exclude

exclude
ik'sklu:d
verb
1) (to prevent (someone) from sharing or taking part in something: They excluded her from the meeting.) holde utenfor, utelukke
2) (to shut out; to keep out: Fill the bottle to the top so as to exclude all air.) holde ute
3) (to leave out of consideration: We cannot exclude the possibility that he was lying.) utelukke, se bort fra
- excluding
utelukke
verb \/ɪkˈskluːd\/, \/ekˈskluːd\/
1) stenge (noen\/noe) ute, nekte (noen) adgang
exclude him from our talks
steng ham ute fra samtalene våre
don't exclude the sun
ikke steng solen ute
2) utelukke, se bort (i) fra
exclude all possibility of doubt
utelukke enhver mulighet for tvil
3) forebygge, avskjære
excluding packing eller packing excluded eksklusive emballasje

English-Norwegian dictionary. 2013.

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  • exclude — ex‧clude [ɪkˈskluːd] verb [transitive] 1. to deliberately not include something: • The judge has decided to exclude her evidence. exclude somebody/​something from something • One study did not use a double blind design and was therefore excluded… …   Financial and business terms

  • exclude — EXCLÚDE, exclud, vb. III. tranz. A înlătura, a da afară, a elimina, a îndepărta, a excepta. ♦ refl. recipr. (Despre două elemente) A se respinge ca fiind incompatibile, contrare. – Din lat. excludere. Trimis de ionel bufu, 16.06.2004. Sursa: DEX… …   Dicționar Român

  • Exclude — Ex*clude , v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Excluded}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Excluding}.] [L. excludere, exclusum; ex out + claudere to shut. See {Close}.] 1. To shut out; to hinder from entrance or admission; to debar from participation or enjoyment; to deprive… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • exclude — ex·clude /ik sklüd/ vt ex·clud·ed, ex·clud·ing 1: to prevent or restrict the entry or admission of exclude hearsay evidence 2: to remove from participation, consideration, or inclusion (as in insurance coverage) the excluded perils include acts… …   Law dictionary

  • exclude — exclude, debar, blackball, eliminate, rule out, shut out, disbar, suspend are comparable when meaning to prevent someone or something from forming part of something else as a member, a constituent, or a factor. Exclude implies a keeping out of… …   New Dictionary of Synonyms

  • exclude — [eks klo͞od′, iksklo͞od′] vt. excluded, excluding [ME excluden < L excludere < ex , out + claudere, CLOSE3] 1. to refuse to admit, consider, include, etc.; shut out; keep from entering, happening, or being; reject; bar 2. to put out; force… …   English World dictionary

  • exclude — mid 14c., from L. excludere keep out, shut out, hinder, from ex out (see EX (Cf. ex )) + claudere to close, shut (see CLOSE (Cf. close) (v.)). Related: Excluded; excluding …   Etymology dictionary

  • exclude — [v] expel, forbid ban, bar, bate, blackball*, blacklist, block, bounce, boycott, close out, count out, debar, disallow, drive out, eject, eliminate, embargo, estop, evict, except, force out, get rid of, ignore, interdict, keep out, leave out,… …   New thesaurus

  • exclude — ► VERB 1) deny access to; keep out. 2) remove from consideration. 3) prevent the occurrence of. 4) expel (a pupil) from a school. DERIVATIVES excludable adjective excluder noun. ORIGIN …   English terms dictionary

  • exclude — [[t]ɪksklu͟ːd[/t]] excludes, excluding, excluded 1) VERB If you exclude someone from a place or activity, you prevent them from entering it or taking part in it. [V n from n] The Academy excluded women from its classes... [V n from n] The army… …   English dictionary

  • exclude — /Ik sklu:d/ verb (T) 1 to deliberately not include something, especially a particular group of people or things: a special diet that excludes dairy products | exclude sb/sth from sth: If we exclude uncompleted projects from the calculations, the… …   Longman dictionary of contemporary English

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