- FASTEN INTO
- [V]INIUNGO (-ERE -IUNXI -IUNCTUM)INJUNGO (-ERE -JUNXI -JUNCTUM)
English-Latin dictionary. 2014.
English-Latin dictionary. 2014.
fasten */ — UK [ˈfɑːs(ə)n] / US [ˈfæs(ə)n] verb Word forms fasten : present tense I/you/we/they fasten he/she/it fastens present participle fastening past tense fastened past participle fastened 1) a) fasten or fasten up [transitive] to close something such… … English dictionary
fasten — verb 1 CLOTHES/BAG ETC also fasten up a) (T) to join together the two sides of a coat, shirt, bag etc so that it is closed: “I m going now,” she said, fastening her coat. | Fasten your seat belt! opposite unfasten b) (I) to become joined together … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
fasten — fas|ten [ fæsn ] verb * 1. ) transitive to close something such as a piece of clothing or a bag using the buttons, ZIPPER, CLIP, etc. on it: Please keep your seatbelts fastened while the seatbelt light is on. fasten something with something: It… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
fasten — [[t]fɑ͟ːs(ə)n, fæ̱s [/t]] fastens, fastening, fastened 1) V ERG When you fasten something, you close it by means of buttons or a strap, or some other device. If something fastens with buttons or straps, you can close it in this way. [V n] She got … English dictionary
fasten — 01. Please [fasten] your seatbelts in preparation for landing. 02. I pinched myself under the chin when I was [fastening] my bicycle helmet. 03. The shoestring was invented in England in 1790; before this, all shoes were [fastened] with buckles.… … Grammatical examples in English
fasten on — {v. phr.} To attach; tie something to make it secure. * / Fasten on your life jackets when you get into the life boats, the captain said./ … Dictionary of American idioms
fasten on — {v. phr.} To attach; tie something to make it secure. * / Fasten on your life jackets when you get into the life boats, the captain said./ … Dictionary of American idioms
fasten — [OE] Etymologically, fasten means ‘make fast’; it goes back ultimately to Germanic *fastuz, source of English fast. From this was derived a verb *fastinōjan, which passed into Old English as fæstnian. To begin with this seems only to have been… … The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins
fasten\ on — v. phr. To attach; tie something to make it secure. Fasten on your life jackets when you get into the life boats, the captain said … Словарь американских идиом
fasten — [OE] Etymologically, fasten means ‘make fast’; it goes back ultimately to Germanic *fastuz, source of English fast. From this was derived a verb *fastinōjan, which passed into Old English as fæstnian. To begin with this seems only to have been… … Word origins
set something into something — ˌset sth ˈin/ˈinto sth derived usually passive to fasten sth into a flat surface so that it does not stick out from it • a plaque set into the wall Main entry: ↑setderived … Useful english dictionary