"prove" in inglés with examples - Collocation dictionary inglés

prove verbo

prove + sustantivo
Kolokacji: 103
prove one's point • prove one's innocence • prove one's case • prove one's worth • prove one's theory • prove one's ability • ...
verbo + prove
Kolokacji: 14
try to prove • failed to prove • need to prove • want to prove • go to prove • ...
prove + preposición
Kolokacji: 31
prove beyond • prove to • prove by • prove over • prove against • ...
prove + adjetivo/adverbio
Kolokacji: 362
prove difficult • prove successful • prove popular • prove useful • prove effective • prove impossible • prove fatal • prove wrong • ...
collocations grouped by meanings
Grup znaczeniowych: 70
(3) popular, unpopular, ideal
Kolokacji: 3
(21) eventually, finally
Kolokacji: 2
(23) influential, powerful, potent
Kolokacji: 3
(35) vulnerable, weak, powerless
Kolokacji: 3
(37) resilient, eager
Kolokacji: 2
(40) superior, justified
Kolokacji: 2
(41) deadly, lethal, toxic
Kolokacji: 3
(43) actually, illusory
Kolokacji: 2
(44) worthy, suitable, unfit
Kolokacji: 3
(46) guilty, painful, uncomfortable
Kolokacji: 3
(47) small, fully, amply
Kolokacji: 3
(52) repeatedly, continually
Kolokacji: 2
(53) overwhelming, irresistible
Kolokacji: 2
(54) wise, unwise
Kolokacji: 2
(57) simply, merely, simple
Kolokacji: 3
(58) premature, initially, timely
Kolokacji: 3
(59) valid, untenable
Kolokacji: 2
(64) empty, fragile, meaningless
Kolokacji: 3
1. prove incompatible = okaż się niezgodny prove incompatible
2. prove unsuited = okaż się niedostosowany prove unsuited
3. prove compatible = okaż się zgodny prove compatible
4. prove congenial = okaż się miły prove congenial
  • Conducting interviews for CineMagazzino also proved congenial: when asked to interview Aldo Fabrizi, Italy's most popular variety performer, their immediate personal rapport led to professional collaboration.
  • For most people, this supposedly horrifying arrangement has proven remarkably congenial, and it doesn't appear likely to change.
  • History was indeed to prove far more congenial to Harold than poetry.
  • Moreover, with its free-market flavor, the Chicago approach proved congenial to the Reagan Administration, which was born in Lexecon's infancy.
  • These chronicles, of which Columbus himself wrote the first, have proved remarkably congenial to the purpose of contemporary novelists and critics.
  • In short, marriage has evolved, usually in ways that prove so congenial we forget it was ever otherwise.
  • Life in his own monastery proved no more congenial than before.
  • But the peace that set in after the Israeli troops withdrew into Israel in late May has not proved so congenial, either.
  • The whole situation in the household was proving more congenial to Frank than he had expected it to be.
  • By contrast, few private white-collar workplaces have proven congenial to pro-union sentiment.
(66) apt, agile
Kolokacji: 2
(67) impervious, receptive
Kolokacji: 2
(69) robust, hardy
Kolokacji: 2
(70) palatable, disconcerting
Kolokacji: 2

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