Перевод: с английского на литовский

с литовского на английский

affected+(verb)

  • 1 affect

    [ə'fekt]
    1) (to act or have an effect on: Rain affects the grass; His kidneys have been affected by the disease.) (pa)veikti
    2) (to move the feelings of: She was deeply affected by the news of his death.) (su)jaudinti

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > affect

  • 2 impersonal

    [im'pə:sənl]
    1) (not showing, or being affected by, personal feelings: His manner was formal and impersonal.) bešališkas, objektyvus
    2) ((of a verb) having a subject which does not refer to a person, thing etc: In the sentence `It snowed last night', `snowed' is an example of an impersonal verb.) beasmenis
    - impersonality

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > impersonal

  • 3 object

    I ['ob‹ikt] noun
    1) (a thing that can be seen or felt: There were various objects on the table.) daiktas, objektas
    2) (an aim or intention: His main object in life was to become rich.) tikslas, siekis
    3) (the word or words in a sentence or phrase which represent(s) the person or thing affected by the action of the verb: He hit me; You can eat what you like.) papildinys, objektas
    II [əb'‹ekt] verb
    (often with to) to feel or express dislike or disapproval: He wanted us to travel on foot but I objected (to that). prieštarauti, nesutikti, protestuoti
    - objectionable
    - objectionably

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > object

  • 4 field

    [fi:ld] 1. noun
    1) (a piece of land enclosed for growing crops, keeping animals etc: Our house is surrounded by fields.) laukas
    2) (a wide area: playing fields (= an area for games, sports etc).) aikštė
    3) (a piece of land etc where minerals or other natural resources are found: an oil-field; a coalfield.) telkinys
    4) (an area of knowledge, interest, study etc: in the fields of literature/economic development; her main fields of interest.) sfera, sritis
    5) (an area affected, covered or included by something: a magnetic field; in his field of vision.) laukas
    6) (an area of battle: the field of Waterloo; ( also adjective) a field-gun.) kovos laukas
    2. verb
    ((in cricket, basketball etc) to catch (the ball) and return it.) pagauti ir atmušti sviedinį
    - fieldwork

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > field

  • 5 react

    [ri'ækt]
    1) (to behave in a certain way as a result of something: How did he react when you called him a fool?; He reacted angrily to the criticism; Hydrogen reacts with oxygen to form water.) reaguoti
    2) ((with against) to behave or act in a certain way in order to show rejection of: Young people tend to react against their parents.) priešgyniauti, priešintis
    3) ((with to) to be affected, usually badly, by (a drug etc): I react very badly to penicillin.) būti alergiškam
    - reactionary
    - reactor

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > react

  • 6 rot

    [rot] 1. past tense, past participle - rotted; verb
    (to make or become bad or decayed: The fruit is rotting on the ground; Water rots wood.) pūti, pūdyti
    2. noun
    1) (decay: The floorboards are affected by rot.) puvėsis
    2) (nonsense: Don't talk rot!) nesąmonės, niekai
    - rottenness
    - rotter

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > rot

  • 7 season

    ['si:zn] 1. noun
    1) (one of the main divisions of the year according to the regular variation of the weather, length of day etc: The four seasons are spring, summer, autumn and winter; The monsoon brings the rainy season.) metų laikas, sezonas
    2) (the usual, proper or suitable time for something: the football season.) sezonas
    2. verb
    1) (to add salt, pepper, mustard etc to: She seasoned the meat with plenty of pepper.) paskaninti
    2) (to let (wood) be affected by rain, sun etc until it is ready for use.) išlaikyti
    - seasonal
    - seasoned
    - seasoning
    - season ticket
    - in season
    - out of season

