English | Italian |
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acacia [acacias] (shrub or tree) noun [UK: əˈk.eɪ.ʃə] [US: əˈk.eɪ.ʃə] | acacianoun |
academia (institution of higher education) noun [UK: ˌæk.ə.ˈdiː.miə] [US: ˌæk.ə.ˈdiː.miə] | universitànoun |
academia (scientific and cultural community engaged in higher education and research, taken as a whole) noun [UK: ˌæk.ə.ˈdiː.miə] [US: ˌæk.ə.ˈdiː.miə] | accademianoun |
academian (member of an academy) noun | accademiconoun |
academic (belonging to an academy or other higher institution of learning) adjective [UK: ˌæk.ə.ˈde.mɪk] [US: ˌæk.ə.ˈde.mɪk] | accademicoadjectiveThe academic year is over. = L'anno accademico è finito. |
academically (in an academic style or way) adverb [UK: ˌæk.ə.ˈde.mɪk.l̩i] [US: ˌæk.ə.ˈde.mɪk.l̩i] | accademicamenteadverb |
academician [academicians] (member of an academy) noun [UK: əˌk.æ.də.ˈmɪʃ.n̩] [US: ˌæk.ə.də.ˈmɪʃ.n̩] | accademicanoun accademiconoun |
academy [academies] (learned society) noun [UK: əˈk.æ.də.mi] [US: əˈk.æ.də.mi] | accademianoun |
academy [academies] (seminary) noun [UK: əˈk.æ.də.mi] [US: əˈk.æ.də.mi] | seminarionoun |
Academy of Sciences (learned society dedicated to sciences) noun | accademia delle scienzenoun |
acai (South American palms of the genus Euterpe) noun | açainoun palmanoun |
acanthite (a mineral form of silver sulfide) noun [UK: əkˈanθaɪt] [US: əkˈænθaɪt] | acantitenoun |
acanthosis (abnormal thickening of the stratum spinosum) noun | acantosinoun |
acanthus [acanthuses] (plant) noun [UK: əˈk.æn.θəs] [US: əˈk.æn.θəs] | acantonoun |
acarbose noun | acarbosionoun |
acarological (relating to acarology) adjective | acarologicoadjective |
acarology (the study of ticks and mites) noun | acarologianoun |
acarophobia noun | acarofobianoun |
acatalectic adjective | acataletticoadjective acatalettoadjective |
acatalepsy (the doctrine that human knowledge never amounts to certainty) noun | acatalessianoun |
acausality (lack of causality) noun | acausalitànoun |
accelerant (causing acceleration or speeding up) adjective [UK: æk.ˈse.lə.rənt] [US: æk.ˈse.lə.rənt] | acceleranteadjective |
accelerant [accelerants] (substance that can bond or mix with, or disturb, another substance and cause an increase in the speed of a chemical process) noun [UK: æk.ˈse.lə.rənt] [US: æk.ˈse.lə.rənt] | accelerantenoun |
accelerate [accelerated, accelerating, accelerates] (to cause to move faster) verb [UK: ək.ˈse.lə.reɪt] [US: æk.ˈse.lə.ˌret] | accelerareverbJohn accelerated. = John accelerò. |
accelerate [accelerated, accelerating, accelerates] (to hasten) verb [UK: ək.ˈse.lə.reɪt] [US: æk.ˈse.lə.ˌret] | affrettareverb |
accelerated ageing noun | invecchiamento acceleratonoun |
acceleration [accelerations] (act or state) noun [UK: ək.ˌse.lə.ˈreɪʃ.n̩] [US: ˌæk.ˌse.lə.ˈreɪʃ.n̩] | accelerazionenoun |
accelerationism (theory that capitalism or some of its processes should be accelerated) noun | accelerazionismonoun |
accelerator [accelerators] (accelerator pedal) noun [UK: ək.ˈse.lə.reɪ.tə(r)] [US: æk.ˈse.lə.ˌre.tər] | acceleratorenounHe pressed his foot on the accelerator. = Premette il piede sull'acceleratore. |
accelerator mass spectrometry analysis noun | |
accent [accents] (distinctive pronunciation associated with a region, social group, etc.) noun [UK: ˈæk.sent] [US: ək.ˈsent] | cadenzanoun calatanoun inflessionenoun |
accent [accents] (higher-pitched or stronger articulation) noun [UK: ˈæk.sent] [US: ək.ˈsent] | accentonoun |
accent [accents] (modulation of the voice in speaking) noun [UK: ˈæk.sent] [US: ək.ˈsent] | enfasinoun modulazionenoun tononoun |