Desarme in english
Disarm
pronunciation: dɪsɑrm part of speech: verb
pronunciation: dɪsɑrm part of speech: verb
In gestures
desarmar1 = pull + Nombre + to bits ; take + Nombre + to bits ; disarm ; dismantle ; take + Nombre + to pieces ; strip down ; take + Nombre + apart ; break + Nombre + apart.
Example: Microscopists think very little about plucking an innocent and unsuspecting insect from the garden, killing it, and pulling it to bits for study under a microscope.Example: The bronze gearing was far too corroded to be taken to bits, cleaned up, and made to work.Example: A Serbian man who stormed into the Serbian presidential building with two hand grenades was disarmed by the police after a five-hour standoff.Example: The reader has to reserve books on display and wait till the entire display is dismantled.Example: Furniture from ships was sometimes built-in, sometimes capable of being taken to pieces easily, and sometimes it bore fittings allowing it to be secured to deck or bulkhead.Example: Be careful when stripping the plough down as bolts for it are hard to find at present and ploughshares are going to cost you over £40 each for new ones.Example: The houses are built, then taken apart and trucked to where they are needed and then re-assembled.Example: He had a screwdriver in his pocket that would have broken it apart in two seconds.desarmar2 = knock + the bottom out of.
Example: The aggravated situation provides new arguments for supporters of military intervention, and knocks the bottom out of the adherents of the diplomatic process.desarme = disarmament.
Example: Research in developing countries into armament and disarmament is hampered by the reluctance of governments to release information.more:
» desarme nuclear = nuclear disarmament .
Example: This project was undertaken to see which resources were available in Canadian public libraries on the general issues of world peace, nuclear disarmament, the arms race, the nuclear threat, national defence policy.