fade

  • 21fadé — fadé, e adj. Qui a son compte, son fade (ivre, rossé ou malade). / C est fadé, c est fort ; c est bien servi …

    Dictionnaire du Français argotique et populaire

  • 22fade — fade·less; fade; fade·less·ly; …

    English syllables

  • 23Fade-in — [feɪd |ɪn ], das; [s] [engl. to fade in = einblenden]: das Einblenden (z. B. von Musiktiteln) …

    Universal-Lexikon

  • 24fade — (v.) early 14c., lose brightness, grow pale, from O.Fr. fader become weak, wilt, wither, from adj. fade pale, weak, insipid (12c.), probably from V.L. *fatidus, some sort of blending of L. fatuus silly, tasteless + vapidus flat, flavorless.… …

    Etymology dictionary

  • 25fade — [v1] lose color achromatize, become colorless, blanch, bleach, blench, clear, decolorize, dim, disappear, discolor, dissolve, dull, etiolate, evanish, evaporate, grow dim, lose brightness, lose luster, muddy, neutralize, pale, tarnish, tone down …

    New thesaurus

  • 26fade — ► VERB 1) gradually grow faint and disappear. 2) lose or cause to lose colour. 3) (with reference to a film or video image or recorded sound) increase or decrease in clarity or volume. ► NOUN ▪ an act or instance of fading. ORIGIN Old French… …

    English terms dictionary

  • 27Fade — Fade, 1) was den Geschmack od. das Pikante desselben verloren hat; 2) albern, abgeschmackt. Fadaisen (spr. Fadäsen), Albernheiten, Narrenpossen …

    Pierer's Universal-Lexikon

  • 28Fade — Fade, abgeschmackt, geschmacklos, albern; Fadaisen (–äsen), Albernheiten …

    Herders Conversations-Lexikon

  • 29fade — index decay, depart, disappear, dissipate (spread out), languish, perish, tarnish Burton s Legal Thesaurus …

    Law dictionary

  • 30fade — (izg. fȇjd) m DEFINICIJA sport vrsta udarca u golfu, loptica leti zakrivljenom putanjom ETIMOLOGIJA engl …

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