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1 egg
I [eɡ] noun1) (an oval object usually covered with shell, laid by a bird, reptile etc, from which a young one is hatched: The female bird is sitting on the eggs in the nest.) ola2) (such an object laid by a hen, used as food: Would you rather have boiled, fried or scrambled eggs?) ola3) (in the female mammal, the cell from which the young one is formed; the ovum: The egg is fertilized by the male sperm.) olšūna•- egg-cup- eggplant
- eggshell
- put all one's eggs in one basket
- teach one's grandmother to suck eggs II [eɡ]- egg on* * *ola; olšūna; granāta, bumba; puisis -
2 hatch
I [hæ ] noun((the door or cover of) an opening in a wall, floor, ship's deck etc: There are two hatches between the kitchen and dining-room for serving food.) lūka- hatchwayII [hæ ] verb1) (to produce (young birds etc) from eggs: My hens have hatched ten chicks.) perēt2) (to break out of the egg: These chicks hatched this morning.) izšķilties3) (to become young birds: Four of the eggs have hatched.) izšķilties4) (to plan (something, usually bad) in secret: to hatch a plot.) perināt (nodomu u.tml.)* * *lūka; iegravēta līnija, svītrinājums; perēšana; perējums; iegravēt paralēlas līnijas, svītrināt; perēt; izšķilties; perināt -
3 queen
[kwi:n]1) (a woman who rules a country, who inherits her position by right of birth: the Queen of England; Queen Elizabeth II.) karaliene2) (the wife of a king: The king and his queen were both present.) karaliene3) (a woman who is in some way important, excellent or special: a beauty queen; a movie queen.) karaliene4) (a playing-card with a picture of a queen on it: I have two aces and a queen.) dāma5) (an important chess-piece: a bishop, a king and a queen.) dāma6) (the egg-laying female of certain kinds of insect (especially bees, ants and wasps).) māte7) ((slang) a homosexual man who assumes the female role.) pasīvais homoseksuālists•- queenly- queen mother* * *karaliene; dieviete; māte; dāma; homoseksuālists; kronēt par karalieni; būt par karalieni; bandinieku pārvērst par dāmu; iet uz satikšanos ar meiteni -
4 shell
[ʃel] 1. noun1) (the hard outer covering of a shellfish, egg, nut etc: an eggshell; A tortoise can pull its head and legs under its shell.) čaumala; čaula; gliemežnīca2) (an outer covering or framework: After the fire, all that was left was the burned-out shell of the building.) karkass3) (a metal case filled with explosives and fired from a gun etc: A shell exploded right beside him.) šāviņš2. verb1) (to remove from its shell or pod: You have to shell peas before eating them.) nolobīt; izlobīt2) (to fire explosive shells at: The army shelled the enemy mercilessly.) apšaudīt•- come out of one's shell
- shell out* * *čaumala, čaula; gliemežvāks; apvalks; bruņas; šāviņš; patrona; zārks; karkass, korpuss; viegla sacīkšu laiva; nauda; apšuvums, apvalks; lobīt; nolobīt; lobīties; apšaudīt -
5 trace
[treis] 1. noun1) (a mark or sign left by something: There were traces of egg on the plate; There's still no trace of the missing child.) pēdas; paliekas2) (a small amount: Traces of poison were found in the cup.) paliekas; neliels daudzums2. verb1) (to follow or discover by means of clues, evidence etc: The police have traced him to London; The source of the infection has not yet been traced.) izsekot; sadzīt pēdas2) (to make a copy of (a picture etc) by putting transparent paper over it and drawing the outline etc: I traced the map.) kopēt; izzīmēt•- tracing- trace elements
- tracing-paper* * *atsaite, streņģe, vilksnis; pēdas; taciņa; neliels daudzums; pieraksts; novilkums uz pauspapīra; izsekot; skicēt; pausot, kopēt; izzīmēt, vilkt; fiksēt, reģistrēt
См. также в других словарях:
have egg on your face — have egg on (your) face informal to seem stupid because of something you have done. You ll be the one who has egg on your face if it goes wrong … New idioms dictionary
have egg on face — have egg on (your) face informal to seem stupid because of something you have done. You ll be the one who has egg on your face if it goes wrong … New idioms dictionary
have egg on over your face — have ˈegg on/all over your face idiom (informal) to be made to look stupid • They were left with egg on their faces when only ten people showed up. Main entry: ↑eggidiom … Useful english dictionary
have egg all over your face — have ˈegg on/all over your face idiom (informal) to be made to look stupid • They were left with egg on their faces when only ten people showed up. Main entry: ↑eggidiom … Useful english dictionary
have egg on one’s face — tv. to be embarrassed by something one has done. (As if one went out in public with a dirty face. Have got can replace have.) □ I was completely wrong, and now I have egg on my face. □ She’s really got egg on her face! … Dictionary of American slang and colloquial expressions
have egg on your face — have/get/egg on your face informal phrase to be embarrassed or appear stupid because something that you tried to do has gone wrong They found themselves out of pocket and with egg on their faces. Thesaurus: to be, or to become ashamed or… … Useful english dictionary
have egg on one's face — verb To suffer embarrassment or humiliation; to damage ones reputation. He really has egg on his face after that gaffe … Wiktionary
have egg on one's face — be embarrassed He really has egg on his face after finding out about his mistake … Idioms and examples
have egg on one's chin — Vrb phrs. To have one s trouser flies open. Often used to warn another of this potentially embarrassing situation … English slang and colloquialisms
Have egg on one's face — be exposed in an embarrassing situation … Dictionary of Australian slang
have egg on one's face — Australian Slang be exposed in an embarrassing situation … English dialects glossary