-
1 lick
1. transitive verb1) leckenlick a stamp — eine Briefmarke anlecken od. belecken
lick one's lips — (lit. or fig.) sich (Dat.) die Lippen lecken
lick something/somebody into shape — (fig.) etwas/jemanden auf Vordermann bringen (ugs.)
lick one's wounds — (lit. or fig.) seine Wunden lecken
2) (play gently over) [Flammen, Feuer:] [empor]züngeln an (+ Dat.)3) (coll.): (beat) verdreschen (ugs.); (fig.) bewältigen, meistern [Problem]; (in contest) eine Abfuhr erteilen (+ Dat.)2. noun1) (act) Lecken, dasgive a door a lick of paint — eine Tür [oberflächlich] überstreichen
2) (coll.): (fast pace)at a great or at full lick — mit einem Affenzahn (ugs.)
Phrasal Verbs:- academic.ru/88743/lick_off">lick off- lick up* * *[lik] 1. verb(to pass the tongue over: The dog licked her hand.) lecken2. noun1) (an act of licking: The child gave the ice-cream a lick.) das Lecken2) (a hasty application (of paint): These doors could do with a lick of paint.) die Spur•* * *[lɪk]I. n2. (small quantity)▪ a \lick of ein wenigthe living room could do with a \lick of paint das Wohnzimmer könnte etwas Farbe vertragento be going at a hell of a \lick einen [Affen]zahn draufhaben sl4.II. vt▪ to \lick sth etw lecken [o schlecken]to \lick an ice cream cone/lollipop an einem Eis/Lutscher schleckento \lick the plate den Teller ableckento \lick a stamp eine Briefmarke [mit der Zunge] befeuchten2. (touch) etw beleckenflames were \licking the curtains die Flammen züngelten an den Vorhängen hochthe waves were already \licking the bottom step die Wellen schlugen bereits an die unterste Stufeall right Joe, I know when I'm \licked also gut, Joe, ich gebe mich geschlagen4. (solve)▪ to \lick sth [or to have got sth \licked] etw im Griff habentogether we can \lick this gemeinsam kriegen wir das schon hin famto have got the problem \licked das Problem geknackt haben fam▪ to \lick sb jdn verprügeln6.▶ to \lick sb's arse [or AM ass] ( vulg) jdm in den Arsch kriechen vulg, ein Arschkriecher sein vulg▶ to \lick one's wounds seine Wunden leckenIII. vi* * *[lɪk]1. nto give sth a lick — an etw (dat) lecken
the cat gave me/my hand a lick — die Katze leckte mich ab/mir die Hand
3) (inf= small quantity)
it's time we gave the kitchen a lick of paint — die Küche könnte auch mal wieder etwas Farbe vertragen (inf)he doesn't do a lick of work — er tut keinen Schlag
4) (Brit inf= pace)
the project is coming along at a good lick — das Projekt geht ganz gut voran (inf)to go/drive at a fair old lick — einen ganz schönen Zahn draufhaben
2. vt1) (with tongue) leckento lick one's lips — sich (dat) die Lippen lecken; (fig) sich (dat) die Finger lecken
the cat licked its paws — die Katze leckte sich (dat) die Pfoten
to lick sb's boots (fig) — vor jdm kriechen (inf), jds Stiefel lecken
3) (inf: beat, defeat) in die Pfanne hauen (inf)I think we've got it licked — ich glaube, wir haben die Sache jetzt im Griff
3. vito lick at sth — an etw (dat) lecken
flames licked around the building — Flammen züngelten an dem Gebäude empor
* * *lick [lık]A v/t1. (ab-, be)lecken:lick a stamp eine Briefmarke belecken;he licked the jam off his lips er leckte sich die Marmelade von den Lippen;lick one’s lips sich die Lippen lecken (a. fig);lick into shape figb) etwas in die richtige Form bringen, zurechtbiegen, -stutzen;2. figa) plätschern an (akk) (Wellen)b) lecken an (dat):the flames licked the roof die Flammen leckten oder züngelten am Dach empor3. umga) verprügeln, verdreschenb) schlagen, besiegenc) mit einem Problem etc fertig werdend) übertreffen, schlagen:that licks creation das übertrifft alles;this licks me das geht über meinen Horizont;it licks me how … es ist mir unbegreiflich, wie …4. umg pflegen, (tadellos) in Ordnung haltenB v/i1. lecken:lick at belecken, lecken an (dat)2. umg sausen, flitzenC s1. Lecken n:give sth a lick etwas belecken, an etwas lecken;give o.s. a lick and a promise umg Katzenwäsche machen2. Spur f:he has a lick of a schoolmaster about him er hat ein bisschen was von einem Schulmeister an sich;3. (Farb-, Regen- etc) Spritzer m:lick of paint (rain)4. umg Schlag m5. umg Tempo n:at full lick mit voller Geschwindigkeit;he was driving at quite a lick er hatte einen Affenzahn drauf umgb) Leckstein m (für Haustiere und Wild)* * *1. transitive verb1) leckenlick a stamp — eine Briefmarke anlecken od. belecken
lick one's lips — (lit. or fig.) sich (Dat.) die Lippen lecken
lick something/somebody into shape — (fig.) etwas/jemanden auf Vordermann bringen (ugs.)
