- outmanoeuvre (Am outmaneuver)
- надмудрува со маневар, изманеврира
English-Macedonian dictionary. 2013.
English-Macedonian dictionary. 2013.
Outmanoeuvre — Outmaneuver Out ma*neu ver, Outmanoeuvre Out ma*n[oe]u vre, v. t. To surpass, or get an advantage of, in maneuvering; to outwit or frustrate by clever stratagems; to outgeneral. [1913 Webster +PJC] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
outmanoeuvre — UK US UK (US outmaneuver) /ˌaʊtməˈnuːvər/ verb [T] ► to get an advantage over other people or companies, often by doing something that is clever or slightly dishonest: »By forming an alliance the two firms succeeded in outmaneuvering the market… … Financial and business terms
Outmaneuver — Out ma*neu ver, Outmanoeuvre Out ma*n[oe]u vre, v. t. To surpass, or get an advantage of, in maneuvering; to outwit or frustrate by clever stratagems; to outgeneral. [1913 Webster +PJC] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
outmaneuver — or outmanoeuvre [out′mə no͞o′vər] vt. outmanneuvered or outmanoeuvred, outmanneuvering or outmanoeuvring to maneuver with better effect than; outwit … English World dictionary
outmanoeuvre — [[t]a͟ʊtmənu͟ːvə(r)[/t]] outmanoeuvres, outmanoeuvring, outmanoeuvred VERB When you outmanoeuvre someone, you gain an advantage over them in a particular situation by behaving in a clever and skilful way. [V n] He has shown once again that he s… … English dictionary
outmaneuver — verb defeat by more skillful maneuvering (Freq. 1) The English troops outmaneuvered the Germans My new supervisor knows how to outmaneuver the boss in most situations • Syn: ↑outmanoeuvre, ↑outsmart • Hypernyms: ↑outdo, ↑ … Useful english dictionary
outmanoeuvre — out|ma|noeu|vre BrE outmaneuver AmE [ˌautməˈnu:və US ər] v [T] to gain an advantage over someone by using cleverer or more skilful plans or methods ▪ He believed he could outmanoeuvre and trap the English king … Dictionary of contemporary English
outmanoeuvre — BrE, outmaneuver AmE verb (T) to gain an advantage over someone by using cleverer plans or methods than they do: a woman who could outmanoeuvre even the Prime Minister … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
outmanoeuvre — /owt meuh nooh veuhr/, v.t., outmanoeuvred, outmanoeuvring. Brit. outmaneuver. * * * … Universalium
outmanoeuvre — /aʊtməˈnuvə/ (say owtmuh noohvuh) verb (t) to outdo in or get the better of by manoeuvring. Also, US, outmaneuver …
opponent — noun 1 person who plays against sb ADJECTIVE ▪ chief, main ▪ dangerous, tough ▪ worthy VERB + OPPONENT ▪ a … Collocations dictionary