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101 to diddle
mag-apuháp -
102 to diddle somebody out of money
izkrāpt kādam nauduEnglish-Latvian dictionary > to diddle somebody out of money
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103 to diddle
mag-apuháp -
104 дергаться
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105 схалтурить
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106 дергаться
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107 схалтурить
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108 смастерить наспех программу
Русско-английский большой базовый словарь > смастерить наспех программу
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109 mag-alangán
diddle -
110 magsalawahan
diddle -
111 надувать
diddle глагол:fob (надувать, обманывать)belly out (надувать, надуваться)cod (надувать, обманывать)pigeon (надувать, обманывать)job (выполнять задание, ударить, нанимать на сдельную работу, работать нерегулярно, работать сдельно, надувать)словосочетание: -
112 облапошивать
diddle глагол: -
113 тратить время зря
diddle глагол:Русско-английский синонимический словарь > тратить время зря
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114 смастерить наспех
Русско-английский большой базовый словарь > смастерить наспех
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115 diddledaddle
diddle-daddle
1> _разг. чушь, ерунда, вздор -
116 diddledee
diddle-dee
1> _бот. вороника красная, водяника красная (Empetrum rubrum) -
117 kumapâ
diddle, to feel, to touch, grope, poke, poker -
118 beschummeln
be|schụm|meln ptp beschu\#mmeltvti (inf)to cheat* * *be·schum·meln *1. (betrügen)jdn finanziell \beschummeln to swindle sb, to rip sb off sl2. (belügen)* * ** * *jemanden beschummeln diddle sb (um out of); beim Spiel: cheat* * ** * *v.to cheat v. -
119 bemogeln
v/t umg.: jemanden bemogeln cheat s.o.* * *be|mo|geln ptp bemogeltvt (inf)to cheat* * *be·mo·gelnvt (fam)* * ** * *bemogeln v/t umg:jemanden bemogeln cheat sb* * * -
120 sisar
v.to pilfer. (peninsular Spanish)* * *1 COSTURA to dart, take in* * *VT1) (=robar) to thieve, pilfer2) (=engañar) to cheat3) (Cos) to take in* * *verbo transitivo (Esp fam)me sisaba unas pesetas en la compra — she used to diddle me out of a few pesetas from the shopping money
* * *= pilfer, filch, swipe.Ex. In his work, Al pilfers fragments from a wide array of sources and glues them into collages.Ex. Even in poems written directly out of his own experience, he is likely to use notions, phrases, and musical ideas filched from other recent poems.Ex. A thief has swiped the solid-gold medallion given as a Nobel Prize in Physics to Ernest Lawrence.* * *verbo transitivo (Esp fam)me sisaba unas pesetas en la compra — she used to diddle me out of a few pesetas from the shopping money
* * *= pilfer, filch, swipe.Ex: In his work, Al pilfers fragments from a wide array of sources and glues them into collages.
Ex: Even in poems written directly out of his own experience, he is likely to use notions, phrases, and musical ideas filched from other recent poems.Ex: A thief has swiped the solid-gold medallion given as a Nobel Prize in Physics to Ernest Lawrence.* * *sisar [A1 ]vt2(estafar): me sisaba unos euros en la compra she used to diddle me out of a few euros from the shopping moneyayer me sisó 100 gramos you did me out of 100 grams yesterday, it was 100 grams short yesterday* * *
sisar verbo transitivo
1 (dinero) to pilfer
2 Cost to do the armhole
* * *♦ vtto pilfer♦ vito pilfer* * *v/t fampilfer
См. также в других словарях:
diddle — to cheat, swindle, 1806, from dial. duddle, diddle to totter (1630s). Meaning waste time is recorded from 1825. Meaning to have sex with is from 1879; that of to masturbate (especially of women) is from 1950s. More or less unrelated meanings that … Etymology dictionary
diddle — diddle1 [did′ l] vt. diddled, diddling [dial. duddle, diddle, to totter, akin to DODDER1] 1. Informal to move back and forth in a jerky or rapid manner; jiggle 2. Slang a) to have sexual intercourse with b) … English World dictionary
Diddle — Did dle, v. i. [Cf. {Daddle}.] To totter, as a child in walking. [Obs.] Quarles. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Diddle — Did dle, v. t. [Perh. from AS. dyderian to deceive, the letter r being changed to l.] To cheat or overreach. [Colloq.] Beaconsfield. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
diddle — did‧dle [ˈdɪdl] verb [transitive] informal to get money from someone by deceiving them: • I m sure he diddled me out of quite a lot of money! … Financial and business terms
diddle — ► VERB informal ▪ cheat or swindle. ORIGIN probably from Jeremy Diddler, a character in the farce Raising the Wind (1803) who constantly borrowed small sums of money … English terms dictionary
diddle — diddle1 diddler, n. /did l/, v.t., diddled, diddling. Informal. to cheat; swindle; hoax. [1800 10; perh. special use of DIDDLE2] diddle2 diddler, n. /did l/, v., diddled, diddling … Universalium
diddle — [19] The current meaning of diddle, ‘to cheat or swindle’, was probably inspired by Jeremy Diddler, a character who was constantly borrowing money and neglecting to repay it in James Kenney’s play Raising the Wind (1803) (the expression raise the … The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins
diddle — [19] The current meaning of diddle, ‘to cheat or swindle’, was probably inspired by Jeremy Diddler, a character who was constantly borrowing money and neglecting to repay it in James Kenney’s play Raising the Wind (1803) (the expression raise the … Word origins
diddle — did|dle [ˈdıdl] v [T] BrE informal [Date: 1800 1900; Origin: Perhaps from Diddler, name of a character in a 19th century English play] to get money from someone by deceiving them diddle sb out of sth ▪ They ll diddle you out of your last penny if … Dictionary of contemporary English
diddle — vb 1. British to cheat. A common colloquial ism recorded since the early 1800s. ► Comedian Ken Dodd insisted on cash for shows to diddle the taxman, his former agent told a jury yesterday. (Daily Mirror, 5 July 1989) In Old English dydrian meant… … Contemporary slang