English to Arabic Dictionary impress

impress

اعجاب
definition
verb
they immediately impressed the judges
make (someone) feel admiration and respect.
she impressed the damp clay with her seal
make a mark or design on (an object) using a stamp or seal; imprint.
noun
bluish marks made by the impress of his fingers
an act of making an impression or mark.
translation of 'impress'
verb
أثر,
دمغ,
طبع في الذهن,
ختم,
صادر للمصلحة العامة,
تجبر
noun
علامة مميزة,
أثر,
تأثير,
وقع تأثير,
دمغة,
بصم,
طابع,
بصمة,
طابع ختم
example
his desire to put his own 'impress' on the films he made
They are also-significantly, perhaps-those showing the deepest 'impress' of Swift's work.
Also, the creepiest images - the ones that linger like the 'impress' of clammy fingers on the back of your neck - are in the first volume.
he has to put on an act to 'impress'
the company should 'impress' the cards with a stamp
It was a move designed to 'impress' every eye watching.
Although mainstream church attendance is in decline, Scotland bears the 'impress' of its Protestant history.
The cultural life of Kashmir has had the 'impress' of great mystics.
Although this should be an easy victory for Kaddour, the pressure to 'impress' those at ringside will be great.
The 'impress' of age and experience is not only disregarded but frowned upon.
The conventional view held that cultural 'impress' on the New World was rudimentary, artless, too recent to have mellowed the garish profusion of nature.
Later, eager to 'impress' Mark in the pub, she foregoes her normal vodka-and-coke and nonchalantly orders a glass of wine.
he has to put on an act to 'impress'
The ‘visit’ was, in truth, a vast exercise in participatory theatre, designed to 'impress' his allies and intimidate his generals.
If you want to 'impress' any ideas on people, try being reasonable.
Andean cultures used seals to 'impress' designs on pottery
The office, like the chair, was designed to 'impress' more than actually function.
In contrast, entrances to palaces and places of worship are usually large and designed to 'impress' visitors with the power of the owner or the importance of a religion.
A book on British politics based on the 1980s and early 1990s inevitably bore the heavy 'impress' of Mrs Thatcher and the ideas and policies associated with her.
they carried a travel warrant authorizing them to 'impress' transport and requisition billets
When he started dating a girl he was quite seriously about, Mum opened a bank account, weekly deposited money into and gave him an access card so he could 'impress' his girl.
Brass and, to some extent, bronze finishing tools have been used for centuries by bookbinders to 'impress' designs and lines onto leather bindings.
Twenty-three different seals were used to 'impress' the 56 nodules from Thebes.
Golden light makes the landscape seem otherworldly, yet it has the reassuring 'impress' of humanity about it.
his desire to put his own 'impress' on the films he made
He was a prolific book illustrator, and as few other artists had the power to concentrate the 'impress' of his genius in even the smallest and slightest of his works.
As empty spaces, they carry an 'impress' of the pure sterility imparted by death - the sense of the ascetic and the pure that comes with too many washings of the same white sheet.
bluish marks made by the 'impress' of his fingers
Thus it is that, although religions claim universality, much of what is claimed to be universal is discovered to bear the 'impress' of culture, society and history.
bluish marks made by the 'impress' of his fingers
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