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1 dig
diɡ 1. present participle - digging; verb1) (to turn up (earth) with a spade etc: to dig the garden.) spa/grave opp2) (to make (a hole) in this way: The child dug a tunnel in the sand.) grave3) (to poke: He dug his brother in the ribs with his elbow.) dytte, støte2. noun(a poke: a dig in the ribs; I knew that his remarks about women drivers were a dig at me (= a joke directed at me).) dytt, støt- digger- dig out
- dig uparbeide--------graveIsubst. \/dɪɡ\/1) graving, utgravingsplass2) utgraving3) ( hverdagslig) støt, stikk, puff, dytt4) ( overført) stikk, hint, spydighet, spark5) (amer., slang) lesehestII1) grave, grave i2) rote i (jorden)3) grave opp, grave ut, grave frem4) ( overført) lete frem, grave frem, grave opp5) lete, søke, rote6) (spesielt amer., slang, også dig in) pugge, legge seg i selen, jobbe, slite7) ( hverdagslig) bo, losjere8) støte, stikke, kjøre, hugge, sette, bore9) (gammeldags, hverdagslig) digge, like• do you dig what I'm saying?dig away at jobbe (med), slite (med)dig into kaste seg over, hugge innpådig oneself in bli varm i skjorta, installere seg trenge inn i emnet ( militærvesen) grave seg neddig one's feet\/heels\/toes in ( hverdagslig) sette seg til motverge, gjøre motstanddig out ( også overført) grave frem, lete frem(amer.) stikke avdig potatoes ta opp poteterdig up ( også overført) grave opp -
2 hire
1. verb1) ((often with from) to get the use of by paying money: He's hiring a car (from us) for the week.) leie2) ((often with out) to give (someone) the use of in exchange for money: Will you hire me your boat for the week-end?; Does this firm hire out cars?) leie ut3) ((especially American) to employ (a workman etc): They have hired a team of labourers to dig the road.) ansette, feste2. noun((money paid for) hiring: Is this hall for hire?; How much is the hire of the hall?; We don't own this crane - it's on hire.) (til) leie- hirer- hire-purchaseleieIsubst. \/ˈhaɪə\/1) leie, leieforhold2) leie(avgift)3) lønn, hyre, betaling4) (amer.) nyansatt personcar hire company bilutleie(firma)car hire service bilutleielet out on hire leie uton hire til leieleidIIverb \/ˈhaɪə\/1) leie2) ansette, tilsette, feste3) leie, engasjerehire oneself out ta arbeid, arbeidehire out leie ut
См. также в других словарях:
dig oneself in — 1. To entrench oneself 2. To establish oneself in a position • • • Main Entry: ↑dig … Useful english dictionary
dig oneself into a hole — (or dig a hole for oneself) get oneself into an awkward or restrictive situation … Useful english dictionary
dig oneself in — Establish oneself, dig out Find … A concise dictionary of English slang
dig oneself into a hole — get oneself into an awkward or restrictive situation. → dig … English new terms dictionary
dig — verb (digs, digging; past and past participle dug) 1》 break up and move earth with a tool or with hands, paws, etc. ↘make (a hole) by digging. ↘extract from the ground by digging. ↘(dig in) (of a soldier) protect oneself by making a… … English new terms dictionary
dig — v. & n. v. (digging; past and past part. dug) 1 intr. break up and remove or turn over soil, ground, etc., with a tool, one s hands, (of an animal) claws, etc. 2 tr. a break up and displace (the ground etc.) in this way. b (foll. by up) break up… … Useful english dictionary
dig out — {v.} 1. To find by searching; bring out (something) that was put away. * /Jack dug his sled out of the cellar./ * /The newspaper printed an old story dug out of their records./ Compare: DIG UP. 2. {informal} To escape. Usually used with of .… … Dictionary of American idioms
dig out — {v.} 1. To find by searching; bring out (something) that was put away. * /Jack dug his sled out of the cellar./ * /The newspaper printed an old story dug out of their records./ Compare: DIG UP. 2. {informal} To escape. Usually used with of .… … Dictionary of American idioms
dig\ out — v 1. To find by searching; bring out (smth) that was put away. Jack dug his sled out of the cellar. The newspaper printed an old story dug out of their records. Compare: dig up 2. informal To escape. Usually used with of . Often used in the… … Словарь американских идиом
Dig — (d[i^]g), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Dug} (d[u^]g) or {Digged} (d[i^]gd); p. pr. & vb. n. {Digging}. Digged is archaic.] [OE. diggen, perh. the same word as diken, dichen (see {Dike}, {Ditch}); cf. Dan. dige to dig, dige a ditch; or (?) akin to E. 1st… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
dig — dig1 [dig] vt. dug, digging [ME diggen < Anglo Fr * diguer < OFr digue, dike < Du dijk: see DIKE1] 1. to break and turn up or remove (ground, etc.) with a spade or other tool, or with hands, claws, snout, etc. 2. to make (a hole, cellar … English World dictionary