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > season

  • 8 smart

    1. adjective
    1) (neat and well-dressed; fashionable: You're looking very smart today; a smart suit.) puošnus, madingas, išsipuošęs
    2) (clever and quick in thought and action: We need a smart boy to help in the shop; I don't trust some of those smart salesmen.) guvus, nuovokus, išmaningas
    3) (brisk; sharp: She gave him a smart slap on the cheek.) smagus, smarkus
    2. verb
    1) ((of part of the body) to be affected by a sharp stinging feeling: The thick smoke made his eyes smart.) graužti, perštėti
    2) (to feel annoyed, resentful etc after being insulted etc: He is still smarting from your remarks.) jaustis įskaudintam
    3. noun
    (the stinging feeling left by a blow or the resentful feeling left by an insult: He could still feel the smart of her slap/insult.) įskaudinimas
    - smartly
    - smartness
    - smart bomb
    - smart card

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > smart

  • 9 weather

    ['weƟə] 1. noun
    (conditions in the atmosphere, especially as regards heat or cold, wind, rain, snow etc: The weather is too hot for me; stormy weather; ( also adjective) a weather chart/report, the weather forecast.) oras
    2. verb
    1) (to affect or be affected by exposure to the air, resulting in drying, change of colour, shape etc: The wind and sea have weathered the rocks quite smooth.) nuglūdinti, nugairinti
    2) (to survive safely: The ship weathered the storm although she was badly damaged.) atlaikyti
    - weathercock
    - weathervane
    - weatherperson
    - make heavy weather of
    - under the weather

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > weather

См. также в других словарях:

  • affected role — noun the semantic role of an entity that is not the agent but is directly involved in or affected by the happening denoted by the verb in the clause • Syn: ↑patient role, ↑patient • Hypernyms: ↑semantic role, ↑participant role …   Useful english dictionary

  • Ergative verb — In linguistics, an ergative verb is a verb that can be either transitive or intransitive, and whose subject when intransitive corresponds to its direct object when transitive.In EnglishIn English, most verbs can be used intransitively, but… …   Wikipedia

  • Ilokano verb — Although other word classes in Ilokano are not as morphologically diverse in forms, verbs are about as morphologically complex as the classic Indo European languages of Latin, Ancient Greek or Sanskrit.Ilokano verbs inflect for the completion of… …   Wikipedia

  • Passive verb — Passive Pas sive, a. [L. passivus: cf. F. passif. See {Passion}.] 1. Not active, but acted upon; suffering or receiving impressions or influences; as, they were passive spectators, not actors in the scene. [1913 Webster] The passive air Upbore… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Germanic strong verb — In the Germanic languages, a strong verb is one which marks its past tense by means of ablaut. In English, these are verbs like sing, sang, sung. The term strong verb is a translation of German starkes Verb , which was coined by the linguist… …   Wikipedia

  • Intransitive verb — In grammar, an intransitive verb does not take an object. In more technical terms, an intransitive verb has only one argument (its subject), and hence has a valency of one. For example, in English, the verbs sleep , complain and die , are… …   Wikipedia

  • Guess-the-verb — Guess the verb, or guess the noun, is a problem sometimes encountered in text adventure or interactive fiction computer games which have a strict or lacking command set. Usually a game has two or more verbs for an action involving a special… …   Wikipedia

  • boot verb — noun Any of various verbs, generally in Romance languages, in which the first and second persons plural are affected differently by some phonological or morphological rule than the other four forms …   Wiktionary

  • affect — verb (T) 1 to do something that produces an effect or change in someone or something: a disease that affects the central nervous system | emergency relief for the areas affected by the hurricane 2 (usually passive) to make someone feel strong… …   Longman dictionary of contemporary English

  • rid of — verb do away with • Syn: ↑obviate, ↑eliminate • Ant: ↑necessitate (for: ↑obviate) • Derivationally related forms: ↑obviation ( …   Useful english dictionary

  • upset — verb (upset, upsetting) –verb (t) /ʌpˈsɛt / (say up set) 1. to overturn; knock or tip over; capsize. 2. to spill by knocking over; tip out. 3. to throw into disorder; disarrange; overthrow or undo. 4. to disturb (someone) mentally or emotionally; …  

Поделиться ссылкой на выделенное

Прямая ссылка:
Нажмите правой клавишей мыши и выберите «Копировать ссылку»