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desorientar
catalán
desorientar
Cause to be lost or disoriented.
disorientate
orient
portugués
desorientar
1
A punch in the face like that was enough to
disorient
anyone.
2
A strobe-light attached to one of his weapons was used to
disorient
victims.
3
Usually twenty-four hours was the minimum time needed to properly
disorient
a subject.
4
Healers knew pain, and the shock of it wouldn't
disorient
her for long.
5
This programming is called spin programming and is intended to
disorient
and confuse.
6
It can
disorient
them like a constantly faulty light, flicking on and off.
7
Meanwhile, audible conversations are shot so to deliberately
disorient
and dazzle the viewer.
8
His response would be textbook protocol in an attempted rendition:
disorient
and then attack.
9
The rocking motion of the craft started to
disorient
him.
10
Meant to
disorient
anyone who makes it this far.
11
Tom tossed a handful of concussive grenades to
disorient
them, but his team kept running.
12
Our vision is shot, and the lights
disorient
them.
13
They can confuse and
disorient
an enemy, weaving a fine mesh of sorcery called a fret.
14
Interrogation 101: Confuse and
disorient
the subject.
15
Making more than one new minion might weaken or
disorient
Toret enough for Chane to take advantage.
16
Virginia Wade, among others, suggested that the player was pulling some kind of stunt to
disorient
opponents.
disorient
·
disorient an enemy
disorient a space
disorient opponents
disorient the senses
disorient victims
portugués
desorientar
catalán
desorientar