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1 fall over backwards
to try very hard:يُحاوِلُ بِكُلِّ جُهْدِهِHe bent over backwards to get us tickets for the concert.
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2 over stag gaan
over stag gaan〈 figuurlijk〉 be roped in, fall (for) -
3 fall
[fɔːl] past tense fell [fel]: past participle ˈfallen1. verb1) to go down from a higher level usually unintentionally:يَسْقُط ، يَقَعُ علىHer eye fell on an old book.
2) ( often with over ) to go down to the ground etc from an upright position, usually by accident:يَسْقُطShe fell (over).
3) to become lower or less:يَهْبُط، يَنْخَفِضThe temperature is falling.
4) to happen or occur:يَحِلُّEaster falls early this year.
5) to enter a certain state or condition:يَقَعُ في الغرام، يَسْقُطُ نائِماThey fell in love.
6) (formal only with it as subject):يقعُ على عاتِقي، من واجِبي أنto come as one's duty etc: It falls to me to take care of the children.
2. noun1) the act of falling:سُقوط، وُقوعHe had a fall.
2) (a quantity of) something that has fallen:سُقوط، هُطولa fall of snow.
3) capture or (political) defeat:سُقوط، إنْهِيارthe fall of Rome.
4) (American) the autumn:الخَريفLeaves change colour in the fall.
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4 fall (fallen)
سَقَطَ \ collapse: to fall down (esp. under a heavy weight or for lack of support): The old chair collapsed under the fat man. come down: to fall: The price of sugar came down. The telephone wires came down in the storm. come off: to fall off: The handle came off (the door). drop: to fall: An apple dropped from the tree. fail: (to cause) not to pass (an exam): He failed (in) his French examination. fall (fallen): to go down by mistake; drop: I slipped and fell (or fell down or fell over). He fell out of the tree and landed on his head. topple: to fall slowly (usu. of sth. that is top-heavy). tumble: to fall, often with a turning movement: He slipped, and tumbled down the stairs. \ See Also انهار (اِنْهَارَ)، هبط (هَبَطَ)، وقع (وَقَعَ)، رَسَبَ (في الامتحان)، انقلب (اِنْقَلَبَ) -
5 over ende
(gå over ende) fall flat -
6 tip over
to knock or fall over; to overturn:يَقْلِب، يُسْقِط، يوقِعShe put the jug on the end of the table and it tipped over.
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7 keel over
to fall over usually suddenly or unexpectedly eg in a faint.يَنْقَلِب مُغمى عليهِ -
8 kaste sig over
fall on / upon, go for, pounce, throw oneself into -
9 hals over kop verliefd worden
Van Dale Handwoordenboek Nederlands-Engels > hals over kop verliefd worden
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10 á-fall
n. ‘on-fall,’ esp.1. a nautical term, of a ‘sea’ dashing over a ship, Bs. i. 422, Korm. 180, Nj. 267, Sks. 227, Fs. 113, 153; hence the phrase, liggja undir áföllum, of one in danger at sea.2. a law term, the laying on of a fine or the like; á. sekðar, Grág. i. 138.β. a condemnatory sentence in an Icel. court; ef þeir vilja á. dæma … vér dæmum á. honum, Grág. i. 67, 71, of the formula or summing up and delivering a sentence in court.3. metaph. and theol. = áfelli, a visitation, calamity, 623. 19, Magn. 470, II. E. i. 236.COMPD: áfallsdómr. -
11 knock over
to cause to fall from an upright position:يوقِع، يُسْقِطThe dog knocked over a chair as it rushed past.
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12 push over
to cause to fall; to knock down:يوقِعHe pushed me over.
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13 просвам се
fall over -
14 pasti preko čega
• fall over -
15 pasti sa
• fall over -
16 prijeći k neprijatelju
• fall over -
17 wylęgać o zbożu
• fall over -
18 svalit se
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19 напуск
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20 отказ системы
Русско-английский индекс к Англо-русскому толковому словарю терминов и сокращений по ВТ, Интернету и программированию > отказ системы
См. также в других словарях:
fall over — (yourself to do something) British, American & Australian, American to be very eager to do something. They were falling over themselves to be helpful. (usually in continuous tenses) … New idioms dictionary
fall over — phrasal verb Word forms fall over : present tense I/you/we/they fall over he/she/it falls over present participle falling over past tense fell over past participle fallen over 1) [intransitive] if something falls over, it falls so that its side… … English dictionary
fall over — UK US fall over Phrasal Verb with fall({{}}/fɔːl/ verb (fell, fallen) ► IT if a computer or a computer program falls over, it suddenly stops working: »If the program falls over on complicated drawings, it is of no use to us professionally. ► if a … Financial and business terms
fall over — verb fall forward and down (Freq. 1) The old woman went over without a sound • Syn: ↑go over • Hypernyms: ↑break down, ↑collapse • Verb Frames … Useful english dictionary
ˌfall ˈover — phrasal verb 1) if something falls over, it falls so that its side is on the ground 2) if you fall over, you fall to the ground … Dictionary for writing and speaking English
fall over — phr verb Fall over is used with these nouns as the subject: ↑chair, ↑silence … Collocations dictionary
fall over somebody — ˌfall ˈover sb/sth derived no passive to hit your foot against sth when you are walking and fall, or almost fall Syn: trip over • I rushed for the door and fell over the cat in the hallway. see also ↑fall … Useful english dictionary
fall over something — ˌfall ˈover sb/sth derived no passive to hit your foot against sth when you are walking and fall, or almost fall Syn: trip over • I rushed for the door and fell over the cat in the hallway. see also ↑fall … Useful english dictionary
fall over yourself to do something — phrase to be very enthusiastic about doing something Thesaurus: become excitedsynonym Main entry: fall * * * ˌfall ˈover yourself to do sth derived (informal … Useful english dictionary
fall\ over\ backwards — • fall over backwards • fall over oneself v. phr. To do everything you can to please someone; try very hard to satisfy someone. The hotel manager fell over backwards to give the movie star everything she wanted. The boys fell over themselves… … Словарь американских идиом
fall\ over\ oneself — • fall over backwards • fall over oneself v. phr. To do everything you can to please someone; try very hard to satisfy someone. The hotel manager fell over backwards to give the movie star everything she wanted. The boys fell over themselves… … Словарь американских идиом