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Новый большой англо-русский словарь - extricate

 
 

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Перевод с английского языка extricate на русский

extricate
1. выпутывать; высвобождать; выводить (из затруднительного положения) to extricate an animal from a net —- высвободить животное из сетей to extricate a carriage from the mud —- вытащить экипаж из грязи to extricate a friend from debt —- выручить друга, запутавшегося в долгах 2. выпутываться, высвобождаться to extricate oneself from difficulties —- выпутаться из затруднительного положения he extricated himself from (out of) a crisis —- он выкарабкался из критического положения
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См. в других словарях

1.
  v.  1) выводить (из затруднительного положения) (from, out of) to extricate oneself -  а) выпутываться;  б) mil. отрываться от противника to extricate casualties mil. - выносить раненых  2) разрешать (сложную проблему)  3) obs. распутывать (клубок) ...
Англо-русский словарь
2.
  v.tr. (often foll. by from) free or disentangle from a constraint or difficulty. Derivatives extricable adj. extrication n. Etymology: L extricare extricat- (as EX-(1), tricae perplexities) ...
Толковый словарь английского языка Oxford English Reference
3.
   transitive verb  (-cated; -cating)  Etymology: Latin extricatus, past participle of extricare, from ex- + tricae trifles, perplexities  Date: 1601  1.  a. archaic unravel  b. to distinguish from a related thing  2. to free or remove from an entanglement or difficulty  • extricable adjective  • extrication noun Synonyms:  ~, disentangle, untangle, disencumber, disembarrass mean to free from what binds or holds back. ~ implies the use of care or ingenuity in freeing from a difficult position or situation ~d himself from financial difficulties. disentangle and untangle suggest painstaking separation of a thing from other things disentangling fact from fiction untangle a web of deceit. disencumber implies a release from something that clogs or weighs down an article disencumbered of jargon. disembarrass suggests a release from something that impedes or hinders disembarrassed herself of her advisers. ...
Merriam-Webster Collegiate Dictionary
4.
  (extricates, extricating, extricated) 1. If you extricate yourself or another person from a difficult or serious situation, you free yourself or the other person from it. It represents a last ditch attempt by the country to extricate itself from its economic crisis... She tugged on Hart’s arm to extricate him from the circle of men with whom he’d been talking. = free VERB: V pron-refl from n, V n from n 2. If you extricate someone or something from a place where they are trapped or caught, you succeed in freeing them. (FORMAL) He endeavoured to extricate the car, digging with his hands in the blazing sunshine. = free VERB: V n ...
Collins COBUILD Advanced Learner's English Dictionary
5.
  ~ v 1 to escape from a difficult or embarrassing situation + from  (By 1897 his lawyers had managed to extricate him from the contract. | extricate yourself)  (I desperately tried to think of a way to extricate myself from Mrs. Bedford's questioning.) 2 to remove someone or something from a place in which they are trapped  (Firemen had to extricate the driver from the wreckage.) - extrication n ...
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
6.
  - 1614, from L. extricatus, pp. of extricare "disentangle," from ex- "out of" + tricж (pl.) "perplexities, hindrances." ...
Английский Этимологический словарь

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