BLOGGER TEMPLATES AND TWITTER BACKGROUNDS

VISI & MISI GMI - REVIVAL

VISI: Find And Restore The Lost  ( Luke 19:19 )

MISI: Mempersiapkan Gereja Tuhan Untuk Kembali Ke Firdaus


ARTI FIND, RESTORE DAN LOST  DALAM KAMUS BAHASA INGGRIS

FIND :


Find arinya: Verb: find (finds, found, finding) |fInd|   1. Come upon, as if by accident; meet with • We find this idea in Plato = bump, chance, encounter, happen   2. Determine the existence, presence, or fact of • We found traces of lead in the paint = detect, discover, notice, observe ~ descry, espy, sight, spot, spy catch out, find out, instantiate, see, sense, trace   3. Come upon after searching; find the location of something that was missed or lost • Did you find your glasses? • I cannot find my gloves! = regain lose ~ acquire, get attain, chance on, chance upon, come across, come upon, discover, fall upon, feel, happen upon, light upon, locate, rout out, rout up, strike, turn up   4. Establish after a calculation, investigation, experiment, survey, or study • The physicist who found the elusive particle won the Nobel Prize • find the product of two numbers = ascertain, determine, find out admeasure, count, enumerate, gauge, locate, number, numerate, rectify, redetermine, refract, sequence, situate, translate   5. Come to believe on the basis of emotion, intuition, or indefinite grounds • I find him to be obnoxious • I found the movie rather entertaining = feel ~ conclude, reason, reason out   6. Perceive or be contemporaneous with • We found Republicans winning the offices = see, witness ~ experience, go through, see catch   7. Get something or somebody for a specific purpose • I found this gadget that will serve as a bottle opener = come up, get hold, line up ~ acquire, get   8. Make a discovery, make a new finding • Physicists believe they found a new elementary particle = discover ~ conceive, conceptualise, conceptualize, gestate   9. Determine following investigation • She found that he had lied to her = discover ~ discover, find out, get a line, get wind, get word, hear, learn, pick up, see ferret, ferret out, rake up   10. Obtain through effort or management • She found the time and energy to take care of her aging parents • We found the money to send our sons to college ~ acquire, get   11. Decide on and make a declaration about • find someone guilty = rule ~ judge, label, pronounce   12. Be subject to a specified treatment or analysis • These aspects of civilization do not find expression or receive an interpretation = get, incur, obtain, receive ~ change take   13. Perceive oneself to be in a certain condition or place • I found myself in a difficult situation • When he woke up, he found himself in a hospital room ~ comprehend, perceive   14. Get or get back; recover the use of • She found her voice and replied quickly = recover, regain, retrieve ~ acquire, get access   15. Succeed in reaching; arrive at • The arrow found its mark ~ arrive at, attain, gain, hit, make, reach   16. Accept and make use of one's personality, abilities, and situation • My son went to Berkeley to find himself = find oneself ~ grow, maturate, mature   Noun: find |fInd|   1. A productive insight = breakthrough, discovery ~ brainstorm, brainwave, insight   2. The act of discovering something = discovery, uncovering ~ act, deed, human action, human activity breakthrough, catching, detection, determination, espial, finding, rediscovery, self-discovery, spotting, spying, tracing   Derived Noun: finder, finding Adjective: found, findable See also find fault, find oneself, find out

ARTI RESTORE 


restore : Verb: restore |ri'stor |   1. Return to its original or usable and functioning condition • restore the forest to its original pristine condition = reconstruct ~ regenerate, renew decompress, defibrillate, rehabilitate, reinstate, uncompress   2. Return to life; get or give new life or energy • The week at the spa restored me = regenerate, rejuvenate ~ regenerate, renew reincarnate, renew, resurrect, revive   3. Give or bring back • Restore the stolen painting to its rightful owner = restitute ~ give back, refund, repay, return   4. Restore by replacing a part or putting together what is torn or broken • She restored her TV set = doctor, fix, furbish up, mend, repair, touch on ~ ameliorate, amend, better, improve, meliorate, mend cobble, darn, fiddle, fill, heel, patch, patch up, piece, point, reheel, repoint, resole, revamp, sole, tinker, trouble-shoot, troubleshoot, vamp   5. Bring back into original existence, use, function, or position • restore law and order = reestablish, reinstate ~ alter, change, modify redeem   Derived Noun: Restoration, restoration, restorer Verb: overrestore Adjective: restorable, restorative

ARTI LOST 


Arti the lost Adjective: lost |lóst|   1. No longer in your possession or control; unable to be found or recovered • a lost child • his lost book • lost friends • lost opportunities ≈ gone, lost, mislaid, misplaced, missing, squandered, stray, straying, wasted found   2. Having lost your bearings; confused as to time, place or personal identity • I frequently find myself lost when I come up out of the subway = confused, disoriented ≈ unoriented   3. Spiritually or physically doomed or destroyed • a lost generation • a lost ship • lost souls • the lost platoon ≈ cursed, curst, damned, destroyed, doomed, lost, ruined, unredeemed, unregenerate, unregenerated, unsaved saved   4. Not gained or won • a lost battle • a lost prize ≈ confiscate, forfeit, forfeited won   5. Incapable of being recovered or regained • his lost honour ≈ irrecoverable, unrecoverable   6. Not caught with the senses or the mind • words lost in the din = missed ≈ incomprehensible, uncomprehensible   7. Deeply absorbed in thought • lost in thought = bemused, deep in thought, preoccupied ≈ thoughtful   8. Perplexed by many conflicting situations or statements; filled with bewilderment • she felt lost on the first day of school = at sea, baffled, befuddled, bemused, bewildered, confounded, confused, mazed, mixed-up ≈ perplexed   9. Unable to function without help = helpless ≈ hopeless   Noun: lost |lóst|   1. People who are destined to die soon • the agony of the lost was in his voice = doomed ~ people   Derived Noun: lostness Adverb: lostly Verb: lose (loses, lost, losing) |looz |   1. Fail to keep or to maintain; cease to have, either physically or in an abstract sense • She lost her purse when she left it unattended on her seat keep sleep off, white-out, whiteout   2. Fail to win • We lost the battle but we won the war win drop, drop one's serve, go down, remain down, take the count   3. Suffer the loss of a person through death or removal • She lost her husband in the war • The couple that wanted to adopt the child lost her when the biological parents claimed her ~ suffer   4. Place (something) where one cannot find it again • I lost my eyeglasses = mislay, misplace ~ lay, place, pose, position, put, set   5. Miss from one's possessions; lose sight of • I've lost my glasses again! find forget, leave   6. Allow to go out of sight • The detective lost the man he was shadowing after he had to stop at a red light   7. Fail to make money in a business; make a loss or fail to profit • I lost thousands of dollars on that bad investment! = turn a loss break even, profit   8. Fail to get or obtain • I lost the opportunity to spend a year abroad win   9. Retreat = drop off, fall back, fall behind, recede ~ regress, retrograde, retrogress   10. Fail to perceive or to catch with the senses or the mind • We lost part of what he said = miss overlook   11. Be set at a disadvantage = suffer ~ decline, worsen   12. Get rid of = cast, cast off, drop, shake off, shed, throw, throw away, throw off ~ remove, take, take away, withdraw abscise, autotomise, autotomize, exfoliate, exuviate, moult, shed, slough   Derived Noun: loser, losings See also get lost