abate
11abate — (Del it. abate). 1. m. Eclesiástico de órdenes menores, y a veces simple tonsurado, que solía vestir traje clerical a la romana. 2. Presbítero extranjero, especialmente francés o italiano, y también eclesiástico español que ha residido mucho… …
12Abate — A*bate ([.a]*b[=a]t ), n. Abatement. [Obs.] Sir T. Browne. [1913 Webster] …
13Abate — (Abbate, ital.), s. Abbé …
14Abate — Abāte, s.v.w. Abbate …
15abate — (o abbate) s.m. [lat. tardo abbas atis, voce di origine aramaica]. (eccles.) [chi soprintende a un monastero maschile autonomo] ▶◀ padre superiore, priore, superiore …
16abate — (v.) put an end to (c.1300); to grow less, diminish in power or influence (early 14c.), from O.Fr. abattre beat down, cast down, from V.L. *abbatere, from L. ad to (see AD (Cf. ad )) + battuere to beat (see BATTER (Cf. batter) (v.)). Secondary… …
17abate — s. m. Abatimento; diminuição …
18abatė — abãtė dkt …
19abate — [v] lessen, grow or cause to grow less allay, chill out*, coast*, cool, cool it*, decline, decrease, diminish, dull, dwindle, ebb, go with the flow*, hang easy*, hang loose*, lay back*, let go, let it all hang out*, let up, mellow out*, moderate …
20abate — ► VERB 1) (of something bad) become less intense or widespread. 2) Law reduce or remove (a nuisance). DERIVATIVES abatement noun. ORIGIN Old French abatre to fell , from Latin battere to beat …