Sammanfattning
cover {substantiv}
cappuccio · coperchio · trapunta · coperta · copertura · coperto · fodera · copriletto · posto a tavola · copertina · albergo · calotta
cover {verb}
protetto · difeso
to cover {verb}
contenere · dare in abbondanza · colmare · includere · proteggere · difendere · covare · coprire · contemplare · prendere in esame · comprendere
Engelsk-italiensk översättning av "cover"
"cover" italiensk översättning
cover {substantiv}
cover {substantiv} (även: capuccino, coffee with milk, white coffee, capuchin pigeon)
And for that reason, we cover the LED with a phosphor cap.
Five different print areas at your disposal: cap side, cap back, clip, clip cover and body.
No less than six different print areas at your disposal: cap side, cap back, clip, clip cover, clip base and body.
On the bottom of the device, remove the battery cover and flip the switch to Bluetooth mode.
We have international fora and conventions that cover these matters.
We note that the Council's draft has not only removed the lack of financial cover, but left a certain margin.
I am very pleased that primary production has been included and that we now finally cover the whole of the food chain.
In Poland, our pages were named "Covers of the Year" three times in a row.
Topic: Restructuring measures conducted by pension plans with insufficient cover
How can you tell the difference between a speculative transaction and a cover operation?
Moreover, the GSP's social clause does not cover a sufficiently broad geographical area.
Cover-ups or even sweeping issues under the carpet are not the answer.
The second use is to cover balance of payments external deficits.
The annual maximum amount the guarantee fund can cover is EUR 200 million.
This is the timeframe that we intend to cover in future annual reports as well.
The network must cover the whole of Europe, so that everybody can be properly informed.
All the points expressed in the various amendments are already sensibly covered.
Teenage boys lived in isolation, their bodies covered with white clay.
cover {substantiv} (även: counterpane, coverlet, bedspread, bedcover)
cover {substantiv} (även: place-setting, setting, table-setting)
And this one, which is really telling, this was from July, this cover article:
As the front cover of The Economist said this week: Europe is not working!
She was the editor then of a magazine called ID, and she gave me a cover story.
So what we have right here is the cover of every single Sports Illustrated ever produced.
So these stories together became the Herald Tribune business cover.
cover {verb}
cover [covered|covered] {perf. part.} (även: shelter, protect)
In our opinion, species and environments protected by national legislation should also be covered by the directive.
cover [covered|covered] {perf. part.} (även: championed, shelter, protect)
Under cover of legal arguments, a number of MEPs have actually been defending the tobacco industry.
to cover {verb}
to cover [covered|covered] {vb} (även: to subsume, to embody, to embrace, to encompass)
The documents which are in this manual and which will be published in the OJEC should cover most of the material the questioner is asking...
The products that are covered by the trust center content are mentioned here.
Quite apart from this, the report also covers many administrative aspects.
The Union has reached the Orwellian stage of language covering the opposite of content.
It is 49 pages covering 593 different initiatives.
to cover [covered|covered] {vb} (även: to surfeit, to load)
to cover [covered|covered] {vb} (även: to fill, to surfeit, to load, to fill to the top)
It requires a sustained political and financial commitment to cover the gap between rhetoric and reality.
This proposal on road transport thus seeks to close one of the last remaining gaps, but even so it will not cover all drivers.
to cover [covered|covered] {vb} (även: to take into account, to subsume, to embody, to embrace)
I would also like it to cover organic production, for example.
One indicator called for in the report was added to the scoreboard to cover lifelong learning.
The financial task force run by the OECD will be broadened to cover the issue of combating money laundering.
It is important that the General Declaration of Human Rights in the Association Agreement should cover not only women but also minorities.
The new procedure is also likely to cover problems in implementing Directive 83/ 183, which deals with the tax exemptions granted when
to cover [covered|covered] {vb} (även: to shelter, to protect)
It is therefore vital to ensure not only that funding is available to cover the start-up costs of the RACs, but also that the councils...
When you’re ready to go, snap the cover back on the keyboard to power it down and toss it into your bag or backpack.
Our fraud protection policy covers you against any unauthorized purchases that were made with your Google Account.
In the case of biodiversity, for example, a proportion estimated to be equivalent to only 20 % of biodiversity would be protected, and only 13 % of European territory would be covered.
If they are not guilty of covering up crimes and protecting criminals, they are, nevertheless, the object of suspicion, as the countries ' names are not mentioned.
to cover [covered|covered] {vb} (även: to shelter, to protect)
to cover [covered|covered] {vb} (även: to nurse, to treasure, to sit on, to incubate)
to cover [covered|covered] {vb} (även: to shelter, to protect, to cap, to wrap)
All we need is a check from NASA headquarters (Laughter) to cover the costs.
These standards should cover the whole of the Mediterranean and all coastal countries.
Four years ago, virtually no one was still earning enough to cover their costs.
We must prevent them being insufficient to cover the commitments in the near future.
This percentage should be increased to cover all its expenditure.
to cover [covered|covered] {vb} (även: to contemplate, to gaze on, to consider, to think about)
The issue is whether the Directive should cover, not only clinical trials, but also in vitro research.
The proposal clearly cannot cover arrangements for which the Member States or other partners involved in the programme are supposed to
However, if we are too ambitious at the beginning and think that we can cover the whole biosphere, then we would not be serving
It will need to cover the sort of points raised by a number of Members in this debate, including the chairman of the Committee on Foreign
If we merely wanted a qualified majority vote in Council then a directive would have very limited scope and would only cover posted workers.
to cover [covered|covered] {vb} (även: to include, to deal with)
The report was to cover the European Union's involvement in RFOs and also in international agreements on fisheries.
to cover [covered|covered] {tran. vb} (även: to include, to embrace, to comprise, to contain)
Is there an acceptable political formula to cover all these objectives?
And should the directive be retrospective to cover every car that has ever been made?
It will refocus the Union’ s relationship with Africa to cover the whole continent.
If we say yes to it, Forest Focus will have to cover the social, economic and ecological fields in Europe.
The real path of globalisation for Europe is the enlargement of the European Union to cover all European countries.
Synonymer
Synonymer (engelska) till "cover":
Användningsexempel
Användningsexempel för "cover" i Italienska
Snarlika ord
cousinship · couture · covalence · covalent · covariance · covariant · cove · covenant · covenanted · coventual · cover · cover-up · coverage · coveralls · covered · covering · coverlet · covers · covert · covetous · covetously