initiate
61initiation — initiate ► VERB 1) cause (a process or action) to begin. 2) admit with formal ceremony or ritual into a society or group. 3) (initiate into) introduce to (a new activity or skill). ► NOUN ▪ a person who has been initiated. DERIVATIVES initiat …
62initiatory — initiate ► VERB 1) cause (a process or action) to begin. 2) admit with formal ceremony or ritual into a society or group. 3) (initiate into) introduce to (a new activity or skill). ► NOUN ▪ a person who has been initiated. DERIVATIVES initiat …
63Посвященный — (Initiate) От латинского слова Initiatus. Обозначение того, кто был принят и кому были открыты мистерии и тайны Масонства или Оккультизма. В древности те, кто были посвящены в тайное знание, преподаваемое Иерофантами Мистерий. В наши дни те,… …
64ICMD — Initiate Core Melt Down (Computing » Assembly) …
65ПОСВЯЩЕННЫЙ — (Initiate) От латинского слова Initiatus. Обозначение того, кто был принят и кому были открыты мистерии и тайны Масонства или Оккультизма. В древности те, кто были посвящены в тайное знание, преподаваемое Иерофантами Мистерий. В наши дни те, кто… …
66bring an action against — initiate legal proceedings, file a claim against …
67introduce changes — initiate modifications, make alterations …
68break the ice (to) — Initiate conversation; make the first sale of the day. ► “Twinning with North American cities helps to break the ice between Chinese and Canadian business executives.” (Canadian Business, Aug. 1994, p. 83) …
69float (to) — Initiate; the time between when a check is written and when an account is debited. ► “Still, a planned merger is not the only reason to float a debt issue.” (Chemical Week, Sept. 13, 1995, p. 28) …
70jump start (to) — Initiate, to get something going. ► “After Pinochet, the new leaders in Chile jump started the economy by shifting to free market economics.” (Prof. Ralph Folsom, University of San Diego, 1996) …