adjust

Etymology
From, borrowed from , or , from + ; Equivalent to en. Probably influenced in sense by (cf. modern ), from, from. The Middle English originally meant "to correct, remedy" in the late 14th century, and was reborrowed from Middle French in the early 17th century. According to another view on the etymology, the word was actually derived from Old French and then supposedly later influenced by folk etymology from Latin.

Verb

 * 1)  To modify.
 * 2)  To improve or rectify.
 * 3)  To settle an insurance claim.
 * 4)  To change to fit circumstances.
 * 1)  To settle an insurance claim.
 * 2)  To change to fit circumstances.
 * 1)  To settle an insurance claim.
 * 2)  To change to fit circumstances.

Translations

 * Bulgarian: ,
 * Catalan:
 * Chinese:
 * Mandarin:
 * Czech:
 * Dutch: ,
 * Esperanto: ,
 * Finnish:, , ,
 * French:
 * German:, , , , geringfügig ändern, leicht abändern, etwas verstellen
 * Greek:
 * Hungarian:, , , ,
 * Ido:
 * Italian:, ,
 * Japanese:
 * Kazakh: реттеу
 * Latin:, adapto
 * Manx: kiartee, cochiartee
 * Maori: whakarerekē
 * Norwegian: ,
 * Polish: ,
 * Portuguese:
 * Romanian:, ,
 * Russian:, , ,
 * Spanish:, ,
 * Swedish:, , , ,
 * Tibetan: བཅས་བཅོས་བྱེད
 * Vietnamese:
 * Welsh:


 * Armenian:
 * Bulgarian:
 * Dutch:, ,
 * Esperanto: alĝustigi, ĝustigi
 * Finnish:
 * French:
 * Georgian:
 * German: ,
 * Greek:
 * Hebrew:
 * Hungarian:, ,
 * Irish: ceartaigh
 * Italian:
 * Japanese:
 * Manx: kiartee
 * Norwegian: ,
 * Polish:
 * Portuguese:
 * Romanian:
 * Russian: ,
 * Spanish:
 * Thai:
 * Tibetan: བཅས་བཅོས་བྱེད


 * Finnish:
 * Greek:
 * Hungarian: ,


 * Bulgarian:
 * Chinese:
 * Mandarin:
 * Esperanto: akomodiĝi, adaptiĝi
 * Finnish:
 * German:,  ,  ,
 * Hungarian:
 * Portuguese:
 * Spanish:
 * Tibetan: སྙོམ་སྒྲིག་བྱེད


 * French:
 * Japanese:
 * Korean:
 * Slovene:
 * Vietnamese:, ,