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1 покрыться потом
General subject: break into a sweat, break out into a sweat -
2 распариваться
распариться1. (о коже и т. п.) steam out; ( об овощах) be stewed well2. разг. ( разогреваться до пота) be steaming, break* into a sweat3. страд. к распаривать -
3 распариться (II) (св)
............................................................1. steam out........................................................................................................................ -
4 распариваться
I несовер. - распариваться; совер. - распариться
1) steam out (о коже); be stewed well (об овощах)
2) разг. (разогреваться до пота)
be steaming, break into a sweat
II страд. от распаривать* * *steam out; be stewed well -
5 распариться
несовер. - распариваться; совер. - распариться
1) steam out (о коже); be stewed well (об овощах)
2) разг. (разогреваться до пота)
be steaming, break into a sweat* * *steam out; be stewed well -
6 распариваться
несов. - распа́риваться, сов. - распа́риться1) ( об овощах) be stewed well2) разг. ( разогреваться до пота) be steaming, break into a sweat [swet] -
7 прошибать
несов. - прошиба́ть, сов. - прошиби́ть; (вн.)1) ( пробивать ударом) break (through)прошиби́ть сте́ну — break through a wall
его́ хо́лод проши́б — the cold struck through him
3) разг. (влиять, вызывать какую-л реакцию) affect (d), stir (d); get / evoke a response (from); ( волновать) move (d), touch (d); ( производить впечатление) impress (d)его́ ниче́м не прошибёшь — he is unresponsive; ( о невозможности произвести впечатление) there's no way to impress him
бы́ло тру́дно прошиби́ть её споко́йствие — it was difficult to break through her calm
••пот проши́б кого́-л — smb broke into a sweat [swet], smb began to sweat
слеза́ проши́бла кого́-л — tears [tɪəz] sprang to smb's eyes
лбом сте́нку не прошибёшь — it's no use beating your head against a brick wall
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8 пуститься
1) General subject: launch (в разговор, спор), break (break into a run - пуститься бежать (break out in a sweat...)), enter (enter into a risky undertaking - пускаться в рискованное предприятие), go (go into detail / the details - пускаться в подробности), start (пускаться в путь), let (пуститься куда-л - let go somewhere), set out -
9 прошибать
прошибить (вн.) разг.1. break* through (d.)2.:его пот прошиб — he broke into a sweat, he began to sweat
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10 приложить усилия
1) General subject: apply energies, be at the pains, endeavor, make efforts, strive, take pains, make it count (призыв сделать что-то хорошо)2) Diplomatic term: invest effort3) Makarov: devote energies4) Phraseological unit: break a sweat (To put effort into something.), buckle down (To put forth the needed effort; to focus; become serious.) -
11 страдать
1) General subject: anguish, be afflicted, be cut up, be in pain, be in torment, be poor, curse (от чего-л.), have the iron enter into soul, labor (от чего-л.), labor under (от чего-либо), labour (от чего-л.), labour under (от чего-либо), martyr, perish (от холода и т.п.), smart, spoon, suffer, suffer from (от чего-л.), sweat, tantalize, thole, to be in torment, suffer martyrdom, afflict with, to be affected2) Medicine: smother (от удушья)3) Obsolete: dree4) Agriculture: throe5) Religion: adversity, suffer affliction6) Jargon: carry the torch (for someone)7) Makarov: feel sore about9) Phraseological unit: be in for
См. также в других словарях:
break into — phrasal verb [transitive] Word forms break into : present tense I/you/we/they break into he/she/it breaks into present participle breaking into past tense broke into past participle broken into 1) break into something to enter a building by force … English dictionary
break into sth phrasal — verb (T) 1 STEAL to enter a building by using force, in order to steal something: Thieves broke into the bank vault by digging a tunnel. 2 break into a run/gallop/trot etc to suddenly start running etc: Suzie heard footsteps behind her and broke… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
break into — phr verb Break into is used with these nouns as the subject: ↑face, ↑intruder, ↑thief, ↑vandal Break into is used with these nouns as the object: ↑applause, ↑car, ↑conversation, ↑flat, ↑gallop, ↑grin, ↑ … Collocations dictionary
break into — {v.} 1. To force an entrance into; make a rough or unlawful entrance into. * /Thieves broke into the store at night./ 2. {informal} To succeed in beginning (a career, business, or a social life) * /He broke into television as an actor./ 3. To… … Dictionary of American idioms
break into — {v.} 1. To force an entrance into; make a rough or unlawful entrance into. * /Thieves broke into the store at night./ 2. {informal} To succeed in beginning (a career, business, or a social life) * /He broke into television as an actor./ 3. To… … Dictionary of American idioms
break\ into — v 1. To force an entrance into; make a rough or unlawful entrance into. Thieves broke into the store at night. 2. informal To succeed in beginning (a career, business, or a social life) He broke into television as an actor. 3. To interrupt. He… … Словарь американских идиом
break — break1 [ breık ] (past tense broke [ brouk ] ; past participle broken [ broukən ] ) verb *** ▸ 1 separate into pieces ▸ 2 fail to obey rules ▸ 3 make a hole/cut ▸ 4 destroy someone s confidence ▸ 5 when people learn news ▸ 6 stop for a short time … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
sweat — sweat1 [swet] v ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(liquid from skin)¦ 2¦(work)¦ 3¦(worry)¦ 4 don t sweat it 5 don t sweat the small stuff 6¦(produce liquid)¦ 7¦(cook)¦ Phrasal verbs sweat something<=>off sweat something<=>out ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ [ … Dictionary of contemporary English
sweat — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun ADJECTIVE ▪ heavy ▪ light ▪ clammy ▪ My shirt stuck to the clammy sweat on my back. ▪ cold … Collocations dictionary
break — break1 W1S1 [breık] v past tense broke [brəuk US brouk] past participle broken [ˈbrəukən US ˈbrou ] ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(separate into pieces)¦ 2¦(bones)¦ 3¦(machines)¦ 4¦(rules/laws)¦ 5¦(promise/agreement)¦ 6¦(stop/rest)¦ 7¦(end something)¦ … Dictionary of contemporary English
sweat — 1 verb 1 LIQUID FROM SKIN (I) to have liquid coming out through your skin, especially because you are hot or frightened: I was sweating after the long climb. | sweat heavily/profusely (=sweat a lot) | sweat like a pig informal (=sweat a lot) |… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English