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21 town
1) (a group of houses, shops, schools etc, that is bigger than a village but smaller than a city: I'm going into town to buy a dress; He's in town doing some shopping.) by2) (the people who live in such a group of houses etc: The whole town turned out to greet the heroes.) by(befolkning)3) (towns in general as opposed to the countryside: Do you live in the country or the town?) by•- town hall
- townsfolk
- townspeople
- go to townbysubst. \/taʊn\/1) by2) (by)sentrum3) (i England, ofte) Londonjeg reiser inn til byen (dvs. London) én gang i uken4) by-5) (amer.) (by)kommune, (by)områdearms of a town se ➢ armsbe out of town være bortreistbetween towns mellombysgo (out) on the town ( slang) gjøre byen, gå ut (for å more seg)go to town ( slang) overgå seg selv, legge ned sin sjel lykkes helt, ha hellet med seg, skyte gullfuglen flotte seg, slå stort på gå ut på byen, (gå ut og) more seg, ranglego (up) to town dra (inn) til byenin town i byenleave town reise (bort) fra byen, forlate byenlive on the town være på forsorgen, leve på trygdpaint the town red ( overført) sette byen på ende (ved å feste og more seg)the talk of the town det vanlige samtaleemnet det hele byen snakker omtown and gown ( i universitetsby) folk og studenterthe town of London London by -
22 vernacular
və'nækjulə 1. adjective(colloquial or informally conversational: vernacular speech/language.) folkelig, lokal-, omgangs-2. noun(the common informal language of a country etc as opposed to its formal or literary language: They spoke to each other in the vernacular of the region.) folkemål, dialekt, muntlig språkdialektIsubst. \/vəˈnækjʊlə\/1) morsmål2) forklaring: folkelig ord eller uttrykk3) distriktets eget språk, dagligtale, folkemål, dialekt, målføre4) fagspråk, fagsjargong5) (botanikk, zoologi) hjemlig plante- eller dyrenavnin the vernacular på folkemålet, i enkle vendingerthe vernacular of the stage teaterspråk(et)IIadj. \/vəˈnækjʊlə\/1) folkelig, folke-, hjemlig2) lokal(preget), stedligvernacular name (botanikk, zoologi) hjemlig navn -
23 verse
və:s1) (a number of lines of poetry, grouped together and forming a separate unit within the poem, song, hymn etc: This song has three verses.) vers2) (a short section in a chapter of the Bible.) vers3) (poetry, as opposed to prose: He expressed his ideas in verse.) poesi, verspoesi--------vers--------verselinjeIsubst. \/vɜːs\/1) ( bibelsk) poesi, vers, dikt2) strofe, vers3) verslinjein verse på versput into verse sette på vers, versifisereIIverbskrive vers, uttrykke på versverse oneself in sette seg inn i -
24 voluntarism
subst. \/ˈvɒlənt(ə)rɪ(zə)m\/ eller voluntaryism1) frivillighet, frivillighetssystem2) ( filosofi) voluntarisme3) system med frie kollektivforhandlinger (uten statlig innblanding) -
25 dry land
(the land as opposed to the sea etc.) fastland, fast grunn -
26 in principle
(in general, as opposed to in detail.) i prinsippet, prinsipielt -
27 modern language
(a language spoken nowadays (as opposed to ancient Greek, Latin etc).) levende språk -
28 put into practice
(to do, as opposed to planning etc: He never gets the chance to put his ideas into practice.) sette ut i livet -
29 Roman numerals
(I,II,III etc, as opposed to the Arabic numerals 1,2,3 etc.) romertall -
30 the people
(the ordinary people of a country as opposed to the aristocracy etc: government for the people by the people.) folket
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См. также в других словарях:
opposed — ([o^]p*p[=o]zd ), opposing opposing ([o^]p*p[=o] z[i^]ng),adj. 1. characterized by active opposition; as, two bitterly opposing schools of thought. Syn: antagonistic, antipathetic, antipathetical, opponent. [WordNet 1.5] 2. acting in opposition… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
opposed — opposed; un·opposed; … English syllables
opposed — index adverse (hostile), antipathetic (oppositional), averse, contradictory, contrary, different … Law dictionary
opposed to — index contra (adverb), contra (preposition) Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
opposed — / opposing [adj] antagonistic, against against the grain*, allergic*, anti*, antipathetic, antithetical, antonymous, at cross purposes, at odds, averse, battling, clashing, combating, conflicting, confronting, contrary, controverting, counter,… … New thesaurus
opposed — op|posed [ ə pouzd ] adjective ** 1. ) someone who is opposed to something thinks it should not happen or should not be done: opposed to: He was bitterly opposed to the war. be opposed to doing something: Some residents were opposed to naming the … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
opposed */*/ — UK [əˈpəʊzd] / US [əˈpoʊzd] adjective 1) someone who is opposed to something thinks it should not happen or should not be done opposed to: He was bitterly opposed to the war. be opposed to doing something: Some residents were opposed to naming… … English dictionary
opposed — [[t]əpo͟ʊzd[/t]] ♦♦♦ 1) ADJ GRADED: v link ADJ to n/ ing If you are opposed to something, you disagree with it or disapprove of it. I am utterly opposed to any form of terrorism... We are strongly opposed to the presence of America in this region … English dictionary
opposed — op|posed [əˈpəuzd US əˈpouzd] adj [not before noun] 1.) be opposed to sth to disagree with something such as a plan or system ▪ Most of us are opposed to the death penalty. 2.) two ideas that are opposed to each other are completely different… … Dictionary of contemporary English
opposed — adj. 1 opposed to disagreeing strongly with sth VERBS ▪ be ▪ remain ADVERB ▪ adamantly, bitterly, deeply, fiercely … Collocations dictionary
opposed — adjective (not before noun) 1 two ideas that are opposed to each other are completely different from each other (+ to): The principles of capitalism and socialism are diametrically opposed to each other. 2 as opposed to used to compare two things … Longman dictionary of contemporary English