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41 club
1. noun1) (a heavy stick etc used as a weapon.) bâtă, băţ2) (a bat or stick used in certain games (especially golf): Which club will you use?) crosă3) (a number of people meeting for study, pleasure, games etc: the local tennis club.) club4) (the place where these people meet: He goes to the club every Friday.) club5) (one of the playing-cards of the suit clubs.) treflă2. verb(to beat or strike with a club: They clubbed him to death.) a ciomăgi- clubs -
42 confession
[-ʃən]1) (acknowledgment of a crime or fault: The youth made a confession to the police officer.) mărturisire2) ((an) act of confessing one's sins to a priest: She went to confession every Friday.) confesiune -
43 cycle
I 1. verb(to go by bicycle: He cycles to work every day.) a merge cu bicicleta2. noun(shortened form of bicycle: They bought the child a cycle for his birthday.) bicicletă- cyclistII noun1) (a number of events happening one after the other in a certain order: the life-cycle of the butterfly.) ciclu2) (a series of poems, songs etc written about one main event etc: a song cycle.) ciclu3) ((of alternating current, radio waves etc) one complete series of changes in a regularly varying supply, signal etc.) ciclu•- cyclic- cyclically -
44 day
[dei] 1. noun1) (the period from sunrise to sunset: She worked all day; The days are warm but the nights are cold.) zi2) (a part of this period eg that part spent at work: How long is your working day?; The school day ends at 3 o'clock; I see him every day.) zi (de muncă)3) (the period of twenty-four hours from one midnight to the next: How many days are in the month of September?) zi4) ((often in plural) the period of, or of the greatest activity, influence, strength etc of (something or someone): in my grandfather's day; in the days of steam-power.) pe vremea•- daybreak- day-dream 2. verbShe often day-dreams.)- daylight- day school
- daytime
- call it a day
- day by day
- day in
- day out
- make someone's day
- one day
- some day
- the other day -
45 dice with death
(to do something very risky (and dangerous): He diced with death every time he took a short cut across the main railway line.) a-şi risca viaţa -
46 distinguish
[di'stiŋɡwiʃ]1) ((often with from) to mark as different: What distinguishes this café from all the others?) a distinge (de)2) (to identify or make out: He could just distinguish the figure of a man running away.) a distinge3) ((sometimes with between) to recognize a difference: I can't distinguish (between) the two types - they both look the same to me.) a face deosebirea (între)4) (to make (oneself) noticed through one's achievements: He distinguished himself at school by winning a prize in every subject.) a se distinge•- distinguished -
47 dodge
[do‹] 1. verb(to avoid (something) by a sudden and/or clever movement: She dodged the blow; He dodged round the corner out of sight; Politicians are very good at dodging difficult questions.) a evita, a ocoli2. noun1) (an act of dodging.) ocolire, evitare2) (a trick: You'll never catch him - he knows every dodge there is.) truc•- dodgy -
48 drill
[dril] 1. verb1) (to make (a hole) with a drill: He drilled holes in the wood; to drill for oil.) a găuri, a (per)fora2) ((of soldiers etc) to exercise or be exercised: The soldiers drilled every morning.) a face instrucţie2. noun1) (a tool for making holes: a hand-drill; an electric drill.) burghiu2) (exercise or practice, especially of soldiers: We do half-an-hour of drill after tea.) antrenament, instrucţie -
49 drink in
(to take in eagerly: They listened eagerly, drinking in every detail.) a sorbi -
50 eccentric
[ik'sentrik] 1. adjective((of a person, his behaviour etc) odd; unusual: He is growing more eccentric every day; He had an eccentric habit of collecting stray cats.) excentric2. noun(an eccentric person.) excentric- eccentricity -
51 effort
['efət]1) (hard work; energy: Learning a foreign language requires effort; The effort of climbing the hill made the old man very tired.) efort2) (a trying hard; a struggle: The government's efforts to improve the economy were unsuccessful; Please make every effort to be punctual.) efort3) (the result of an attempt: Your drawing was a good effort.) încercare•- effortlessly -
52 encouragement
noun words of encouragement; He must be given every encouragement.) încurajare -
53 encyclop(a)edia
(a reference work containing information on every branch of knowledge, or on one particular branch: an encyclopaedia of jazz; If you do not know the capital city of Hungary, look it up in an encyclopaedia.) enciclopedie- encyclopaedic- encyclopedic -
54 encyclop(a)edia
