-
1 выйти из себя
1) General subject: be beside oneself with rage, blow cool, blow top, blow up, get blood up, get dander up, get hot under the collar, get mad, get one's shirt out, get rattled, go off the deep end, lose balance, lose cool, lose equilibrium, lose hair, lose one's equilibrium, lose one's temper, lose rag, lose shirt, lose temper, lose wig, to be beside oneself with rage, wax wroth, get back up, get hetup about, have shirt out, lose wool, go loopy, lose self-control, flip one's lid, ("взорваться") get very angry, go spare3) American: blow a fuse, lose goat4) Literal: fly off the handle (he flew off the handle - он как с цепи сорвался), lose one's balance5) Australian slang: climb the wall, do( one's) lolly, do (one's) scone, drop (one's) bundle, go through the roof6) Rude: get rag out7) Jargon: blow a gasket, blow one's cool, blow one's top, burn, flip (one's) lid, fly of the handle, go haywire, lose one's cool, throw a fit, get narked, pop one's cork, blow one's cork, blow one's lid, go up in the air, storm9) Makarov: get (one's) back up, go off the handle, flare up, flip lid, fly into a rage, fly off the handle10) Taboo: get (one's) shit hot, get the butt, raise hell -
2 разъярённый
1) General subject: ( as) mad as a hatter, aboil, blistering, enraged, furious, horn mad, horn-mad, hot with rage, infuriated, like a bear with a sore head, rampant, ropeable (о быке), tearing angry, white hot, white-hot, with his hackles up, wrath, wrathful, wrathy, angry2) Colloquial: savage3) Obsolete: rageth (прблизительно rage)4) Australian slang: ropeable (о быке и т.п.)5) Makarov: as mad as a hatter, hot under the collar, sultry6) Taboo: ape shit -
3 нервничать
1) General subject: be fussy, be nervous, be on edge, be on the jump, chafe, feel nervous, fidget, get rattled, get the jitters, get the needle, have the fidgets to be in a fidget, have the jitters, have the needle, jitters, show fussiness, to be (all) on edge, to be fussy, to be in a flurry, to be on the jump, bite lips, have the heebie-jeebies, have the jeebies, get all steamed up, be stressed, get stressed, stress, stress out2) Colloquial: jitter3) Agriculture: get excited (о лошади)4) British English: get Y-fronts in a W5) Jargon: get edgy, go bananas, have jitters, have kittens, raise a dust, sweat bullets6) Banking: grow hot under the collar7) Makarov: be in a flurry, edgy, to be all on edge, to be in a fidget, chafe at, chafe under, feel edgy, have the fidgets8) Taboo: bugger about, come in ( one's) pants, have clinkers in (one's) bum, shit bricks, tear-ass about9) Idiomatic expression: get your knickers in a twist. -
4 Р-355
ПОД ГОРЯЧУЮ РУКУ сделать, сказать что, попасться, подвернуться (кому) и т. п. coll PrepP Invar adv fixed WO(to say or do sth. when one is, run into s.o. when he is etc) in an angry mood, highly and visibly displeased, dissatisfied etcin a (fit of) temperin (a fit of) anger when (one is) angry (steamed (up), fuming, peeved, hot under the collar, in a huff* etc)X попался Y-y \Р-355 - X ran into Y when Y was angry (steamed etc)не попадайся Y-y - - steer clear of Y when Y is angry (steamed etc)....Молчали, не обижались бабы. Даже самые языкатые из них, способные, казалось, под горячую руку переговорить самого черта, лишь горько усмехались в ответ из-под сдвинутых к самым бровям платков (Максимов 3).. The women stood in silence and didn't take offense. Even the most shrewish among them, who could talk the devil's hind leg off when they were in a temper, only smiled back ruefully from under their headscarves (3a)За долгую свою жизнь похоронил Иван Кузьмич много собак, и Чарли, пожалуй, окажется той собакой, которая переживет его и будет ждать его возвращения из смерти. А ведь случалось, пинал его Иван Кузьмич под горячую руку (Евтушенко 2) In his long life Ivan Kuzmich had buried many dogs, but Charlie would probably be the dog that outlived him and would wait for him to return from the dead. Yet sometimes Ivan Kuzmich kicked him in anger (2a) -
