| sustantivo |
| 1. |
place - any area set aside for a particular purpose; "who owns this place?"; "the president was concerned about the property across from the White House" |
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property |
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geographical area,
geographical region,
geographic area,
geographic region a demarcated area of the Earth
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boatyard a place where boats are built or maintained or stored
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sanctuary a consecrated place where sacred objects are kept
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center,
centre a position on a basketball team of the player who participates in the jump that starts the game
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colony a group of organisms of the same type living or growing together
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hatchery a place where eggs are hatched under artificial conditions (especially fish eggs); "the park authorities operated a trout hatchery"
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| 2. |
place - an item on a list or in a sequence; "in the second place"; "moved from third to fifth position" |
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position |
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item,
point a whole individual unit; especially when included in a list or collection; "they reduced the price on many items"
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postposition (linguistics) the placing of one linguistic element after another (as placing a modifier after the word that it modifies in a sentence or placing an affix after the base to which it is attached)
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preposition a function word that combines with a noun or pronoun or noun phrase to form a prepositional phrase that can have an adverbial or adjectival relation to some other word
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| 3. |
place - an abstract mental location; "he has a special place in my thoughts"; "a place in my heart"; "a political system with no place for the less prominent groups" |
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cognition,
knowledge,
noesis the psychological result of perception and learning and reasoning
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layer,
level,
stratum thin structure composed of a single thickness of cells
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| 4. |
place - a particular situation; "If you were in my place what would you do?" |
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shoes |
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position,
situation the act of positing; an assumption taken as a postulate or axiom
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| 5. |
place - proper or designated social situation; "he overstepped his place"; "the responsibilities of a man in his station"; "married above her station" |
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station |
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rank,
social rank,
social station,
social status a row or line of people (especially soldiers or police) standing abreast of one another; "the entrance was guarded by ranks of policemen"
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niche (ecology) the status of an organism within its environment and community (affecting its survival as a species)
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| 6. |
place - proper or appropriate position or location; "a woman's place is no longer in the kitchen" |
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condition,
status the procedure that is varied in order to estimate a variable's effect by comparison with a control condition
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| 7. |
place - the passage that is being read; "he lost his place on the page" |
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passage the act of passing from one state or place to the next
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| 8. |
place - a general vicinity; "He comes from a place near Chicago" |
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locality,
neck of the woods,
neighborhood,
neighbourhood,
vicinity people living near one another; "it is a friendly neighborhood"; "my neighborhood voted for Bush"
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| verbo |
| 1. |
place - identify the location or place of; "We localized the source of the infection" |
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localize,
localise |
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locate,
situate discover the location of; determine the place of; find by searching or examining; "Can you locate your cousins in the Midwest?"; "My search turned up nothing"
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| 2. |
place - place somebody in a particular situation or location; "he was placed on probation" |
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assign,
delegate,
depute,
designate select something or someone for a specific purpose; "The teacher assigned him to lead his classmates in the exercise"
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| 3. |
place - assign to (a job or a home) |
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assign,
delegate,
depute,
designate select something or someone for a specific purpose; "The teacher assigned him to lead his classmates in the exercise"
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| 4. |
place - take a place in a competition; often followed by an ordinal; "Jerry came in third in the Marathon" |
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rank take or have a position relative to others; "This painting ranks among the best in the Western World"
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| 5. |
place - finish second or better in a horse or dog race; "he bet $2 on number six to place" |
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race,
run compete in a race; "he is running the Marathon this year"; "let's race and see who gets there first"
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| 6. |
place - estimate; "We put the time of arrival at 8 P.M." |
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put,
set |
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approximate,
estimate,
gauge,
guess,
judge be close or similar; "Her results approximate my own"
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| 7. |
place - to arrange for; "place a phone call"; "place a bet" |
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order place in a certain order; "order the photos chronologically"
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| 8. |
place - sing a note with the correct pitch |
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sing to make melodious sounds; "The nightingale was singing"
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