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as hurl down

  • 1 Hurl

    v. trans.
    P. and V. βάλλειν, ῥίπτειν, φιέναι, μεθιέναι (rare P.), Ar. and V. έναι, V. δικεῖν ( 2nd aor.), ἰάπτειν.
    Hurl away: P. and V. ποβάλλειν, ἐκβάλλειν, μεθιέναι, φιέναι, πορρίπτειν, V. ἐκρίπτειν.
    met., lose wilfully: P. and V. ποβάλλειν, P. προΐεσθαι.
    Hurl down: P. and V. καταβάλλειν, V. καταρρίπτειν.
    Bring low: P. and V. καθαιρεῖν, V. καταρρέπειν, κλνειν.
    Hurl down upon: V. ἐγκατασκήπτειν (τι τινι), ἐπεμβάλλειν (τι).

    Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Hurl

  • 2 Down

    subs.
    Ar. χνοῦς, ὁ, V. λάχνη, ἡ, ἴουλος, ὁ.
    Downs, heights: P. and V. τὰ ἄκρα, V. κλιτύς, ἡ; see Hill.
    ——————
    adv.
    P. and V. κτω.
    Up and down: see under Up.
    ——————
    prep.
    P. and V. κατ (gen.) ( as hurl down), V. κτω (gen.) (Eur., Cycl. 448).
    Down ( a river or stream): P. κατά (acc.).
    Down hill: P. εἰς τὸ κάταντες (Xen.), κατὰ πρανοῦς (Xen.).
    He has continued to do this down to this very day: P. τοῦτο διατετέλεκε ποιῶν μέχρι ταύτης τῆς ἡμέρας (Dem. 1087).
    Upside down: see Upside (Upside down).
    Run down ( a ship), v.: Ar. and P. καταδῦσαι ( 1st aor. act. cf καταδύειν).
    Depreciate: P. and V. διαβάλλειν, P. διασύρειν.
    Trample on one who is down: Ar. ἐπεμπηδᾶν κειμένῳ (Nub. 550).
    Go down: see Abate.

    Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Down

  • 3 Precipitate

    v. trans.
    Hurl down: P. and V. καταβάλλειν, P. κατακρημνίζειν, V. καταρρίπτειν.
    Hurry on: P. and V. σπεύδειν, ἐπισπεύδειν.
    ——————
    adj.
    Hasty: of persons, P. προπετής, σφοδρός, ἀλόγιστος, Ar. and P. ταμός; of things, P. ἀπερίσκεπτος, ἄσκεπτος, ἀλόγιστος; see Rash.

    Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Precipitate

См. также в других словарях:

  • hurl —   Nou, kūpahu, kā.   Also: walakīkē; ō ō, pahu (as a spear); kā alā (as stones with a sling);    ♦ hurl down, kiola ino. See throw …   English-Hawaiian dictionary

  • hurl — [hə:l US hə:rl] v [Date: 1100 1200; Origin: Probably copying the action] 1.) [T always + adverb/preposition] to throw something with a lot of force, especially because you are angry ▪ Demonstrators were hurling bricks through the windows. ▪ He… …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • hurl´er — hurl «hurl», verb, noun. –v.t. 1. to throw with much force; cast; fling: »The man hurled his spear at one bear, and the dogs hurled themselves at the other. 2. Figurative. to throw forth (words, cries, or shouts) v …   Useful english dictionary

  • hurl — [hʉrl] vt. [ME hurlen, prob. of ON echoic orig. as in Dan hurle, to whir, Norw hurla, to buzz] 1. to throw or fling with force or violence 2. to cast down; overthrow 3. to utter vehemently [to hurl insults ] ☆ 4. Baseball Informal to pitch vi …   English World dictionary

  • hurl headlong — index precipitate (throw down violently) Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …   Law dictionary

  • Hurl! — infobox television show name = Hurl! format = Live action, variety, game show, television series runtime = 30 minutes per episode (inc. advertisements) rating = TV 14 creator = executive producer = Tom Crehan, Dale Roy Robinson starring = Tom… …   Wikipedia

  • hurl — 01. The young boy [hurled] his eraser across the room and hit his friend in the head. 02. The old woman [hurled] abuse at the teenagers who had run though her garden stealing strawberries. 03. The monster began picking up cars and [hurling] them… …   Grammatical examples in English

  • hurl — [[t]hɜrl[/t]] v.t. 1) to throw or fling with great force or vigor; cast 2) to throw or cast down 3) to utter with vehemence: to hurl insults at the umpire[/ex] 4) to throw a missile 5) a forcible or violent throw; fling • Etymology: 1175–1225;… …   From formal English to slang

  • hurl — verb (hurled; hurling) Etymology: Middle English Date: 13th century intransitive verb 1. rush, hurtle 2. pitch 5a, b 3. vomit transitive verb 1. to send or thrust with great vigo …   New Collegiate Dictionary

  • hurl — hurler, n. /herrl/, v.t. 1. to throw or fling with great force or vigor. 2. to throw or cast down. 3. to utter with vehemence: to hurl insults at the umpire. v.i. 4. to throw a missile. 5. Baseball. to pitch a ball. n. 6. a forcible or violent… …   Universalium

  • hurl a brickbat — Synonyms and related words: affront, call names, dishonor, disoblige, dump on, fleer at, flout, gibe at, give offense to, humiliate, insult, jeer at, jibe at, mock, offend, outrage, put down, scoff at, taunt, treat with indignity …   Moby Thesaurus

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