5 под горячую руку
[PrepP; Invar; adv; fixed WO]=====⇒ (to say or do sth. when one is, run into s.o. when he is etc) in an angry mood, highly and visibly displeased, dissatisfied etc:- when (one is) angry (steamed (up), fuming, peeved, hot under the collar, in a huff etc);♦...Молчали, не обижались бабы. Даже самые языкатые из них, способные, казалось, под горячую руку переговорить самого черта, лишь горько усмехались в ответ из-под сдвинутых к самым бровям платков (Максимов 3)... The women stood in silence and didn't take offense. Even the most shrewish among them, who could talk the devil's hind leg off when they were in a temper, only smiled back ruefully from under their headscarves (3a)♦ За долгую свою жизнь похоронил Иван Кузьмич много собак, и Чарли, пожалуй, окажется той собакой, которая переживет его и будет ждать его возвращения из смерти. А ведь случалось, пинал его Иван Кузьмич под горячую руку (Евтушенко 2) In his long life Ivan Kuzmich had buried many dogs, but Charlie would probably be the dog that outlived him and would wait for him to return from the dead. Yet sometimes Ivan Kuzmich kicked him in anger (2a)Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > под горячую руку
-
6 сердитый
прил.Английские эквиваленты в отличие от русского слова сердитый уточняют по отношению к кому или чему выражен гнев.1. angry — сердитый, злой, разгневанный: to look angry см.выглядеть сердитым/иметь сердитый вид; to be/to feel angry — сердиться; to be angry with smb — сердиться на кого-либо; to be angry at smth — сердиться на что-либо; to make smb angry — сердить кого-либо/рассердить кого-либо He is very angry with me at my having losl his book. — Он очень сердится на меня за то, что я потеряла его книгу. Don't be angry with him, it is not his fault. — He сердись на него, это ведь не его вина. Состояние to be angry ассоциируется с горячностью и внезапностью, что находит отражение в ряде сочетаний, передающих разную степень раздражения и гнева. Все нижеприведенные сочетания, однако, более эмоционально передают рассерженность, чем нейтральное to be angry: There followed another outburst of anger. — Затем последовала еще одна вспышка гнева. When she told him about it he nearly exploded. — Он чуть не взорвался, когда она ему об этом сказала. Alice often flares up over nothing. — Алиса часто может вспылить из-за нустика./Алиса часто может взвиться из-за пустяка. She burned with indignation. — Она кипела от негодования. Не has a furious temper. — У него горячий нрав. Не is a hot-tempered young man. — Он вспыльчивый молодой человек. Their parents were having a heated argument about where to go. — Их родители почти ссорились, обсуждая, куда бы им поехать. They were having a blazing/flaming row. — Они скандалили так, что искры летели. It makes my blood boil. — У меня от этого кровь закипаает. I lost my cool. — Я потерял спокойствие./Я потерял хладнокровие. Не was getting very hot under the collar. — Он очень горячился. He flew up at her. — Он набросился на нее. It was an explosive situation and he could not contain his anger any longer. — Ситуация была взрывоопасной, он не мог больше сдерживать свой гнев. Не erupted at the meeting. — Он взорвался на собрании.2. cross — сердитый ( употребляется обычно детьми или по отношению к детям): The neighbours got cross with us every time we put on loud music. — Соседи всегда сердились, когда мы заводили громкую музыку. I am cross with her for lying. — Я сержусь на нее за ложь. -
7 взбешённый
