English to Binisaya - Cebuano Dictionary and Thesaurus.

Dictionary Binisaya to EnglishEnglish to BinisayaSense
Word:

 

Word - rootword - affixes
padangat - dangat - pa-~
pa.da.ngat. - 3 syllables

pa- = padangat
padangat

padangat : send (v.)
dangat [dá.ngat.] : arrive (v.); attain (v.); reach (v.)

Derivatives of dangat


Glosses:
send
v. (motion)1. direct, sendcause to go somewhere.; "The explosion sent the car flying in the air"; "She sent her children to camp"; "He directed all his energies into his dissertation"
~ cast, contrive, throw, projectput or send forth.; "She threw the flashlight beam into the corner"; "The setting sun threw long shadows"; "cast a spell"; "cast a warm light"
~ move, displacecause to move or shift into a new position or place, both in a concrete and in an abstract sense.; "Move those boxes into the corner, please"; "I'm moving my money to another bank"; "The director moved more responsibilities onto his new assistant"
~ turnchannel one's attention, interest, thought, or attention toward or away from something.; "The pedophile turned to boys for satisfaction"; "people turn to mysticism at the turn of a millennium"
~ turnto send or let go.; "They turned away the crowd at the gate of the governor's mansion"
~ divertsend on a course or in a direction different from the planned or intended one.
~ routesend via a specific route.
~ refersend or direct for treatment, information, or a decision.; "refer a patient to a specialist"; "refer a bill to a committee"
~ airt, redirectchannel into a new direction.; "redirect your attention to the danger from the fundamentalists"
~ blowcause air to go in, on, or through.; "Blow my hair dry"
v. (contact)2. send, send outto cause or order to be taken, directed, or transmitted to another place.; "He had sent the dispatches downtown to the proper people and had slept"
~ channel, channelise, channelize, transmit, transport, transfersend from one person or place to another.; "transmit a message"
~ send inmail in; cause to be delivered.; "Send in your comments"
~ mail outtransmit by mail.; "The company mailed out the catalog to all potential customers"
~ mail, get offsend via the postal service.; "I'll mail you the check tomorrow"
v. (communication)3. mail, post, sendcause to be directed or transmitted to another place.; "send me your latest results"; "I'll mail you the paper when it's written"
~ expresssend by rapid transport or special messenger service.; "She expressed the letter to Florida"
~ airmailsend or transport by airmail.; "Letters to Europe from the U.S. are best airmailed"
~ registersend by registered mail.; "I'd like to register this letter"
~ express-mailsend by express mail or courier.; "Express-mail the documents immediately"
~ transfermove from one place to another.; "transfer the data"; "transmit the news"; "transfer the patient to another hospital"
v. (motion)4. send, ship, transporttransport commercially.
~ move, displacecause to move or shift into a new position or place, both in a concrete and in an abstract sense.; "Move those boxes into the corner, please"; "I'm moving my money to another bank"; "The director moved more responsibilities onto his new assistant"
~ bargetransport by barge on a body of water.
~ railroadtransport by railroad.
~ despatch, dispatch, send offsend away towards a designated goal.
~ forward, send onsend or ship onward from an intermediate post or station in transit.; "forward my mail"
v. (competition)5. place, post, send, stationassign to a station.
~ garrisonstation (troops) in a fort or garrison.
~ fortstation (troops) in a fort.
~ move, displacecause to move or shift into a new position or place, both in a concrete and in an abstract sense.; "Move those boxes into the corner, please"; "I'm moving my money to another bank"; "The director moved more responsibilities onto his new assistant"
~ site, locate, placeassign a location to.; "The company located some of their agents in Los Angeles"
v. (communication)6. get off, send, send offtransfer.; "The spy sent the classified information off to Russia"
~ transfermove from one place to another.; "transfer the data"; "transmit the news"; "transfer the patient to another hospital"
v. (possession)7. charge, commit, institutionalise, institutionalize, sendcause to be admitted; of persons to an institution.; "After the second episode, she had to be committed"; "he was committed to prison"
~ transfermove from one place to another.; "transfer the data"; "transmit the news"; "transfer the patient to another hospital"
~ hospitalise, hospitalizeadmit into a hospital.; "Mother had to be hospitalized because her blood pressure was too high"
v. (communication)8. air, beam, broadcast, send, transmitbroadcast over the airwaves, as in radio or television.; "We cannot air this X-rated song"
~ broadcast medium, broadcastinga medium that disseminates via telecommunications.
~ publicize, bare, publicise, airmake public.; "She aired her opinions on welfare"
~ satellitebroadcast or disseminate via satellite.
~ sportscastbroadcast a sports event.
~ telecast, televisebroadcast via television.; "The Royal wedding was televised"
