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withdraw

  • 1 withdraw

    (th) a retrage; (petr) a extrage, a detuba

    English-Romanian technical dictionary > withdraw

  • 2 withdraw

    [wið'dro:]
    past tense - withdrew; verb
    1) (to (cause to) move back or away: The army withdrew from its position; He withdrew his troops; They withdrew from the competition.) a (se) retrage
    2) (to take back (something one has said): She withdrew her remarks, and apologized; He later withdrew the charges he'd made against her.) a retrage
    3) (to remove (money from a bank account etc): I withdrew all my savings and went abroad.) a retrage
    - withdrawn

    English-Romanian dictionary > withdraw

  • 3 back out

    1) (to move out backwards: He opened the garage door and backed (his car) out.) a ieşi cu spatele, a da în marşarier
    2) (to withdraw from a promise etc: You promised to help - you mustn't back out now!) a da înapoi

    English-Romanian dictionary > back out

  • 4 dip into

    1) (to withdraw amounts from (a supply, eg of money): I've been dipping into my savings recently.) a lua bani (din)
    2) (to look briefly at (a book) or to study (a subject) in a casual manner: I've dipped into his book on Shakespeare, but I haven't read it right through.) a-şi arunca ochii peste

    English-Romanian dictionary > dip into

  • 5 drop out

    ( often with of) (to withdraw from a group, from a course at university, or from the normal life of society: There are only two of us going to the theatre now Mary has dropped out; She's dropped out of college.) a se retrage

    English-Romanian dictionary > drop out

  • 6 evacuate

    [i'vækjueit]
    1) (to leave or withdraw from (a place), especially because of danger: The troops evacuated their position because of the enemy's advance.) a părăsi, a evacua
    2) (to cause (inhabitants etc) to leave a place, especially because of danger: Children were evacuated from the city to the country during the war.)

    English-Romanian dictionary > evacuate

  • 7 retire

    1) (stop working permanently, usually because of age: He retired at the age of sixty-five.) a ieşi la pensie
    2) (to leave; to withdraw: When he doesn't want to talk to anyone, he retires to his room and locks the door; We retired to bed at midnight; The troops were forced to retire to a safer position.) a se retrage, a pleca
    - retirement
    - retiring

    English-Romanian dictionary > retire

  • 8 retreat

    [ri'tri:t] 1. verb
    1) (to move back or away from a battle (usually because the enemy is winning): After a hard struggle, they were finally forced to retreat.) a bate în retragere
    2) (to withdraw; to take oneself away: He retreated to the peace of his own room.) a se retrage (în/la)
    2. noun
    1) (the act of retreating (from a battle, danger etc): After the retreat, the soldiers rallied once more.) retragere
    2) (a signal to retreat: The bugler sounded the retreat.) retragere
    3) ((a place to which a person can go for) a period of rest, religious meditation etc: He has gone to a retreat to pray.) loc retras; retragere tem­porară (pentru meditaţie)

    English-Romanian dictionary > retreat

  • 9 scratch

    [skræ ] 1. verb
    1) (to mark or hurt by drawing a sharp point across: The cat scratched my hand; How did you scratch your leg?; I scratched myself on a rose bush.) a zgâria
    2) (to rub to relieve itching: You should try not to scratch insect bites.) a (se) scărpina
    3) (to make by scratching: He scratched his name on the rock with a sharp stone.) a grava
    4) (to remove by scratching: She threatened to scratch his eyes out.) a(-şi) scoate
    5) (to withdraw from a game, race etc: That horse has been scratched.) a retrage
    2. noun
    1) (a mark, injury or sound made by scratching: covered in scratches; a scratch at the door.) zgârietură
    2) (a slight wound: I hurt myself, but it's only a scratch.) zgârietură, julitură
    3) (in certain races or competitions, the starting point for people with no handicap or advantage.) linie de plecare
    - scratchiness
    - scratch the surface
    - start from scratch
    - up to scratch