(a reference work containing information on every branch of knowledge, or on one particular branch: an encyclopaedia of jazz; If you do not know the capital city of Hungary, look it up in an encyclopaedia.) enciclopedie- encyclopaedic- encyclopedic -
55 everybody
pronoun (every person: Everyone thinks I'm right.) toată lumea -
56 everyone
pronoun (every person: Everyone thinks I'm right.) toată lumea -
57 everywhere
adverb ((in or to) every place: The flies are everywhere; Everywhere I go, he follows me.) peste tot, oriunde -
58 exercise
1. noun1) (training or use (especially of the body) through action or effort: Swimming is one of the healthiest forms of exercise; Take more exercise.) antrenament, exerciţiu fizic2) (an activity intended as training: ballet exercises; spelling exercises.) exerciţiu3) (a series of tasks, movements etc for training troops etc: His battalion is on an exercise in the mountains.) manevră2. verb1) (to train or give exercise to: Dogs should be exercised frequently; I exercise every morning.) a (se) antrena2) (to use; to make use of: She was given the opportunity to exercise her skill as a pianist.) a exercita -
59 extension
[-ʃən]1) (an added part: He built an extension to his house; a two-day extension to the holiday; He has telephone extensions (= telephones) in every bedroom.) anexă; prelungire2) ((a program by which) part of a university located somewhere else offers courses to people who are not fulltime students.) extindere3) (the process of extending.)4) (a telephone that operates on the same line as another: They have a phone in the living-room and an extension in the bedroom.) -
60 fair
I [feə] adjective1) (light-coloured; with light-coloured hair and skin: fair hair; Scandinavian people are often fair.) blond2) (just; not favouring one side: a fair test.) corect3) ((of weather) fine; without rain: a fair afternoon.) frumos4) (quite good; neither bad nor good: Her work is only fair.) acceptabil5) (quite big, long etc: a fair size.) destul de mare6) (beautiful: a fair maiden.) frumos•- fairness- fairly
- fair play II [feə] noun1) (a collection of entertainments that travels from town to town: She won a large doll at the fair.) bâlci2) (a large market held at fixed times: A fair is held here every spring.) târg3) (an exhibition of goods from different countries, firms etc: a trade fair.) târg
См. также в других словарях:
every — 1. differences between each and every. Both words denote all the people or things in a group, and both normally govern a singular verb (for some exceptions see each). But each is a pronoun (as in I ll take three of each) as well as an adjective… … Modern English usage
Every — Ev er*y, a. & a. pron. [OE. everich, everilk; AS. [=ae]fre ever + [ae]lc each. See {Ever}, {each}.] 1. All the parts which compose a whole collection or aggregate number, considered in their individuality, all taken separately one by one, out of… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
every — ► DETERMINER 1) used to refer to all the individual members of a set without exception. 2) used to indicate something happening at specified intervals: every thirty minutes. 3) all possible; the utmost: every effort was made. ● every bit as Cf.… … English terms dictionary
every — [ev′rē] adj. [ME everiche < OE æfre ælc, lit., ever each] 1. each, individually and separately; each, and including all [every man among you] 2. the fullest possible; all that there could be [given every chance to do the job] 3. each group or… … English World dictionary
every — early 13c., contraction of O.E. æfre ælc each of a group, lit. ever each (Chaucer s everich), from EACH (Cf. each) with EVER (Cf. ever) added for emphasis, as the word is still felt to need emphasis (Mod.Eng. every last ..., every single ..., etc … Etymology dictionary
every — index collective Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
every — each, *all … New Dictionary of Synonyms
every — [adj] each, all each one, whole, without exception; concept 531 Ant. none … New thesaurus
every */*/*/ — UK [ˈevrɪ] / US determiner Summary: Every is generally used before a singular countable noun. The only exceptions are at Sense 2, where every can be used in phrases like every three hours , and at Sense 3. A noun subject that follows every is… … English dictionary
every — ev|ery W1S1 [ˈevri] determiner [always followed by a singular C noun] [: Old English; Origin: Afre Alc ever each ] 1.) used to refer to all the people or things in a particular group or all the parts of something ▪ We looked carefully at every… … Dictionary of contemporary English
every — [[t]e̱vri[/t]] ♦ 1) DET: DET sing n You use every to indicate that you are referring to all the members of a group or all the parts of something and not only some of them. Every village has a green, a church, a pub and a manor house... Record… … English dictionary