dictionnaire Polonais - Anglais

język polski - English

porozumieć się Anglais:

1. communicate communicate


We communicate by e-mail.
Last year, I spent so much time by myself that I almost forgot how to communicate effectively with others.
Studying how to communicate effectively is time well spent.
When will we have learnt enough English to be able to communicate fluently?
Ken is the best guy to communicate with Mr. Ogata. That is, if he prepares presentation materials.
The fact that educated Americans in general no longer share understandable background knowledge is a chief cause of their inability to communicate effectively.
The amount of time someone is willing to spend on something may communicate how important it is to him.
I hope you're prepared to communicate under these conditions, because e-mail is most effective and convenient when different time zones are taken into consideration.
What was that person saying? "He couldn't communicate in Russian at all so I told him off in Russian."
And we can communicate so many things in so many ways - with our faces, hands, bodies, and voices. We can even write our thoughts in words.
They dance in circles to communicate a short distance, and shake their bodies and dart back and forth to indicate a longer distance.
With a high, closed collar, figure-hugging cut, and large slits at either side of a straight skirt, the qipao is unique in its ability to communicate both modesty and sensuousness.
If we ever came in contact with an alien race, how would we communicate with it?
Gorillas cannot use their lips and tongues to speak, but they can communicate with people in other ways.
Knowing their languages is not enough to communicate effectively, because the methods of communication are determined by their cultures.

Anglais mot "porozumieć się"(communicate) se produit dans des ensembles:

chuj wam na mordy

2. put across put across


He was trying to put across a serious point.
He put across his idea.

Anglais mot "porozumieć się"(put across) se produit dans des ensembles:

phrasal verbs

3. deal with


problems to deal with
All of us deal with our nerves in daily life.
In this part, I will deal with the most frequent difficulties in obtaining a permit.
I deal with recruitment.
Who is the most difficult person you have to deal with?
if you overcome a problem or a feeling, you successfully deal with it
You've no idea how many problems I have to deal with as a mayor.
Plumber deal with damage.
The judge deals with many different types of criminals. Why do you have to deal with it?
I asked my assistant if there was anything else we had to deal with.
This is the only way Greece can deal with crises.
Sometimes you will have to deal with clients who are a bit irritated.
We need to deal with environmental problems like pollution.
we have to learn to deal with this situation successfully
Now we’re under pressure at work but we need to deal with that

4. need to build a bridge



5. interact


One way to learn a foreign language is to interact with native speakers of that language.
At school, teachers say he interacted well with other people
Penny is a bit shy but she interacts well with the children in her class.
To act on each other: "More than a dozen variable factors could interact, with their permutations running into the thousands"
You can interact with the TV using the remote control.
You stand up and walk through it; and the cast interacts with you.
interact with
All people are born free and have the same rights and dignity. They are imbued with reason and conscience and should interact with each other in a spirit of brotherhood.
Basing his invention of public relations on his uncle Sigmund Freud's psychoanalytic theory, Edward Bernays has left a lasting legacy on the media and how they interact with their audiences.

6. make an agreement



Anglais mot "porozumieć się"(make an agreement) se produit dans des ensembles:

Spain and Catalonia

7. refer


What does it refer to?
Could you tell me how to refer to the podium for an awards ceremony? The "winner's stand"?
Kareishu is a special smell that comes as old people age. Popular expressions such as: "Ossan kusai" or "Oyaji kusai" (smelly old man) refer to this smell.
American news stories always refer to "The Japanese" no matter who is being talked about.
In most societies, it's rude to refer to someone in the third person when he or she is standing right there.
I am using this term in Emmet's sense to refer to the psychological rules of language use.
If you have some questions, please refer to this guidebook.
For further information refer to the enclosed leaflet.
I would like to refer for a while to collective redress, which is very important.
First see your pediatrician, who may refer you to a pediatric allergist.
Do the first answers that come up on an internet search refer to the most commoncauses of a symptom?
She referred to Kant and Nietzsche during her presentation.
I think it id important to refer to their own documents
If you refer to something, you consult it. To check your spelling, you refer to a dictionary.
In present day Japan, "alchemy" is only used metaphorically; to refer to improper means of making money by politicians or religious hucksters with no morals or shame.