lick one's wounds — (lit. or fig.) seine Wunden lecken
2) (play gently over) [Flammen, Feuer:] [empor]züngeln an (+ Dat.)3) (coll.): (beat) verdreschen (ugs.); (fig.) bewältigen, meistern [Problem]; (in contest) eine Abfuhr erteilen (+ Dat.)2. noun1) (act) Lecken, dasgive a door a lick of paint — eine Tür [oberflächlich] überstreichen
2) (coll.): (fast pace)at a great or at full lick — mit einem Affenzahn (ugs.)
Phrasal Verbs:- lick off- lick up* * *v.lecken v.schlecken v.
См. также в других словарях:
give (something) a lick and a promise — 1. to clean something quickly and not carefully. I put on my new suit, gave my shoes a lick and a promise, and left the house. 2. to do a job or piece of work quickly and not carefully. We didn t have time to do much clearing up in the yard just… … New idioms dictionary
a lick and a promise — If you give something a lick and a promise, you do it hurriedly, most often incompletely, intending to return to it later … The small dictionary of idiomes
lick and promise — If you give something a lick and a promise, you make a quick attempt to clean it, with the intention of doing it more thoroughly later. She gave the kitchen a lick and a promise before she ran to catch the bus … English Idioms & idiomatic expressions
lick — lick1 S3 [lık] v ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(tongue)¦ 2¦(sport)¦ 3¦(flames/waves)¦ 4 have (got) something licked 5 lick your lips 6 lick your wounds 7 lick somebody s boots ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ [: Old English; Origin: liccian] 1.) … Dictionary of contemporary English
lick — 1 verb 1 TONGUE (T) to move your tongue across the surface of something in order to eat it, clean it etc: The dog jumped up and licked her face. 2 SPORT (T) informal to defeat an opponent: I reckon we could lick the best teams in Georgia. 3… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
neglect — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) Disregard Nouns 1. neglect, negligence, carelessness, heedlessness, thoughtlessness, dereliction, delinquency; omission, oversight, laches, default; benign neglect; rashness; procrastination. See… … English dictionary for students
once-over — {n.}, {slang} 1. A quick look; a swift examination of someone or something. Usually used with give or get . * /The new boy got the once over from the rest of the class when he came in./ * /Bob gave his paper the once over before handing it in./ 2 … Dictionary of American idioms
once-over — {n.}, {slang} 1. A quick look; a swift examination of someone or something. Usually used with give or get . * /The new boy got the once over from the rest of the class when he came in./ * /Bob gave his paper the once over before handing it in./ 2 … Dictionary of American idioms
Toxic Twins — The Toxic Twins is a nickname given to lead singer Steven Tyler and lead guitarist Joe Perry of American hard rock band Aerosmith. They were given that name in the 1970s, due to their rampant use of drugs and alcohol both on and off stage, which… … Wikipedia
once-over — noun slang 1. A quick look; a swift examination of someone or something. Usually used with give or get . The new boy got the once over from the rest of the class when he came in. Bob gave his paper the once over before handing it in. 2. or once… … Словарь американских идиом
biblical literature — Introduction four bodies of written works: the Old Testament writings according to the Hebrew canon; intertestamental works, including the Old Testament Apocrypha; the New Testament writings; and the New Testament Apocrypha. The Old… … Universalium