severe **** se·vere adj

severe **** se·vere adj
[sɪ'vɪə(r)]
-r comp -st superl (problem, case, flooding, injuries) grave, (climate, winter, restrictions) rigido (-a), (frost, cold) intenso (-a), (punishment, person) severo (-a), (examination) rigoroso (-a), (damage) ingente, (blow, criticism) duro (-a), (pain, headache, pressure) forte, (symptoms) acuto (-a)

to be severe (with sb) — essere severo (-a) (con qn)

a severe cold — un forte raffreddore

children with severe handicaps — bambini con gravi handicap

a severe shortage of staff — una forte carenza di personale

a severe punishment — una punizione severa

a severe blow — un duro colpo


English-Italian dictionary. 2013.

Игры ⚽ Нужна курсовая?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • severe — se•vere [[t]səˈvɪər[/t]] adj. ver•er, ver•est 1) harsh; unnecessarily extreme: severe criticism[/ex] 2) serious or stern in manner or appearance 3) grave; critical: a severe illness[/ex] 4) rigidly restrained in style, taste, etc.; plain; austere …   From formal English to slang

  • severe — se|vere W2S3 [sıˈvıə US ˈvır] adj ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(very serious)¦ 2¦(weather)¦ 3¦(punishment)¦ 4¦(criticism)¦ 5¦(difficult)¦ 6¦(person)¦ 7¦(plain)¦ ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ [Date: 1500 1600; : French; Origin: sévère, from Latin severus] …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • severe — se·vere || sɪ vɪr / vɪə adj. serious, grave; acute, critical; difficult, rigorous; simple, plain; harsh, strict …   English contemporary dictionary

  • DIEU — LE TERME «Dieu» (au singulier et avec une majuscule) renvoie dans notre culture pénétrée de christianisme à l’affirmation monothéiste de l’Ancien et du Nouveau Testament (la Bible juive, plus les premiers écrits chrétiens que les Églises tiennent …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • AUGUSTIN (SAINT) — Aurelius Augustinus est né le 13 novembre 354, à Thagaste (aujourd’hui Souk Ahras en Algérie); il est mort le 28 août 430 dans sa ville épiscopale d’Hippone, assiégée par les Vandales (aujourd’hui Annaba). C’est un Romain d’Afrique, qui a vécu,… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • persevere — per|se|vere [ˌpə:sıˈvıə US ˌpə:rsıˈvır] v [Date: 1300 1400; : French; Origin: persévérer, from [i]Latin perseverare, from severus; SEVERE] to continue trying to do something in a very determined way in spite of difficulties use this to show… …   Dictionary of contemporary English

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”