goes for every one of you! — questo è valido per ognuno di voi o per tutti!
in every way — (from every point of view) sotto ogni aspetto; (using every method) in tutti i modi
2) (emphatic)every bit as much as — proprio tanto quanto, esattamente quanto
every day — ogni giorno, tutti i giorni
every other day — ogni due giorni, un giorno sì e uno no
every other Sunday — ogni due domeniche, una domenica sì e una no, una domenica su due
••••every now and then every now and again every so often every once in a while di tanto in tanto, di quando in quando, a volte; it's every man for himself ciascuno per sé; every man for himself! si salvi chi può! every which way — in ogni senso
Note:Every is usually used in front of a singular countable noun: every student = ogni studente. When every precedes a plural countable noun, it means that something happens at regular periods of time, after a certain distance, etc.: he smokes a cigarette every two hours = fuma una sigaretta ogni due ore; you'll have to fill up with petrol every 450 miles = dovrai fare il pieno di benzina ogni 450 miglia. - Every is most frequently translated by tutti / tutte + plural noun: every day = tutti i giorni. When every is emphasized to mean every single, it can also be translated by ogni o ciascuno. For examples and exceptions, see the entry below
См. также в других словарях:
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 — I. noun Date: 14th century 1. a. a feeling or consciousness of one s powers or of reliance on one s circumstances < had perfect confidence in her ability to succeed > < met the risk with brash confidence > b. faith or belief that one will act in… … New Collegiate Dictionary
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
confidence*/*/*/ — [ˈkɒnfɪd(ə)ns] noun [U] 1) the belief that you are able to do things well You should have more confidence in your yourself.[/ex] I m doing this course mainly to gain a little confidence.[/ex] The more he fails, the more he loses confidence.[/ex]… … Dictionary for writing and speaking English
confidence — 1 *trust, reliance, dependence, faith Analogous words: certitude, assurance, conviction, *certainty: credence, credit, *belief, faith Antonyms: doubt: apprehension Contrasted words: *distrust, mistrust: despair, hopelessness (see under … New Dictionary of Synonyms
Confidence Man (Lost) — Confidence Man Lost episode Sawyer considers burning the letter he wrote in 1979. Episode no … Wikipedia
complete — com|plete1 [ kəm plit ] adjective *** 1. ) including all the parts, details, or features: The library is fortunate to have an almost complete set of these publications. The system needs a complete overhaul. Our family just wouldn t feel complete… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
complete — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} verb 1 finish sth ADVERB ▪ on schedule, on time ▪ successfully ▪ The project has now been successfully completed. ▪ just, recently … Collocations dictionary
complete */*/*/ — I UK [kəmˈpliːt] / US [kəmˈplɪt] adjective 1) [only before noun] used for emphasizing that someone or something has a particular quality He s a complete idiot! She s the complete opposite to me. There had been a complete breakdown of trust and… … English dictionary