0 a heavy, metal object that is dropped into water to stop a boat from moving -- kotwica
1 someone who reads the news and announcements on a television or radio programme -- prezenter/ka
2 to stop a boat from moving by dropping a heavy metal object into the water -- rzucać kotwicę , zakotwiczyć
3 to make something or someone stay in one position by fastening them firmly -- mocować
4 to read the news or announcements on television or radio as your job -- pracować jako prezenter/ka
Clearly, empirically anchored rating methods for eliciting semantic similarity and dissimilarity deserve further consideration.
Both developments are motivated by a perceived need to achieve communicatively transparent test results anchored in observable behaviors.
Such statements are evidence of doctors' decision-making being anchored in empirical evidence about disease prevalence.
Legal instruments are often accompanied by financial sanctions, while economic instruments are anchored in legal regulations.
Responses were ranked according to the severity of stressors on a fully anchored fivepoint scale ranging from ' none ' (0) to ' severe ' (4).
In addition to occurring in locally anchored immediate space, speech events establish interactional spaces defined by the configuration and orientation of copar ticipants.
Importantly, this base anchors the inner life of the individual, sustaining a sense of resilience and social identification during the everyday negotiation of social relationships.
Richards discusses what she terms ' bad neighbours ', and their role as anchors for communication in the neighborhood.