abbr. 1. air temperature 2. ampere-turn 3. antitank 4. automatic transmission prep. 1. a. In or near the area occupied by; in or near the location of: at the market; at our
destination. b. In or near the position of: always at my side; at the center of the page. 2. To or toward the direction or location of, especially for a specific purpose: Questions came at us from all sides. 3. Present during; attending: at the dance. 4. Within the interval or span of: at the dinner hour; at a glance. 5. In the state or condition of: at
peace with one's conscience. 6. In the activity or field of: skilled at playing chess; good at math. 7. To or using the rate, extent, or amount of; to the point of: at 30 cents a pound; at high speed; at 20 paces; at 350°F. 8. On, near, or by the time or age of: at three o'clock; at 72 years of age. 9. On account of; because of: rejoice at a victory. 10. By way of;
through: exited at the rear gate. 11. In accord with; following: at my request. 12. Dependent upon: at the mercy of the court. 13. Occupied with: at work. at it Informal Engaged in verbal or physical conflict; arguing or fighting: The neighbors are at it again. American Heritage®
Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition. Copyright © 2016 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved. prep 1. used to indicate location or position: are they at the table?; staying at a small hotel. 2. towards; in the direction of:
looking at television; throwing stones at windows. 3. used to indicate position in time: come at three o'clock. 4. engaged in; in a state of (being): children at play; stand at ease; he is at his most charming today. 5. (in expressions concerned with habitual activity) during the passing of (esp in the phrase at night): he used to work at night. 6.
for; in exchange for: it's selling at four pounds. 7. used to indicate the object of an emotion: angry at the driver; shocked at his behaviour. 8. where it's at slang the real place of action [Old English æt; related to Old Norse at to, Latin ad to] n, pl at (Currencies) a Laotian
monetary unit worth one hundredth of a kip [from Thai] the internet domain name forAt
AT
at
(ăt; ət when unstressed)aT
at
(æt) at
(ɑːt; æt) at
(Computer Science) Austria
At
the chemical symbol for
(Elements & Compounds) astatine
symbol for
(Units) Also: A ampere-turn
AT
abbreviation for
(Education) attainment target
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
at1
(æt; unstressed ət, ɪt)prep.
1. (used to indicate a point or place occupied in space); in, on, or near: to stand at the door.
2. (used to indicate a location or position, as in time, on a scale, or in order): at age 65; at zero; at the end.
3. (used to indicate incidence or occurrence): at the sound of the bell; at low tide.
4. (used to indicate presence or location): at home; at hand.
5. (used to indicate amount, degree, or rate): at great speed; at high altitudes.
6. (used to indicate a direction, goal, or objective); toward: Look at that.
7. (used to indicate occupation or involvement): at work; at play.
8. (used to indicate a state or condition): at ease; at peace.
9. (used to indicate a cause or source): She was annoyed at their carelessness.
10. (used to indicate relative quality or value): at one's best; at cost.
[before 900; Middle English; Old English æt, c. Old Frisian et, Old Saxon, Old Norse, Gothic at, Old High German az, Latin ad]
at2
(ɑt, æt)n., pl. at.
a monetary unit of Laos, equal to 1/100 of a kip.
[1950–55; < Lao; ultimately < Pali aṭṭha eight]
at-
var. of ad- before t: attend.
AT
1. achievement test.
2. antitank.
At
ampere-turn.
At
Chem. Symbol.
astatine.
at.
1. atmosphere.
2. atomic.
3. attorney.
Random House Kernerman Webster's College Dictionary, © 2010 K Dictionaries Ltd. Copyright 2005, 1997, 1991 by Random House, Inc. All rights reserved.
At
The American Heritage® Student Science Dictionary, Second Edition. Copyright © 2014 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.
at
1. place or position
At is used to talk about where something is or where something happens.
There was a staircase at the end of the hallway.
You often use at to mean 'next to' or 'beside'.
He waited at the door.
You say that someone sits at a table or desk.
I was sitting at my desk, reading.
If you want to mention the building where something is or where something happens, you usually use at.
We had dinner at a restaurant in Attleborough.
He lived at 14 Burnbank Gardens, Glasgow.
In British English, you say that someone is at school or at university when you want to say that they study there.
He had done some acting at school.
After a year at university, Ben joined the army.
Speakers of American English usually say that someone is in school.
They met in high school.
You say that something happens at a meeting, ceremony, or party.
The whole family were at the funeral.
They met at a dinner party.
2. time
At is also used to say when something happens.
You use at when you are mentioning a precise time.
At 2.30 a.m. he returned.
The train leaves at 9 a.m.
If you want to know the precise time when something happened or will happen, you can say 'At what time...?' but people usually say 'What time...'' or 'When...?'
When does the boat leave?
'We're having a party on the beach.' – 'What time?' – 'At nine.'
You can say that something happened or will happen 'at dawn', 'at dusk', or 'at night'.
She had come in at dawn.
It was ten o'clock at night.
However, you say that something happened or will happen 'in the morning', 'in the afternoon', or 'in the evening'.
If something happens at a meal time, it happens while the meal is being eaten.
Let's talk about it at dinner.
You say that something happens at Christmas or at Easter.
She sent a card at Christmas.
