słownik angielsko - angielski

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widespread po angielsku:

1. existing or happening over a large area or among many people



Angielskie słowo "widespread" (existing or happening over a large area or among many people) występuje w zestawach:

PNJA GE 16.11

2. spread or stretched out over time



Angielskie słowo "widespread" (spread or stretched out over time) występuje w zestawach:

WW Lesson #15

3. existing or happening in many places



Angielskie słowo "widespread" (existing or happening in many places) występuje w zestawach:

10C, 11A Vocabulary

4. widely diffused or prevalent



Angielskie słowo "widespread" (widely diffused or prevalent) występuje w zestawach:

academic 1-4

5. wide


The black angel spread those jet-black wings wide and flew up into the sky.
A wide leather belt would look good with that dress.
A buyers' market is a market in which goods are plentiful, buyers have a wide range of choices, and prices are low.
For some reason, I'm wide awake and can't fall asleep.
wide jaw
Cut the quartered Chinese cabbage into wide strips.
Shopping by mail through catalogs gives people a wide choice of merchandise.
The mythical Kraken, thick as a ship and three times as wide, once made an attack on Christopher Columbus's fleet... giving Columbus no choice but to eat him.
The first thing that came to my attention was the large sofa. It was covered in sober coloured leather, the seat and the back both looked wide and comfortable.
Hui Shi had many ingenious notions. His writings would fill five carriages; but his doctrines were erroneous and contradictory, and his words were wide of their mark.
He had never forgiven Adélaïde for not having those heavy breasts, those wide buttocks that are a credit to families.
By the 1940s, the qipao came in a wide variety of designs and fabrics, with an equally wide variety of accessories.
широкие улицы|wide streets
I expected a wide avenue, but I saw only a narrow path.
It was the first airplane with a wide body and with more than one aisle

Angielskie słowo "widespread" (wide) występuje w zestawach:

world building

6. Epidemic


An epidemic has broken out.
His prompt action prevented an epidemic.
Note: Epidemic is also an adjetiv.
Adoptions have gone up 600% since the epidemic of vagina dentata began.

7. found or distributed over a large area or number of people



8. common


A common way to finance a budget deficit is to issue bonds.
in common
Unless otherwise decided by the directors, if the company has a common seal and it is affixed to a document, the document must also be signed by at least one authorised person in the presence of a witness who attests the signature.
Mathematicians have this in common with the French: whatever you're trying to say to them, they take it and translate it in their own way and turn it around into something completely different.
It really is a nice theory. The only defect I think it has is probably common to all philosophical theories. It's wrong.
When there was despair in the dust bowl and depression across the land, she saw a nation conquer fear itself with a New Deal, new jobs, a new sense of common purpose. Yes, we can.
While the easiest way in metaphysics is to condemn all metaphysics as nonsense, the easiest way in morals is to elevate the common practice of the community into a moral absolute.
In a country where individualism is more common, personal objections to smoking in public are usually respected.
If you listen to great music even the most common things become something magnificent.
One can even buy a so-called Religion, which is really but common morality sanctified with flowers and music. Rob the Church of her accessories and what remains behind?
The verb 'help' takes to-infinitives and bare infinitives but bare infinitives are said to be the most common in casual text; as also used in this example sentence.
In most people's eyes she was nothing more than a common criminal. We are working together for a common purpose. Breast cancer is the most common form of cancer among women in this country.

Angielskie słowo "widespread" (common) występuje w zestawach:

weather 2, words meaning

9. something found in a vary large area



Angielskie słowo "widespread" (something found in a vary large area) występuje w zestawach:

TOEFL - Most important words 476 - 500

10. prevalent


Colds are prevalent this winter.
It is a prevalent belief, according to a nationwide poll in the United States, that Muslims are linked with terrorism.
The protein markers for three most prevalent brain cancers came up negative.
Renal excretion of metabolites was the prevalentroute of elimination of radioactivity.
The disease is prevalent in the area.
The most prevalent population group is 50-64, higher than the national average.
Drinking wine was a prevalent custom in ancient India.
Sharing equal credit in raising children is currently more prevalent
There's no question, none, that so-called lifestyle diseases -- diabetes, heart disease, stroke, some cancers -- are diseases that are far more prevalent here than anywhere in the rest of the world. And that's the direct result of eating a Western diet.
A number of health problems become more prevalent as people get older.
prevalent custom
Why do you think divorce is so prevalent?
They are more prevalent in any area where the economy is down.
The virus has been prevalent in the western side of the country close to Germany, where over 600 people have already contracted the virus, with 250 in January alone.
The term ‘milonguero style tango’ was coined in the early 1990s to describe the style of dancing tango that was prevalent in the milongas of downtown Buenos Aires in the 1950s.

Angielskie słowo "widespread" (prevalent) występuje w zestawach:

Overpopulation, English 2LO

11. pervasive


The smell of sweat was pervasive.
pervasive opinion in Ukraine about Russia is hate.
the pervasive influence of television
It was his only defence against the pervasive cold.
Modern day society is replete with situations that make chronic stress highly pervasive.
... when he heard a soft but pervasive screech erupt from somewhere outside the hut.
Seth, who at twenty-one months had been given a diagnosis of pervasive developmental disorder—a loosely defined diagnosis often given to toddlers when their condition is not understood—was assigned to the Ash Street Center, one of a hundred and seven

12. rife


If something ​unpleasant is rife, it is very ​common or ​happens a lot
Dysentery and ​malaria are rife in the ​refugee ​camps (<refugee> uchodźca
"Male chauvinism was rife in medicine."
The school is a place where Turks, Syrians, and Iraqis can connect, in a society where racism towards refugees is rife.

Angielskie słowo "widespread" (rife) występuje w zestawach:

Don’t hang up on customers