    English-Romanian dictionary > scratch

  • 10 subside

    1) ((of land, streets, buildings etc) to sink lower: When a building starts to subside, cracks usually appear in the walls.) a se scufunda
    2) ((of floods) to become lower and withdraw: Gradually the water subsided.) a scădea
    3) ((of a storm, noise or other disturbance) to become quieter: They stayed anchored in harbour till the wind subsided.) a se calma

    English-Romanian dictionary > subside

  • 11 ultimatum

    plural - ultimatums; noun
    (a final demand made by one person, nation etc to another, with a threat to stop peaceful discussion and declare war etc if the demand is ignored: An ultimatum has been issued to him to withdraw his troops from our territory.)

    English-Romanian dictionary > ultimatum

  • 12 withdrew

    past tense; see withdraw

    English-Romanian dictionary > withdrew

См. также в других словарях:

  • withdraw — with‧draw [wɪðˈdrɔː, wɪθ ǁ ˈdrɒː] verb withdrew PASTTENSE [ ˈdruː] withdrawn PASTPART [ ˈdrɔːn ǁ ˈdrɒːn] 1. [transitive] BANKING to take money out of a bank account: • You can withdraw cash from ATMs in an …   Financial and business terms

  • withdraw — with·draw vb drew, drawn, draw·ing vt 1: to remove (money) from a place of deposit or investment 2: to dismiss (a juror) from a jury 3 a: to eliminate from consideration or set outside a category or group withdraw his candidacy b …   Law dictionary

  • Withdraw — With*draw (w[i^][th]*dr[add] ), v. t. [imp. {Withdrew} ( dr[udd] ); p. p. {Withdrawn} ( dr[add]n ); p. pr. & vb. n. {Withdrawing}.] [With against + draw.] 1. To take back or away, as what has been bestowed or enjoyed; to draw back; to cause to… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • withdraw — [v1] remove something or someone from situation abjure, absent oneself, back out, bail out, blow, book, bow out, check out, depart, detach, disengage, draw away, draw back, drop out, ease out, eliminate, exfiltrate, exit, extract, fall back, get… …   New thesaurus

  • Withdraw — With*draw , v. i. To retire; to retreat; to quit a company or place; to go away; as, he withdrew from the company. When the sea withdrew. King Horn. [1913 Webster] Syn: To recede; retrograde; go back. [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • withdraw — early 13c., to take back, from with away + drawen to draw, possibly a loan translation of L. retrahere to retract. Sense of to remove oneself is recorded from c.1300 …   Etymology dictionary

  • withdraw — *go, leave, depart, quit, retire Analogous words: abscond, decamp, *escape, flee, fly: retreat, *recede Contrasted words: arrive, *come …   New Dictionary of Synonyms

  • withdraw — ► VERB (past withdrew; past part. withdrawn) 1) remove or take away. 2) take (money) out of an account. 3) discontinue or retract. 4) leave or cause to leave a place. 5) cease to participate in an activity or be a member of a team or organization …   English terms dictionary

  • withdraw — [withdrô′, withdrô′] vt. withdrew, withdrawn, withdrawing [ME withdrawen: see WITH & DRAW] 1. a) to take back or draw back; remove b) to remove from use, consideration, etc. 2. to re …   English World dictionary

  • withdraw */*/ — UK [wɪðˈdrɔː] / US [wɪðˈdrɔ] verb Word forms withdraw : present tense I/you/we/they withdraw he/she/it withdraws present participle withdrawing past tense withdrew UK [wɪðˈdruː] / US [wɪðˈdru] past participle withdrawn UK [wɪðˈdrɔːn] / US… …   English dictionary

  • withdraw — with|draw W2 [wıðˈdro:, wıθ US ˈdro:] v past tense withdrew [ ˈdru:] past participle withdrawn [ ˈdro:n US ˈdro:n] ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(not take part)¦ 2¦(stop supporting)¦ 3¦(change your mind)¦ 4¦(say something is not true)¦ 5¦(product/service)¦ 6¦(leave… …   Dictionary of contemporary English

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