banner banner banner
Collins Primary Illustrated Dictionary
Collins Primary Illustrated Dictionary
Оценить:
Рейтинг: 0

Полная версия:

Collins Primary Illustrated Dictionary

скачать книгу бесплатно


3 When you deal cards, you give them out to the players.

PHRASE 4 A good deal or a great deal of something is a lot of it.

dear dearer, dearest

NOUN 1 You call someone dear as a sign of affection.

ADJECTIVE 2 Something that is dear is very expensive.

3 You use dear at the beginning of a letter, with the name of the person you are writing to. • Dear Sunita.

death deaths

NOUN the end of the life of a human being or other animal or plant

debate debates, debating, debated

NOUN 1 argument or discussion

2 a formal discussion in which opposing views are expressed

VERB 3 When people debate something, they discuss it in a formal way.

debit card debit cards

NOUN a plastic card that allows someone to buy goods using the money in their bank account

debris

NOUN fragments or rubble left after something has been destroyed • After the eruption, volcanic debris was found scattered for miles.

debt debts

NOUN a sum of money that someone owes

debut debuts

NOUN a performer’s first public appearance

decade decades

NOUN a period of ten years

decaffeinated

ADJECTIVE Decaffeinated coffee or tea has had most of the caffeine removed.

decathlon decathlons

NOUN an athletic competition in which competitors take part in ten different events

decay decays, decaying, decayed

VERB When things decay, they rot or go bad.

deceased

ADJECTIVE FORMAL A deceased person is someone who has recently died.

deceit

NOUN behaviour that makes people believe something to be true that is not true

deceive deceives, deceiving, deceived

VERB If you deceive someone, you make them believe something that is not true.

December

NOUN the twelfth month of the year. December has 31 days.

decent

ADJECTIVE honest and respectable

deception deceptions

NOUN 1 something that is intended to trick or deceive someone

2 the act of deceiving someone

deceptive

ADJECTIVE likely to make people believe that something is true when it is not

decide decides, deciding, decided

VERB If you decide to do something, you choose to do it, usually after thinking about it carefully.

SYNONYM: make up one’s mind

decision NOUN

deciduous

ADJECTIVE Deciduous trees lose their leaves in the autumn every year.

decimal decimals

ADJECTIVE 1 A decimal system involves counting in units of ten.

NOUN 2 A decimal, or decimal fraction, is a fraction in which a dot, called a decimal point, separates the whole numbers on the left from tenths, hundredths and thousandths on the right. For example, 0.5 represents 5⁄10 (or ½); 0.05 represents 5⁄100 (or 1⁄20).

decision decisions

NOUN a choice or judgement that is made about something

decisive

ADJECTIVE 1 A decisive person is able to make decisions quickly.

2 having an important influence on the result of something • The first goal was a decisive moment in the match.

deck decks

NOUN a downstairs or upstairs area on a bus or ship

declare declares, declaring, declared

VERB 1 If you declare something, you say it firmly and forcefully.

SYNONYMS: announce, proclaim, state

2 FORMAL If something is declared, it is announced publicly. • War was declared in 1939.

decline declines, declining, declipned

VERB 1 If something declines, it becomes smaller or weaker. • The number of students has declined this year.

2 If you decline something, you politely refuse to accept it or do it.

decode decodes, decoding, decoded

VERB If you decode a coded message, you convert it into ordinary language.

decompose decomposes, decomposing, decomposed

VERB If something decomposes, it rots after it dies.

decorate decorates, decorating, decorated

VERB 1 If you decorate something, you make it more attractive by adding things to it.

2 If you decorate a room or building, you paint or wallpaper it.

decoy decoys

NOUN something used to lead a person or animal into a trap

decrease decreases, decreasing, decreased

VERB If something decreases, or if you decrease it, it becomes less. • The number of children in the class decreased rapidly.

decree decrees, decreeing, decreed

NOUN 1 an official order by the government, church or the rulers of a country

VERB 2 If someone decrees something, they announce formally that it will happen.

dedicate dedicates, dedicating, dedicated

VERB 1 If you dedicate yourself to something, you give your time and energy to it.

2 If you dedicate a book or piece of music to someone, you say that it is written for them.

deduct deducts, deducting, deducted

VERB If you deduct an amount from a total, you take it away.

deed deeds

NOUN 1 something that is done • a good deed

2 an important piece of paper or document that an agreement is written on

deep deeper, deepest

ADJECTIVE 1 going a long way down from the surface • a deep hole

2 great or intense • deep affection

3 a low sound • a deep voice

deer

NOUN a large, fast-running, graceful mammal with hooves, that lives wild in parts of Britain and other countries. Male deer have antlers.

deface defaces, defacing, defaced

VERB If you deface something, you damage its appearance in some way. • The gang defaced the walls with spray paint.

defeat defeats, defeating, defeated

VERB 1 If you defeat someone or something, you win a victory over them, or cause them to fail.

NOUN 2 the state of being beaten or of failing • The team was downhearted after its defeat.

defect defects, defecting, defected