derive
31derive — [[t]dɪra͟ɪv[/t]] derives, deriving, derived 1) VERB If you derive something such as pleasure or benefit from a person or from something, you get it from them. [FORMAL] [V n from n/ ing] Mr Ying is one of those happy people who derive pleasure… …
32derive — [14] Like rival, derive comes ultimately from Latin rīvus ‘stream’. This was used as the basis of a verb dērīvāre, formed with the prefix dē ‘away’, which originally designated literally the ‘drawing off of water from a source’. This sense was… …
33derive — [dɪ rʌɪv] verb 1》 (derive something from) obtain something from (a specified source). ↘base something on a modification of: Marx derived his philosophy of history from Hegel. ↘Mathematics obtain a function or equation from another,… …
34derive — [14] Like rival, derive comes ultimately from Latin rīvus ‘stream’. This was used as the basis of a verb dērīvāre, formed with the prefix dē ‘away’, which originally designated literally the ‘drawing off of water from a source’. This sense was… …
35derive — Synonyms and related words: accept, acquire, admit, arouse, arrive at, assume, bag, be seized of, bring forth, bring out, bring to light, call forth, call out, call up, capture, catch, collect, come by, come in for, come into, conclude, contract …
36dérive — n.f. Vie errante : Il s est rangé, après cinq ans de dérive …
37derive v — Alcohol and calculus don t mix so don t drink and derive …
38derive — verb 1 (T) to get something, usually a pleasant feeling, from something or someone: derive sth from: He derived some comfort from the fact that he wasn t the only one to fail the exam. 2 (I) to develop or come from something else (+ from): This… …
39dérive — slinkis statusas T sritis automatika atitikmenys: angl. drift; runaway vok. Abweichung, f; Drift, f; Wanderung, f rus. дрейф, m; уход, m pranc. dérive, f …
40dérive — dreifas statusas T sritis automatika atitikmenys: angl. drift vok. Auswanderung, f; Drift, f; Wanderung, f; Zufallsauswanderung, f rus. дрейф, m pranc. dérive, f …