-
1 wipe
1. verb1) (to clean or dry by rubbing with a cloth, paper etc: Would you wipe the table for me?) tørke (av)2) (to remove by rubbing with a cloth, paper etc: The child wiped her tears away with her handkerchief; Wipe that writing off (the blackboard); Please wipe up that spilt milk.) tørke (bort/opp)2. noun(an act of cleaning by rubbing: Give the table a wipe.) tørking- wiper- wipe outtørke--------viskeIsubst. \/waɪp\/1) (av)tørking2) ( slang) lommetørkle3) tørkefille4) ( film) bildeoverganggive something a wipe tørke av noeIIverb \/waɪp\/1) tørke (av\/bort), stryke bort, gni vekk• could you wipe the dishes, please?• did you wipe the windowpane clean?2) tørke med3) ( overført) slette, viske ut4) (om bånd, film, elektronisk medium) slette5) ( om bankkort e.l.) dra6) ( om strekkode) (av)lesewipe away tørke bortwipe down tørke av, tørke ren, vaske nedwipe off tørke bort, tørke av, stryke uthun tørket tegningen av tavlen (ut)slette, fjerne• wipe that grin off your face!wipe out gni bort, stryke uttilintetgjøre, utrydde• is it possible to wipe out crime?( slang) rydde av veien, drepe (hverdagslig, om sport, spesielt surfing) kantre (på grunn av en bølge) falle avwiped out ( overført) ruinert utmattet ( om alkohol) dritings, full ( om narkotika) stein, høy, rusawipe the floor with vinne en overlegen\/knusende seier over, utklassewipe the slate clean ( overført) begynne på ny frisk, starte med blanke arkwipe up tørke (opp) -
2 powder
1. noun1) (any substance in the form of fine particles: soap powder; milk-powder.) pulver, mel2) (a special kind of substance in this form, used as a cosmetic etc: face-powder; talcum powder.) (-)pudder3) (formerly, gunpowder: powder and shot.) krutt2. verb(to put powder on (one's face or body): She powdered her nose.) pudre (seg)- powdered- powdery
- powder puff
- powder roompudder--------pudre--------pulver--------pulverisereIsubst. \/ˈpaʊdə\/1) ( også som legemiddel) pulver2) ( kosmetikk) pudder3) kruttkeep one's powder dry holde kruttet tørtpowder and shot kuler og krutttake a powder ( hverdagslig) stikke avwaste one's powder on someone spille kruttet sitt på noenIIverb \/ˈpaʊdə\/1) pudre (seg)2) bestrø, overså, strø ut3) pulverisere(s), lage pulver avpowder one's nose pudre seg ( forskjønnende) gå på (dame)toalettet -
3 suck
1. verb1) (to draw liquid etc into the mouth: As soon as they are born, young animals learn to suck (milk from their mothers); She sucked up the lemonade through a straw.) suge, die, patte2) (to hold something between the lips or inside the mouth, as though drawing liquid from it: I told him to take the sweet out of his mouth, but he just went on sucking; He sucked the end of his pencil.) suge på3) (to pull or draw in a particular direction with a sucking or similar action: The vacuum cleaner sucked up all the dirt from the carpet; A plant sucks up moisture from the soil.) suge (opp)4) ((American) (slang) to be awful, boring, disgusting etc: Her singing sucks; This job sucks.) være helt elendig/ubrukelig2. noun(an act of sucking: I gave him a suck of my lollipop.) suging; slikk, slurk- sucker- suck up todie--------patte--------sugeIsubst. \/sʌk\/1) suging2) sugelyd3) klunk, slurkgive something a suck eller have\/take a suck at something ( overført) suge på noe (dvs. tenke på noe)give suck to ( gammeldags) ammesuck at sug ettersuck to (britisk, hverdagslig) æ bæ, ædda bædda• sucks to you!ædda bædda, der kan du se!IIverb \/sʌk\/1) suge (ut av)2) suge i seg, suge opp, suge inn• suck air3) suge på4) die, patte5) suge, dra med seg6) ( overført) suge ut7) (amer., slang) stinke, være bånn i bøtta• this film sucks!get sucked into something ( overført) bli innblandet i noesuck at something være veldig dårlig til noesuck (down) suge ned, trekke ned( slang) narre, ta ved nesen, luresuck in one's breath gispe etter pusten, trekke pusten rasktsuck in(to) ( overført) trekke inn (i), blande inn (i)suck it and see (britisk, hverdagslig) prøv og sesuck someone (off) ( om munnsex) suge noen, sokke noensuck one's thumb suge på tommelensuck out suge utsuck out of suge ut avsuck the blood out of ( overført) suge kraften ut avsuck up suge opp, suge til segsuck up to someone ( slang) smiske for noen, innynde seg hos noen
См. также в других словарях:
dry milk — dry′ milk′ n. coo powdery milk from which about 95 percent of the moisture has been evaporated … From formal English to slang
dry milk — noun dehydrated milk • Syn: ↑powdered milk, ↑dried milk, ↑milk powder • Hypernyms: ↑milk • Hyponyms: ↑nonfat dry milk * * * noun … Useful english dictionary
dry milk — dehydrated milk from which about 95 percent of the moisture has been evaporated. Also called dried milk, milk powder, powdered milk. * * * … Universalium
dry milk — n. powdered milk, dried milk … English contemporary dictionary
dry milk solids — noun plural : the constituents of milk (as protein, lactose, minerals, vitamins, ash) remaining after the removal of water … Useful english dictionary
nonfat dry milk — noun dehydrated skimmed milk • Hypernyms: ↑powdered milk, ↑dry milk, ↑dried milk, ↑milk powder … Useful english dictionary
Milk protein concentrate — (MPC) is any type of concentrated milk product that contains 40–90% milk protein. The United States officially defines MPC as “any complete milk protein (casein plus lactalbumin) concentrate that is 40 percent or more protein by weight.”[1] In… … Wikipedia
Milk equivalent — is a measure of the quantity of fluid milk used in a processed dairy product. Measured on a milkfat basis, it takes about 21.8 pounds of farm milk to make a pound of butter, and about 9.2 pounds to make a pound of American cheese. Measured on a… … Wikipedia
dry — adj., v., & n. adj. (drier; driest) 1 free from moisture, not wet, esp.: a with any moisture having evaporated, drained, or been wiped away (the clothes are not dry yet). b (of the eyes) free from tears. c (of a climate etc.) with insufficient… … Useful english dictionary
milk powder — noun dehydrated milk • Syn: ↑powdered milk, ↑dry milk, ↑dried milk • Hypernyms: ↑milk • Hyponyms: ↑nonfat dry milk * * * noun … Useful english dictionary
dry — I. adjective (drier; also dryer; driest; also dryest) Etymology: Middle English, from Old English drȳge; akin to Old High German truckan dry, Old English drēahnian to drain Date: before 12th century 1. a. free or relatively free from a liquid… … New Collegiate Dictionary