1) General subject: as mad as a wet hen, enraged, frenzied, furious, horn mad, horn-mad, mad, red-hot, redwood, savage2) Australian slang: agro3) Jargon: on one's high bourse, red-assed, redassed, ripped, ripped off, ripped up, scotty, ape, ding-dong, p'd off, pee'd off, peed off, pissed on4) Invective: pissed off5) Makarov: as mad as a hornet, hot under the collar -
8 злой
1) General subject: angry, bad, bad actor, bad tempered, bad-tempered, baleful, bitter, black, black-hearted, blackhearted, carping, cattish, diabolic, diabolical, evil, evil minded, evil-minded, fiendish, fierce, gallows, glaring (о взгляде), glowering, ill disposed, ill natured, ill-conditioned, ill-disposed, ill-natured, impish, malevolent, malicious, malign, malignant, mordant, porkey, puckish, rogue, serpent, severe, sharp (о языке), snappish, snooty, snotty, spiteful, stepmotherly, unkind, unkindly, vicious, waspish, wicked, ill, scathing, sinister, mean (http://ru.wiktionary.org/wiki/mean\#mean_II), nasty3) Religion: malice5) Jargon: P.O., chawed, hot, hot under the collar, in a huff, narky, p.o.'d, peeved off, pissed off, pluged, ratty, red-assed, redassed, scotty, t'd off, t.o.d., tee'd off, teed off, up in arms, hacked off, jacked out, fenced, ticked (off), browned off, fired up, jacked (out), mad, peeve, porky, ripped, ripped off, ripped up, steamed up7) Makarov: glowering (о человеке)8) Taboo: hell-roaring, niggly, pissed, shat -
9 раздражённый
1) General subject: angry, annoyed, bilious, brittle, browned off, chuffed, crank, cranky, cross, disgruntled, distempered, edgy, exasperated, fretted, hot, huffy, irritable, nattered, nettled by( smth.) (чем-л.), nettled with (smth.) (чем-л.), on edge, out of temper, riley, roily, rubbed, sore, spleenful, warm, wild, querulous, frustrated, snippy2) Colloquial: cheesed-off, magged, nattery, peeved, shirty, ticked off (about)3) Obsolete: exasperate4) Bookish: acerbate5) Australian slang: fit to be tied, hot under the collar, pissed off, ropable, snakey, snitchy, wally7) Jargon: aggravated, browned-off, cheesed off, hacked, in a huff, jacked (out), peeve, ratty, jacked out, in a twit, hung8) Fishery: irritated9) Cliche: All bent out of shape10) Makarov: all on edge, heated11) Taboo: brassed off, bummed out, fucked off, hacked off, hell-roarious, miffed, naffed off, narked, narky, peed off, peeved as asshole, peeved as assholes, pissed, (with somebody/something) pissed off, red-assed, shat -
10 сердитый
1) General subject: angry, angry with ( smb.) (на кого-л.), black, blistering, chumpish, crabbed, cross (he is cross with you - он сердит на тебя), cross grained, cross-grained, crotchety, fretful, glowering (о взгляде), gruff, grumpish, grumpy, irascible, irate, mad, out of humor, out of temper, overthwart, porkey, riley, roily, shirty, snake headed, snuffy, sour, spiteful, stuffy, sulkiness, sulky, sullen, surly, testy, ugly (о выражении лица, взгляде), vicious, wrathful3) Dialect: toothy4) American: grouty, rambunctious, salty6) Jargon: hot, hot under the collar, narky, ratty, scotty7) Cliche: All bent out of shape8) Taboo: fired up, nowty, pissed off -
11 накаливаться
= накаляться; св - накали́тьсяto become/to get hot; перен to get/to be heated, to be/to get hot under the collar -
12 выходить из себя
1) General subject: be het up about, be in a swivet, get oneself into a snit, lose one's temper, short fuse, to be het up about ( smth.), to be in a swivet, blow top, blow up, get out, say a mouthful (Gleb had the good habit of never saying a mouthful in the company of others, no matter how angry he was. У Глебя было хорошее качество: как бы он не злился, он не выходил из себя на людях.), lose self-control, lose one's wool, flip one's lid4) Australian slang: rouse5) Jargon: blow( one's) mind (top), flip out, raise Cain (mischief; a rumpus; the devil; the roof; sand), blow cool, raise the roof, pop off, go ape6) Banking: grow hot under the collar -
