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41 be beside oneself (with)
(to be in a state of very great, uncontrolled emotion: She was beside herself with excitement as her holiday approached.) būt ārkārtīgi satrauktam -
42 be/get carried away
(to be overcome by one's feelings: She was/got carried away by the excitement.) aizraut; pārņemt -
43 be/go on the rampage
['ræmpei‹] (to rush about angrily, violently or in excitement, often causing great destruction.) trakot; ārdīties -
44 bubble over
(to be full (with happiness etc): bubbling over with excitement.) kūsāt; mutuļot -
45 prick (up) one's ears
((of an animal) to raise the ears in excitement, attention etc: The dog pricked up its ears at the sound of the doorbell.) ausīties; sasliet ausis -
46 prick (up) one's ears
((of an animal) to raise the ears in excitement, attention etc: The dog pricked up its ears at the sound of the doorbell.) ausīties; sasliet ausis -
47 seething
['si:ðiŋ]1) ((sometimes with with) very crowded: a seething mass of people; The beach is seething with people.) pārpilns2) ((usually with with) very excited or agitated: seething with excitement/anger.) traks (aiz dusmām); kā sadedzis3) (very angry: He was seething when he left the meeting.) dusmās zvērojošs
См. также в других словарях:
Excitement — Ex*cite ment . [Cf. OF. excitement, escitement.] 1. The act of exciting, or the state of being roused into action, or of having increased action; impulsion; agitation; as, an excitement of the people. [1913 Webster] 2. That which excites or… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
excitement — index ardor, commotion, furor, interest (concern), passion, provocation, turmoil Burton s Legal Thesaurus … Law dictionary
excitement — early 15c., encouragement; c.1600, something that tends to excite, from EXCITE (Cf. excite) + MENT (Cf. ment). Meaning condition of mental and emotional agitation is from 1846 … Etymology dictionary
excitement — [n] enthusiasm; incitement action, activity, ado, adventure, agitation, animation, bother, buzz*, commotion, confusion, discomposure, disturbance, dither*, drama, elation, emotion, excitation, feeling, ferment, fever, flurry, frenzy, furor, fuss … New thesaurus
excitement — ► NOUN 1) a feeling of great enthusiasm and eagerness. 2) something that arouses such a feeling. 3) sexual arousal … English terms dictionary
excitement — [ek sīt′mənt, iksīt′mənt] n. [ME < OFr] 1. an exciting or being excited; agitation 2. something that excites … English World dictionary
excitement — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ considerable, extreme, great, high, intense, tremendous ▪ breathless, feverish, giddy (esp. AmE) … Collocations dictionary
excitement — ex|cite|ment W3S3 [ıkˈsaıtmənt] n 1.) [U] the feeling of being excited ▪ The news caused great excitement among scientists. ▪ sexual excitement excitement of ▪ the excitement of becoming a parent excitement at ▪ children filled with excitement at … Dictionary of contemporary English
excitement — n. 1) to arouse, create, stir up excitement 2) to feel excitement 3) considerable, great, intense; mounting excitement 4) excitement builds (to a climax); mounts 5) excitement about, at, over * * * [ɪk saɪtmənt] at create great intense … Combinatory dictionary
excitement — noun 1 (U) the feeling of being excited: squeals of excitement (+ of): The new job held none of the excitement of her career in the police. (+ at): their excitement at the discovery | The news that Ms Street had eloped with Jean caused great… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
excitement */*/ — UK [ɪkˈsaɪtmənt] / US noun Word forms excitement : singular excitement plural excitements 1) [uncountable] the feeling of being excited The long wait only added to our excitement. There was great excitement amongst the crowd as they waited for… … English dictionary