translate from — phr verb Translate from is used with these nouns as the subject: ↑translator … Collocations dictionary
translate from English — change English words or text into another language … English contemporary dictionary
translate — v. 1) (D; tr.) to translate from; into, to (to translate a book from French into Spanish) 2) (misc.) to translate at sight; to translate simultaneously * * * into to translate simultaneously to (to translate a book from French into Spanish) (D;… … Combinatory dictionary
translate — verb (translated; translating) Etymology: Middle English, from Anglo French translater, from Latin translatus (past participle of transferre to transfer, translate), from trans + latus, past participle of ferre to carry more at tolerate, bear… … New Collegiate Dictionary
translate — trans‧late [trænsˈleɪt, trænz ] verb 1. [transitive] FINANCE to change one currency into another: translate something into/to something • A strong dollar reduces the value of overseas profits when they are translated back into dollars. • The… … Financial and business terms
Translate — Trans*late , v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Translated}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Translating}.] [f. translatus, used as p. p. of transferre to transfer, but from a different root. See {Trans }, and {Tolerate}, and cf. {Translation}.] 1. To bear, carry, or remove … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
translate — [trans′lāt΄, tranz′lāt; trans lāt′, tranzlāt′] vt. translated, translating [ME translaten < ML & L: ML translatare < L translatus, transferred, used as pp. of transferre: see TRANSFER] 1. to move from one place or condition to another;… … English World dictionary
translate — (v.) c.1300, to remove from one place to another, also to turn from one language to another, from L. translatus carried over, serving as pp. of transferre to bring over, carry over (see TRANSFER (Cf. transfer)), from trans (see TRANS (Cf. trans… … Etymology dictionary
translate — ► VERB 1) express the sense of (words or text) in another language. 2) be expressed or be capable of being expressed in another language. 3) (translate into) convert or be converted into another form or medium. DERIVATIVES translatable adjective … English terms dictionary
From the beginnings to Avicenna — Jean Jolivet INTRODUCTION Arabic philosophy began at the turn of the second and third centuries of the Hegira, roughly the ninth and tenth centuries AD. The place and the time are important. It was in 133/750 that the ‘Abbāssid dynasty came to… … History of philosophy
translate — verb 1 change sth from one language to another ADVERB ▪ literally ▪ ‘Tiramisù’ literally translates as ‘pull me up’. ▪ accurately, correctly ▪ freely, loosely … Collocations dictionary