However, you say that something happens on a particular day during Christmas or Easter.
They played cricket on Christmas Day.
In British English, at is usually used with weekend.
I went home at the weekend.
American speakers usually use on or over with weekend.
I had a class on the weekend.
What are you doing over the weekend?
Collins COBUILD English Usage © HarperCollins Publishers 1992, 2004, 2011, 2012
Translations
إلى ، عَلىبِ ،
بِ (سِعْر)عِنْدفيفي حالَة vzana vedefterforimed kod - kor áá, aî, í, viîá, fyrirá, í, hjá, viîá, viî, í
・・・に
...에서
uz
naobpriv
på
ที่
tại
AT
N ABBR =automatic translation → TA f
at
[æt]
When at is an element in a phrasal verb, eg look at, look up the verb.
PREP
1. (position)
1.3. (esp Internet) (= name of @ symbol) →
arroba f
"my e-mail address is jones at collins dot uk" () → -mi dirección electrónica es jones arroba collins
punto uk
2. (direction) (= towards) → hacia
the car was coming straight at us → el coche venía directo hacia
nosotros
to look at sth → mirar algo
Collins Spanish Dictionary - Complete and Unabridged 8th Edition 2005 © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1971, 1988 © HarperCollins Publishers 1992, 1993, 1996, 1997, 2000, 2003, 2005
at
[ˈæt](STRONG) [ət] prep
(referring to rates, speed etc) → à
at £1 a kilo → une livre le kilo
two at a time → deux à la fois
at 50 km/h → à 50 km/h
at full speed →
à toute vitesse
(referring to activity) to be at work → être au travail, travailler
to play at cowboys → jouer aux
cowboys
to be good at sth → être bon(ne) en qch
(referring to cause) shocked at sth → choqué(e) par qch
surprised at sth → étonné(e) de qch
annoyed at sth →
agacé(e) par qch
I went at his suggestion → j'y suis allé sur son conseil
Collins English/French Electronic Resource. © HarperCollins Publishers 2005
at
prep
(position) → an (+dat), → bei (+dat); (with place) → in (+dat); at a table → an einem Tisch; at the window → am or beim Fenster; at the corner → an der Ecke; at the top → an der Spitze; at home → zu Hause; at the university (US), at university → an or auf der Universität; at school → in der Schule; at the hotel → im Hotel; at the zoo → im Zoo; at my brother’s → bei meinem Bruder; at a party → auf or bei einer Party; to arrive at the station → am Bahnhof ankommen; he came in at the window → er ist durch das Fenster hereingekommen; the rain came in at the window → es hat durchs Fenster hineingeregnet; where are you at with your work? (inf) → wie weit sind Sie mit Ihrer Arbeit?; this is where it’s at (esp US inf) → da gehts ab (sl), → da geht die Post ab (inf); he doesn’t know where he’s at (inf) → der weiß ja nicht, was er tut (inf)
(direction) to aim/shoot/point etc at somebody/something → auf jdn/etw zielen/schießen/zeigen etc; to look/growl/swear etc at somebody/something → jdn/etw ansehen/anknurren/beschimpfen etc; at him! → auf ihn!
(time, frequency, order) at ten o’clock → um zehn Uhr; at night/dawn → bei Nacht/beim or im Morgengrauen; at Christmas/Easter etc → zu Weihnachten/Ostern etc; at your age/16 (years of age) → in deinem Alter/mit 16 (Jahren); three at a time → drei auf einmal; at the start/end of something → am Anfang/am Ende einer Sache (gen)
(= as a result of, upon) → auf (+acc) → … (hin); at his request → auf seine Bitte (hin); at her death → bei ihrem Tod; at that/this he left the room → daraufhin verließ er das Zimmer
(cause: = with) angry, annoyed, delighted etc → über (+acc)
(rate, value, degree) at full speed/50 km/h → mit voller Geschwindigkeit/50 km/h; at 50p a pound → für or zu 50 Pence pro or das Pfund; at 5% interest → zu 5% Zinsen; at a high/low price → zu einem hohen/niedrigen Preis; when the temperature is at 90 → wenn die Temperatur bei or auf 90 ist; with inflation at this level → bei so einer Inflationsrate ? all, cost, rate1
Collins German Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged 7th Edition 2005. © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1980 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1997, 1999, 2004, 2005, 2007
at
(ӕt) prepositionshowing.
1. position. They are not at home; She lives at 33 Forest Road
2. direction. He looked at her; She shouted at the boys.
3. time. He arrived at ten o'clock; The children came at the sound of the bell.
4. state or occupation. The countries are at war; She is at work.
5. pace or speed. He drove at 120 kilometres per hour.
6. cost. bread at $1.20 a loaf.
at allin any way. I don't like it at all.
Kernerman English Multilingual Dictionary © 2006-2013 K Dictionaries Ltd.
at
→ عِنْد v ved an σε a à kod a ・・・に ...에서 bij ved przy em у på ที่ de, da tại 在Multilingual Translator © HarperCollins Publishers 2009
- Turn
left at the next intersection (US)
Go left at the next junction (UK) - My plane leaves at ...
- I can't find the at sign
- I'm delighted to meet you at last
Collins Multilingual Translator © HarperCollins Publishers 2009