~ interrogatetransmit (a signal) for setting off an appropriate response, as in telecommunication.
~ airbe broadcast.; "This show will air Saturdays at 2 P.M."
~ rebroadcast, rerunbroadcast again, as of a film.
attain
v. (social)1. accomplish, achieve, attain, reachto gain with effort.; "she achieved her goal despite setbacks"
~ scoreget a certain number or letter indicating quality or performance.; "She scored high on the SAT"; "He scored a 200"
~ get to, progress to, reach, makereach a goal, e.g.,.; "make the first team"; "We made it!"; "She may not make the grade"
~ bring home the bacon, deliver the goods, succeed, come through, winattain success or reach a desired goal.; "The enterprise succeeded"; "We succeeded in getting tickets to the show"; "she struggled to overcome her handicap and won"
~ beginachieve or accomplish in the least degree, usually used in the negative.; "This economic measure doesn't even begin to deal with the problem of inflation"; "You cannot even begin to understand the problem we had to deal with during the war"
~ come to, strikeattain.; "The horse finally struck a pace"
~ culminatereach the highest or most decisive point.
~ compassbring about; accomplish.; "This writer attempts more than his talents can compass"
~ averageachieve or reach on average.; "He averaged a C"
~ finagle, wangle, manageachieve something by means of trickery or devious methods.
v. (motion)2. attain, hit, reachreach a point in time, or a certain state or level.; "The thermometer hit 100 degrees"; "This car can reach a speed of 140 miles per hour"
~ arrive, come, getreach a destination; arrive by movement or progress.; "She arrived home at 7 o'clock"; "She didn't get to Chicago until after midnight"
~ max outreach a maximum.; "I maxed out on all my credit cards"
~ break evenattain a level at which there is neither gain nor loss, as in business, gambling, or a competitive sport.
v. (possession)3. attain, chance on, chance upon, come across, come upon, discover, fall upon, happen upon, light upon, strikefind unexpectedly.; "the archeologists chanced upon an old tomb"; "she struck a goldmine"; "The hikers finally struck the main path to the lake"
~ regain, findcome upon after searching; find the location of something that was missed or lost.; "Did you find your glasses?"; "I cannot find my gloves!"
v. (motion)4. arrive at, attain, gain, hit, make, reachreach a destination, either real or abstract.; "We hit Detroit by noon"; "The water reached the doorstep"; "We barely made it to the finish line"; "I have to hit the MAC machine before the weekend starts"
~ go, locomote, move, travelchange location; move, travel, or proceed, also metaphorically.; "How fast does your new car go?"; "We travelled from Rome to Naples by bus"; "The policemen went from door to door looking for the suspect"; "The soldiers moved towards the city in an attempt to take it before night fell"; "news travelled fast"
~ catch upreach the point where one should be after a delay.; "I caught up on my homework"
~ surmount, scalereach the highest point of.; "We scaled the Mont Blanc"
~ get at, accessreach or gain access to.; "How does one access the attic in this house?"; "I cannot get to the T.V. antenna, even if I climb on the roof"
~ bottom outreach the low point.; "Prices bottomed out and started to rise again after a while"
~ peak, top outto reach the highest point; attain maximum intensity, activity.; "That wild, speculative spirit peaked in 1929"; "Bids for the painting topped out at $50 million"
~ summit, breastreach the summit (of a mountain).; "They breasted the mountain"; "Many mountaineers go up Mt. Everest but not all summit"
~ topreach or ascend the top of.; "The hikers topped the mountain just before noon"
~ makereach in time.; "We barely made the plane"
~ makereach in time.; "We barely made the plane"
~ findsucceed in reaching; arrive at.; "The arrow found its mark"
~ culminatereach the highest altitude or the meridian, of a celestial body.
~ come through, get throughsucceed in reaching a real or abstract destination after overcoming problems.; "We finally got through the bureaucracy and could talk to the Minister"
~ run aground, groundhit or reach the ground.
reach
n. (location)1. range, reachthe limits within which something can be effective.; "range of motion"; "he was beyond the reach of their fire"
~ earreach, earshot, hearingthe range within which a voice can be heard.; "the children were told to stay within earshot"
~ eyeshot, viewthe range of the eye.; "they were soon out of view"
~ limitas far as something can go.
~ rifle range, rifle shotthe distance that a rifle bullet will carry.; "the target was out of rifle range"
n. (attribute)2. ambit, compass, orbit, range, reach, scopean area in which something acts or operates or has power or control:.; "the range of a supersonic jet"; "a piano has a greater range than the human voice"; "the ambit of municipal legislation"; "within the compass of this article"; "within the scope of an investigation"; "outside the reach of the law"; "in the political orbit of a world power"
