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1 аконит дикий
1) Biology: clambering monkshood (Aconitum uncinatum)2) Botanical term: wild monkshood -
2 вьющееся растение
1) General subject: bindweed, clamberer, clambering plant, climber, creeper, devil's guts, twiner, winder, woodbine, rambler2) Biology: runner3) American: vining plant4) Engineering: vine5) Architecture: trailer6) Makarov: climbing plant, twiner plant, twining plant -
3 перелезание
1) Sports: clambering2) Makarov: crawling over3) Security: climb-over (через ограждение), climbing (через препятствие) -
4 перелезающий
Sports: clambering -
5 аконит дикий
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6 вьющееся растение
climber имя существительное:Русско-английский синонимический словарь > вьющееся растение
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7 терять счёт
(кому, чему)lose count of smb., smth.Страсть, сколько рыбы тогда попалось! И щуки, и окуни, и головли, и плотва, и гольцы, - даже лещей-лежебоков из тины со дна поднимали! А пискарям так и счёт потеряли. (М. Салтыков-Щедрин, Премудрый пискарь) — Goodness, the heaps of fish they caught then! Pike, roach, dace, chub - all were there. Even the lazy bream were whisked up from the slimy bottom. As for minnows, there was simply no counting them.
Так потянулись дни. Юрка потерял им счёт, вернее, вовсе не считал. (Н. Дубов, Беглец) — The days dragged on. Yurka lost count of them or, rather, he did not count them.
Татьяна Романовна заразилась от Васи неудержимым азартом; карабкаясь уже совсем по незнакомым местам, они окончательно потеряли счёт времени. (П. Проскурин, Полуденные сны) — Tatyana Romanovna caught Vasya's irrepressible recklessness; clambering along totally unfamiliar spots, they lost track of time.
См. также в других словарях:
Clambering — Clamber Clam ber, v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Clambered}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Clambering}.] [OE clambren, clameren, to heap together, climb; akin to Icel. klambra to clamp, G. klammern. Cf. {Clamp}, {Climb}.] To climb with difficulty, or with hands and… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
clambering — /klam beuhr ing, klam euhr /, adj. Bot. of or pertaining to plants that creep or climb like vines, but without benefit of tendrils. [CLAMBER + ING1] * * * … Universalium
clambering — clam·ber || klæmbÉ™ n. difficult climb or ascent v. climb with hands and feet, scramble, scale … English contemporary dictionary
clambering — /klam beuhr ing, klam euhr /, adj. Bot. of or pertaining to plants that creep or climb like vines, but without benefit of tendrils. [CLAMBER + ING1] … Useful english dictionary
Operation Charnwood — Part of Battle for Caen … Wikipedia
Ceratocapnos claviculata — Climbing corydalis Climbing corydalis Scientific classification Kingdom: Plantae … Wikipedia
clamber — [[t]klæ̱mbə(r)[/t]] clambers, clambering, clambered VERB If you clamber somewhere, you climb there with difficulty, usually using your hands as well as your feet. [V prep/adv] They clambered up the stone walls of a steeply terraced olive grove … English dictionary
Clamber — Clam ber, v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Clambered}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Clambering}.] [OE clambren, clameren, to heap together, climb; akin to Icel. klambra to clamp, G. klammern. Cf. {Clamp}, {Climb}.] To climb with difficulty, or with hands and feet; also… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Clamber — Clam ber, n. The act of clambering. T. Moore. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Clamber — Clam ber, v. t. To ascend by climbing with difficulty. [1913 Webster] Clambering the walls to eye him. Shak. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Clambered — Clamber Clam ber, v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Clambered}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Clambering}.] [OE clambren, clameren, to heap together, climb; akin to Icel. klambra to clamp, G. klammern. Cf. {Clamp}, {Climb}.] To climb with difficulty, or with hands and… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English