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1 Paranoia Expletive
Jocular: PEУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > Paranoia Expletive
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2 бранное выражение
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3 бранное выражение
Русско-английский словарь по общей лексике > бранное выражение
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4 вставное слово
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5 бранное выражение
expletive имя существительное:Русско-английский синонимический словарь > бранное выражение
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6 бранное слово
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7 вставное слово
expletive имя существительное: -
8 ругательство
Русско-английский словарь по информационным технологиям > ругательство
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9 бранное выражение
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10 бранное слово
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11 бранный
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12 вставное слово
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13 непечатное пропущено
American: "expletive deleted" (в стенограмме и т. п.)Универсальный русско-английский словарь > непечатное пропущено
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14 восполняющий
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15 вставной
1) General subject: epenthetic (о звуке или букве), expletive, parenthetic, parenthetical, pluggable, put in, set-in2) Engineering: detachable, insert, insert oil-well pump (скважинный нефтяной насос), insert pump (скважинный нефтяной насос), intercalated3) Linguistics: anaptyctic (о гласном звуке)4) Mining: replaceable5) Cinema: cut-in (об эпизоде, кадре и т.п.)6) Oil: collapsible, plug-in8) Drilling: loose9) Oilfield: insert set-in, inserted10) Automation: insert-type, insertable, inset, push-in, slip-in11) Makarov: cut-in (кино; об эпизоде, кадре и т.п.) -
16 вставной элемент
1) Linguistics: expletive2) Electronics: plug-in element -
17 дополнительный
1) General subject: accessorial, accessory, add-on, additional, additory, adjunct, adjunctive, adminicular, adscititious, alternate, amplificatory, another, appendant, auxiliary, by, collateral, complementary, contingent, excess, expletive, extra, farther, follow-up, further, in addition, more, new, obverse, occasional, other, plus, second, spare, subsidiary, supererogatory, supernumerary, supplemental, supplementary, attached, (train, plain) back-up3) Medicine: ancillary, assident, succenturiate, subs (subsidiary)4) Colloquial: wildcat (о поезде)5) Obsolete: accessive (Source: Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913))8) Bookish: appendical, epactal9) Chemistry: padding10) Mathematics: adjugate, complement11) Railway term: superposed12) Law: accessary, adjective, collateral, secondary, subsequent13) Linguistics: completive14) Diplomatic term: special (о выборах и т.п.), supporting16) Telecommunications: ext19) Oil: complemental20) Special term: addititious21) Metrology: complimentary22) Business: collateral (об обеспечении и т.п.), incremental, marginal, ministerial, side-line23) Network technologies: piggyback25) Quality control: accidental, false26) Makarov: adventitious, adventive, annex, branch, external, indirect, odd, peripheral, tributary27) SAP.tech. addnl28) General subject: antithetic -
18 компенсирующий
1) General subject: compensational, compensative, compensatory, expletive, redeeming, reparative2) Military: countervailing3) Mathematics: compensating4) Railway term: equalizing5) Law: satisfactory6) Business: remunerative7) Drilling: balancing -
19 крепкое словцо
General subject: cussword, dirty word, epithet, expletive, invective, obscenity, offensive term, rude word, term of offense, strong language, swear-word -
20 матерное слово
General subject: swear word (compare - материнское слово - мат vs мать), cussword (cuss - curse), epithet, expletive, invective, obscenity, offensive term, rude word, term of offense, dirty word
См. также в других словарях:
Expletive — Ex ple*tive, a. [L. expletivus, from expletus, p. p. of explere to fill up; ex out+plere to fill, akin to plenus full: cf. F. expl[ e]tif. See {Full}.] Filling up; hence, added merely for the purpose of filling up; superfluous. Expletive imagery … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
expletive — is an adjective and a noun: both are pronounced ik splee tiv, with the stress on the second syllable. The primary meaning is ‘filling out a sentence, line of verse, etc.’, and the noun denotes a word that does this, typically in verse, without… … Modern English usage
expletive — [eks′plətôr΄ēeks′plə tiv] n. [LL expletivus, serving to fill < L expletus, pp. of explere, to fill < ex , out, up + plere, to fill: see FULL1] 1. an oath or exclamation, esp. an obscenity 2. a word, phrase, etc. not needed for the sense but … English World dictionary
Expletive — Ex ple*tive, n. A word, letter, or syllable not necessary to the sense, but inserted to fill a vacancy; an oath. [1913 Webster] While explectives their feeble aid to join, And ten low words oft creep in one dull line. Pope. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
expletive — I noun addition, anathema, bad language, blaspheming, curse, denunciation, ecphonesis, embellishment, execration, foul invective, foul language, imprecation, injection, insertion, interjection, interpolation, irreverence, malediction, outcry,… … Law dictionary
expletive — [n] swear word; exclamation curse, cuss, cuss word, interjection, oath; concept 275 … New thesaurus
expletive — ► NOUN ▪ an oath or swear word. ORIGIN originally denoting a word used to fill out a sentence: from Latin expletivus, from explere fill out … English terms dictionary
Expletive — The word expletive is currently used in three senses: syntactic expletives, expletive attributives, and bad language .The word expletive comes from the Latin verb explere , meaning to fill , via expletivus , filling out . It was introduced into… … Wikipedia
expletive — {{11}}expletive (adj.) mid 15c., from L. expletivus (see EXPLETIVE (Cf. expletive) (n.)). {{12}}expletive (n.) 1610s, originally a word or phrase serving to fill out a sentence or metrical line, from M.Fr. explétif (15c.) and directly from L.L.… … Etymology dictionary
expletive — [17] Originally, an expletive word was simply one used to ‘fill up’ a line of verse, to complete its metrical pattern (expletive comes from Latin explētus, the past participle of explēre ‘fill out’, a compound formed from the prefix ex ‘out’ and… … The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins
expletive — [17] Originally, an expletive word was simply one used to ‘fill up’ a line of verse, to complete its metrical pattern (expletive comes from Latin explētus, the past participle of explēre ‘fill out’, a compound formed from the prefix ex ‘out’ and… … Word origins