defy someone

defy someone
expr.
jemandem die Stirn bieten ausdr.

English-german dictionary. 2013.

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  • defy someone to do something — phrase to tell someone to prove that something is possible by doing it I defy you to produce one shred of evidence. Thesaurus: to tell people what to dosynonym Main entry: defy …   Useful english dictionary

  • defy someone to do something — to tell someone to prove that something is possible by doing it I defy you to produce one shred of evidence …   English dictionary

  • defy — [[t]dɪfa͟ɪ[/t]] defies, defying, defied 1) VERB If you defy someone or something that is trying to make you behave in a particular way, you refuse to obey them and behave in that way. [V n] This was the first (and last) time that I dared to defy… …   English dictionary

  • defy */ — UK [dɪˈfaɪ] / US verb [transitive] Word forms defy : present tense I/you/we/they defy he/she/it defies present participle defying past tense defied past participle defied 1) to refuse to obey someone or something The commander defied a direct… …   English dictionary

  • defy — de|fy [ dı faı ] verb transitive * 1. ) to refuse to obey someone or something: DISOBEY: The commander defied a direct order to surrender. 2. ) to happen in a way that is different from what usually happens or what you expect: Buildings leaned… …   Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • defy — [dē fī′, difī′; ] also, for n. [, dē′fī] vt. defied, defying [ME defien < OFr defier, to distrust, repudiate, defy < LL * disfidare < dis , from + * fidare, to trust < fidus, faithful: see FAITH] 1. to resist or oppose boldly or… …   English World dictionary

  • defy — de|fy [dıˈfaı] v past tense and past participle defied present participle defying third person singular defies [T] [Date: 1300 1400; : Old French; Origin: defier, from Latin fidere to trust ] 1.) to refuse to obey a law or rule, or refuse to do… …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • defy — verb defied, defying (T) 1 to refuse to obey a law or rule, or refuse to do what someone in authority tells you to do: He defied his father s wishes and married Agnes. 2 defy description/analysis/imagination etc to be so extreme or unusual that… …   Longman dictionary of contemporary English

  • defy — [14] The underlying notion of defy is of the renunciation of allegiance. It comes via Old French defier from a Vulgar Latin *disfidāre ‘renounce one’s faith’, a compound verb formed from the prefix dis , denoting reversal, and Latin fīdus… …   The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins

  • defy — [dɪˈfaɪ] verb [T] to refuse to obey someone or something Syn: disobey • defy belief/explanation etc to be almost impossible to believe, explain etc[/ex] …   Dictionary for writing and speaking English

  • defy — [14] The underlying notion of defy is of the renunciation of allegiance. It comes via Old French defier from a Vulgar Latin *disfidāre ‘renounce one’s faith’, a compound verb formed from the prefix dis , denoting reversal, and Latin fīdus… …   Word origins

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