dislodge

dislodge
dis'lo‹
verb
(to knock out of place: He accidentally dislodged a stone from the wall.) sacar, desbloquear, desalojar, desprender
dislodge
tr[dɪs'lɒʤ]
transitive verb
1 (object) sacar
2 (person) desalojar (from , de), desplazar (from, de)
dislodge [dɪs'lɑʤ] vt, -lodged ; -lodging : sacar, desalojar, desplazar
dislodge
v.
apartar v.
desalojar v.
desanidar v.
dɪs'lɑːdʒ, dɪs'lɒdʒ
transitive verb
a) (shift, remove) sacar*

the wind dislodged some tiles — el viento causó que se soltaran varias tejas

b) (drive out)

to dislodge somebody (from something) — desplazar* a alguien (de algo)

[dɪs'lɒdʒ]
VT
1) (=remove) [+ stone, obstruction] sacar; [+ enemy] desalojar (from de); [+ party, ruler] desbancar
2) (=cause to fall) hacer caer
* * *
[dɪs'lɑːdʒ, dɪs'lɒdʒ]
transitive verb
a) (shift, remove) sacar*

the wind dislodged some tiles — el viento causó que se soltaran varias tejas

b) (drive out)

to dislodge somebody (from something) — desplazar* a alguien (de algo)


English-spanish dictionary. 2013.

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Mira otros diccionarios:

  • Dislodge — Dis*lodge , v. i. To go from a place of rest. [R.] [1913 Webster] Where Light and Darkness in perpetual round Lodge and dislodge by turns. Milton. [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Dislodge — Dis*lodge , v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Dislodged}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Dislodging}.] [OF. deslogier, F. d[ e]loger; pref. des (L. dis ) + OF. logier, F. loger. See {Lodge}.] 1. To drive from a lodge or place of rest; to remove from a place of quiet or… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Dislodge — Dis*lodge , n. Dwelling apart; separation. [R.] [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • dislodge — I verb banish, carry off, cart away, cashier, cast out, deicere, delocalize, demote, depellere, deport, depose, deracinate, dethrone, detrude, disbar, discharge, disemploy, disenthrone, disestablish, dislocate, dismiss, displace, displant,… …   Law dictionary

  • dislodge — c.1400, from O.Fr. deslogier to leave or cause to leave a lodging place; expel, drive away, from des do the opposite of (see DIS (Cf. dis )) + logier (see LODGE (Cf. lodge)). Related: Dislodged; dislodging …   Etymology dictionary

  • dislodge — [v] knock loose dig out, disentangle, dislocate, displace, disturb, eject, evict, extricate, force out, oust, remove, uproot; concepts 147,213 …   New thesaurus

  • dislodge — ► VERB ▪ remove from a fixed position. DERIVATIVES dislodgement noun …   English terms dictionary

  • dislodge — [dis läj′] vt. dislodged, dislodging [ME disloggen < OFr deslogier: see DIS & LODGE] to force from a position or place where lodged, hiding, etc.; drive out vi. to leave a lodging place dislodgment n …   English World dictionary

  • dislodge — UK [dɪsˈlɒdʒ] / US [dɪsˈlɑdʒ] verb [transitive] Word forms dislodge : present tense I/you/we/they dislodge he/she/it dislodges present participle dislodging past tense dislodged past participle dislodged 1) to force something out of its position… …   English dictionary

  • dislodge — [[t]dɪ̱slɒ̱ʤ[/t]] dislodges, dislodging, dislodged 1) VERB To dislodge something means to remove it from where it was fixed or held. [V n from n] Rainfall from a tropical storm dislodged the debris from the slopes of the volcano... [V ed] In the… …   English dictionary

  • dislodge — v. (D; tr.) to dislodge from (the doctor dislodged the bone from her throat) * * * [dɪs lɒdʒ] (D; tr.) to dislodge from (the doctor dislodged the bone from her throat) …   Combinatory dictionary

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