drive (drove, driven)

drive (drove, driven)
دَقَّ \ beat (beat, beaten): to hit many times: The rain was beating on the roof. drive (drove, driven): to strike a nail with force: I drove a nail into the door. hammer: to knock hard; use a hammer: The policeman hammered on the door. I hammered the nails in. pound: to strike (with) heavy blows with the hand: He pounded on the door. ring: (of a bell) to sound; to sound like bell, or by using a bell: The telephone rang. \ See Also رن (رَنّ)، أدخل (أدْخَلَ)، طَرَقَ بِعُنْف

Arabic-English glossary. 2015.

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  • drive — [drīv] vt. drove, driven, driving [ME driven < OE drifan, akin to Goth dreiban, Ger treiben, ON drīfa < IE base * dhreibh , to push] 1. to force to go; urge onward; push forward 2. to force into or from a state or act [driven mad] 3. to… …   English World dictionary

  • drive — [[t]dra͟ɪv[/t]] ♦ drives, driving, drove, driven 1) VERB When you drive somewhere, you operate a car or other vehicle and control its movement and direction. [V prep/adv] I drove into town and went to a restaurant for dinner... [V prep/adv] He… …   English dictionary

  • drive — I. verb (drove; driven; driving) Etymology: Middle English, from Old English drīfan; akin to Old High German trīban to drive Date: before 12th century transitive verb 1. a. to frighten or prod (as game or cattle) into moving in a desired… …   New Collegiate Dictionary

  • drive — ▪ I. drive drive 1 [draɪv] verb drove PASTTENSE [drəʊv ǁ droʊv] driven PASTPART [ˈdrɪvn] driving PRESPART drive a hard bargain COMMERCE to …   Financial and business terms

  • drive sb out — UK US drive sb/sth out (of sth) Phrasal Verb with drive({{}}/draɪv/ verb [T] (drove, driven) ► to force someone or something to leave or stop doing something: »Critics say the company is trying to drive out competition and charge high royalties.… …   Financial and business terms

  • drive sb out of sth — UK US drive sb/sth out (of sth) Phrasal Verb with drive({{}}/draɪv/ verb [T] (drove, driven) ► to force someone or something to leave or stop doing something: »Critics say the company is trying to drive out competition and charge high royalties.… …   Financial and business terms

  • drive sb/sth out — UK US drive sb/sth out (of sth) Phrasal Verb with drive({{}}/draɪv/ verb [T] (drove, driven) ► to force someone or something to leave or stop doing something: »Critics say the company is trying to drive out competition and charge high royalties.… …   Financial and business terms

  • drive sb/sth out of sth — UK US drive sb/sth out (of sth) Phrasal Verb with drive({{}}/draɪv/ verb [T] (drove, driven) ► to force someone or something to leave or stop doing something: »Critics say the company is trying to drive out competition and charge high royalties.… …   Financial and business terms

  • drive sth out — UK US drive sb/sth out (of sth) Phrasal Verb with drive({{}}/draɪv/ verb [T] (drove, driven) ► to force someone or something to leave or stop doing something: »Critics say the company is trying to drive out competition and charge high royalties.… …   Financial and business terms

  • drive sth out of sth — UK US drive sb/sth out (of sth) Phrasal Verb with drive({{}}/draɪv/ verb [T] (drove, driven) ► to force someone or something to leave or stop doing something: »Critics say the company is trying to drive out competition and charge high royalties.… …   Financial and business terms

  • drive sth up — UK US drive sth up Phrasal Verb with drive({{}}/draɪv/ verb [T] (drove, driven) ► FINANCE to force a price, value, etc. to go up: »Cool and wet weather drove up corn and soybean futures prices …   Financial and business terms

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