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1 defect
1. 'di:fekt noun(a fault or flaw: It was a basic defect in her character; a defect in the china.) feil, mangel, skavank2. di'fekt verb(to leave a country, political party etc to go and join another; to desert: He defected to the West.) hoppe av, flykte, falle fra- defectivefeil--------mangel--------plettIsubst. \/ˈdiːfekt\/, \/dɪˈfekt\/1) mangel2) defekt3) ufullkommenhet, feil, lyte, skavankdefect in character ( jus) karakterbristIIverb \/dɪˈfekt\/1) falle fra (parti e.l.)2) (politikk, også) hoppe av -
2 correct
kə'rekt 1. verb1) (to remove faults and errors from: These spectacles will correct his eye defect.) rette opp/på, korrigere, avhjelpe2) ((of a teacher etc) to mark errors in: I have fourteen exercise books to correct.) rette2. adjective1) (free from faults or errors: This sum is correct.) korrekt, riktig2) (right; not wrong: Did I get the correct idea from what you said?; You are quite correct.) riktig•- corrective
- correctly
- correctnesskorrigere--------rett--------rette--------riktigIverb \/kəˈrekt\/1) rette, rette på, korrigere, beriktige2) justere, stille inn riktig, endre3) irettesette, straffe4) avhjelpe, bøte på, råde bot på, rette påcorrect one's watch by stille klokken ettercorrect proofs lese korrekturcorrect somebody on something rette noe hos noenIIadj. \/kəˈrekt\/1) rett, riktig, feilfri, korrekt2) eksakt, nøyaktig, presis3) faktisk, sann, i overenstemmelse med sannheten4) korrekt, som seg hør og bør, passende5) stilsikker, stilriktig, uklanderligbe correct være riktig, stemme ha rettbe correct for passe forthat's correct! det stemmer! -
3 squint
skwint 1. verb1) (to have the physical defect of having the eyes turning towards or away from each other or to cause the eyes to do this: The child squints; You squint when you look down at your nose.) skjele, blingse2) ((with at, up at, through etc) to look with half-shut or narrowed eyes: He squinted through the telescope.) myse med øynene, skotte2. noun1) (a squinting position of the eyes: an eye-operation to correct her squint.) skjeling, blingsing2) (a glance or look at something: Let me have a squint at that photograph.) kikk3. adjective, adverb((placed etc) crookedly or not straight: Your hat is squint.) skjevmyseIsubst. \/skwɪnt\/1) skjeling, skjeløydhet, blingsing2) ( hverdagslig) titt, kikk3) ( hverdagslig) skjevt blikk4) ( spesielt avvikende eller pervers) tilbøyelighet, tendenshave a squint være skjeløyd, skjeleIIverb \/skwɪnt\/1) myse2) være skjeløyd, skjele3) ( hverdagslig) titte, kikke, skotte, se med skjevt blikksquint one's eyes skjele med øynene knipe sammen øynene -
4 stammer
'stæmə 1. noun(the speech defect of being unable to produce easily certain sounds: `You m-m-must m-m-meet m-m-my m-m-mother' is an example of a stammer; That child has a bad stammer.) stamming2. verb(to speak with a stammer or in a similar way because of eg fright, nervousness etc: He stammered an apology.) stamme; stotre framstammeIsubst. \/ˈstæmə\/1) stamming, stotring2) stotrende utsagnIIverb \/ˈstæmə\/1) stamme, stotre2) stotre frem -
5 vision
'viʒən1) (something seen in the imagination or in a dream: God appeared to him in a vision.) syn, visjon2) (the ability to see or plan into the future: Politicians should be men of vision.) framsynthet, klarsyn3) (the ability to see or the sense of sight: He is slowly losing his vision.) syn(sevne)synsevne--------visjonIsubst. \/ˈvɪʒ(ə)n\/1) syn, synsevne2) syn, visjon, åpenbaring, drømmebilde, fantasi3) pent syn, vakkert syn, drømmesyn4) (TV) bildeskarphet5) klarsyn, klarsynthet, fremsynthet, vidsynhan er en klarsynt mann, han er en vidtskuende mannclarity of vision vidsyn, vidsynthet, fremsynthetdefect of vision synsfeildistance of vision ( fysikk) synsviddefaculty of vision syn, synsevnefield of vision synsfelthave breadth\/lack of vision være vidsynt\/trangsynthave impaired vision ha nedsatt syn, være synsskaddhave visions se syner, ha visjoner, drømme, fantaseresee visions se syner, være synsksound and vision (TV, film e.l.) lyd og bildeIIverb \/ˈvɪʒ(ə)n\/se (som) i et syn, vise (som) i et syn
См. также в других словарях:
defect — de·fect / dē ˌfekt, di fekt/ n: something or a lack of something that results in incompleteness, inadequacy, or imperfection: as a: a flaw in something (as a product) esp. that creates an unreasonable risk of harm in its normal use see also… … Law dictionary
defect — Ⅰ. defect [1] ► NOUN ▪ a shortcoming, imperfection, or lack. ORIGIN Latin defectus, from deficere desert or fail . Ⅱ. defect [2] ► VERB ▪ abandon one s country or cause in favour of an opposing one … English terms dictionary
defect — (n.) early 15c., from M.Fr. defect and directly from L. defectus failure, revolt, falling away, from pp. of deficere to fail, desert (see DEFICIENT (Cf. deficient)). As a verb, from 1570s. Related: Defected; defecting … Etymology dictionary
defect — should be pronounced with stress on the first syllable as a noun (= fault, imperfection) and on the second syllable as a verb (= to go over to an enemy or rival) … Modern English usage
defect — ▪ I. defect de‧fect 1 [dɪˈfekt,ˈdiːfekt] noun [countable] MANUFACTURING a fault in something that means it is not perfect: • They recalled the vehicles because of brake defects. • an effort to improve customer satisfaction and reduce product… … Financial and business terms
defect. — de|fect «noun. DEE fehkt; verb. dih FEHKT», noun, verb. –n. 1. a fault; blemish; imperfection: »The hole was a defect in the material. A bad temper was the defect in his nature. 2. lack of something needed for completeness; a falling short: »A… … Useful english dictionary
defect — defects, defecting, defected (The noun is pronounced [[t]di͟ːfekt[/t]]. The verb is pronounced [[t]dɪfe̱kt[/t]].) 1) N COUNT: usu with supp A defect is a fault or imperfection in a person or thing. He was born with a hearing defect. ...a defect… … English dictionary
defect — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ fundamental, major, obvious, serious, severe ▪ a fundamental defect in the product ▪ mild, minor … Collocations dictionary
defect — noun /ˈdifɛkt / (say deefekt), /dəˈfɛkt / (say duh fekt) 1. a falling short; a fault or imperfection. 2. want or lack, especially of something essential to perfection or completeness; deficiency. –verb (i) /dəˈfɛkt / (say duh fekt) 3. to desert a …
defect — I UK [ˈdiːfekt] / US [ˈdɪˌfekt] noun [countable] Word forms defect : singular defect plural defects ** a fault in someone or something There are a few minor design defects. genetic defects II UK [dɪˈfekt] / US verb [intransitive] Word forms… … English dictionary
defect — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) n. blemish, fault, flaw, imperfection; deficiency, lack, incompleteness. v. i. desert, flee, abandon. See relinquishment, escape. II (Roget s IV) n. 1. [A lack of something needed] Syn. deficiency,… … English dictionary for students