~ extentthe distance or area or volume over which something extends.; "the vast extent of the desert"; "an orchard of considerable extent"
~ approximate range, ballparknear to the scope or range of something.; "his answer wasn't even in the right ballpark"
~ confinesa bounded scope.; "he stayed within the confines of the city"
~ contrastthe range of optical density and tone on a photographic negative or print (or the extent to which adjacent areas on a television screen differ in brightness).
~ internationality, internationalismquality of being international in scope.; "he applauded the internationality of scientific terminology"
~ latitudescope for freedom of e.g. action or thought; freedom from restriction.
~ purview, horizon, viewthe range of interest or activity that can be anticipated.; "It is beyond the horizon of present knowledge"
~ expanse, sweepa wide scope.; "the sweep of the plains"
~ gamuta complete extent or range:.; "a face that expressed a gamut of emotions"
~ spectruma broad range of related objects or values or qualities or ideas or activities.
~ palette, palletthe range of colour characteristic of a particular artist or painting or school of art.
n. (act)3. reach, reaching, stretchthe act of physically reaching or thrusting out.
~ movement, motility, motion, movea change of position that does not entail a change of location.; "the reflex motion of his eyebrows revealed his surprise"; "movement is a sign of life"; "an impatient move of his hand"; "gastrointestinal motility"
~ outreachthe act of reaching out.; "the outreach toward truth of the human spirit"
n. (cognition)4. compass, grasp, range, reachthe limit of capability.; "within the compass of education"
~ capableness, potentiality, capabilityan aptitude that may be developed.
~ ken, sightthe range of vision.; "out of sight of land"
v. (contact)5. reach, reach outmove forward or upward in order to touch; also in a metaphorical sense.; "Government reaches out to the people"
~ movemove so as to change position, perform a nontranslational motion.; "He moved his hand slightly to the right"
v. (communication)6. contact, get hold of, get through, reachbe in or establish communication with.; "Our advertisements reach millions"; "He never contacted his children after he emigrated to Australia"
~ communicate, intercommunicatetransmit thoughts or feelings.; "He communicated his anxieties to the psychiatrist"
~ pingsend a message from one computer to another to check whether it is reachable and active.; "ping your machine in the office"
~ pingcontact, usually in order to remind of something.; "I'll ping my accountant--April 15 is nearing"
~ raiseestablish radio communications with.; "They managed to raise Hanoi last night"
v. (stative)7. extend to, reach, touchto extend as far as.; "The sunlight reached the wall"; "Can he reach?"; "The chair must not touch the wall"
~ beoccupy a certain position or area; be somewhere.; "Where is my umbrella?"; "The toolshed is in the back"; "What is behind this behavior?"
~ reach intorun into or up to.
v. (motion)8. get to, make, progress to, reachreach a goal, e.g.,.; "make the first team"; "We made it!"; "She may not make the grade"
~ achieve, attain, accomplish, reachto gain with effort.; "she achieved her goal despite setbacks"
v. (possession)9. give, hand, pass, pass on, reach, turn overplace into the hands or custody of.; "hand me the spoon, please"; "Turn the files over to me, please"; "He turned over the prisoner to his lawyers"
~ giveleave with; give temporarily.; "Can I give you my keys while I go in the pool?"; "Can I give you the children for the weekend?"
~ transfercause to change ownership.; "I transferred my stock holdings to my children"
~ sneak, slippass on stealthily.; "He slipped me the key when nobody was looking"
~ dealgive (a specific card) to a player.; "He dealt me the Queen of Spades"
~ fork out, fork over, fork up, hand over, turn in, deliver, renderto surrender someone or something to another.; "the guard delivered the criminal to the police"; "render up the prisoners"; "render the town to the enemy"; "fork over the money"
~ relinquish, resign, give up, release, freepart with a possession or right.; "I am relinquishing my bedroom to the long-term house guest"; "resign a claim to the throne"
~ entrust, intrust, confide, commit, trustconfer a trust upon.; "The messenger was entrusted with the general's secret"; "I commit my soul to God"
~ entrust, leaveput into the care or protection of someone.; "He left the decision to his deputy"; "leave your child the nurse's care"
v. (competition)10. reach, strain, striveto exert much effort or energy.; "straining our ears to hear"
~ extend oneselfstrain to the utmost.
~ kill oneself, overexert oneselfstrain oneself more than is healthy.
~ labor, labour, tug, push, drivestrive and make an effort to reach a goal.; "She tugged for years to make a decent living"; "We have to push a little to make the deadline!"; "She is driving away at her doctoral thesis"
~ bother, inconvenience oneself, trouble oneself, troubletake the trouble to do something; concern oneself.; "He did not trouble to call his mother on her birthday"; "Don't bother, please"