13 З-64
ПОД ЗАПАЛ В ЗАПАЛЕ both coll PrepP these forms only advimpulsively, driven by an outburst of feelingin the heat of the momentin a fit (a burst) of temper (in limited contexts) when one is (gets) hot under the collar.Чего не скажешь в запале, особенно во время войны! (Рыбаков 1)....You say all sorts of things in the heat of the moment, especially in wartime (1a). -
14 в запале
• ПОД ЗАПАЛ; В ЗАПАЛЕ both coll[PrepP; these forms only; adv]=====⇒ impulsively, driven by an outburst of feeling:- [in limited contexts] when one is (gets) hot under the collar.♦ Чего не скажешь в запале, особенно во время войны! (Рыбаков 1)....You say all sorts of things in the heat of the moment, especially in wartime (1a).Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > в запале
-
15 под запал
• ПОД ЗАПАЛ; В ЗАПАЛЕ both coll[PrepP; these forms only; adv]=====⇒ impulsively, driven by an outburst of feeling:- [in limited contexts] when one is (gets) hot under the collar.♦ Чего не скажешь в запале, особенно во время войны! (Рыбаков 1)....You say all sorts of things in the heat of the moment, especially in wartime (1a).Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > под запал
-
16 рассердиться
1) General subject: become angry, blaze out (на кого-л.), bristle, flare, get angry, get blood up, get dander up, get hot under the collar, get into a pelter, get into a temper, get mad (don't be mad at me - не сердитесь на меня), get one's dander up, get one's monkey up, go off (Maria went off last night after I told her about losing her bike.), grow angry, lose one's hair, lose one's temper, lose temper, set up one's bristles, wax angry, blow up, boil, get back up, get back up, get mad, get monkey up, get warm, lose wool, put back up, set back up, set up bristles, fly into a temper (на), get into a temper (на), grow angry with (на кого-л.), get angry at (на что-л.), go apeshit2) Colloquial: lose one's wool, pitch a fit3) American: lose goat4) Australian slang: climb the wall, do( one's) scone, drop (one's) bundle6) Makarov: blaze up, get ( one's) back up, get into a pet, take the pet, flame up, flare up, fly into a rage, fly into a temper, fly out (на)7) Idiomatic expression: get panties in a wad -
17 Р-17
ВХОДИТЬ/ВОЙТИ (ПРИХОДИТЬ/ПРИЙТИ, ВПАДАТЬ/ВПАСТЬ) В РАЖ coll VP subj: human to become so angry or excited that one cannot control o.s.: X вошел в раж 2c X got all worked up X blew his cool (in refer, to anger only) X got hot under the collar a fit of rage overcame X.Спорить с Виктором бесполезно: он входит в раж и начинает на всех кричать. It doesn't pay to argue with Victor. He gets all worked up and starts yelling at everyone.(Ефим) вернулся к машинке и, впав в некий раж, стал быстро-быстро стучать по клавишам, не соображая, что пишет (Войнович 6).. When he ( Yefim) returned to the typewriter, a fit of rage overcame him and he began banging away at the keys without stopping to think (6a). -
18 войти в раж
• ВХОДИТЬ/ВОЙТИ <ПРИХОДИТЬ/ПРИЙТИ, ВПАДАТЬ/ВПАСТЬ> В РАЖ coll[VP; subj: human]=====⇒ to become so angry or excited that one cannot control o.s.:- [in refer, to anger only] X got hot under the collar;- a fit of rage overcame X.♦ Спорить с Виктором бесполезно: он входит в раж и начинает на всех кричать. It doesn't pay to argue with Victor. He gets all worked up and starts yelling at everyone.♦ [Ефим] вернулся к машинке и, впав в некий раж, стал быстро-быстро стучать по клавишам, не соображая, что пишет (Войнович 6)... When he [Yefim] returned to the typewriter, a fit of rage overcame him and he began banging away at the keys without stopping to think (6a).Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > войти в раж
-
19 впадать в раж
• ВХОДИТЬ/ВОЙТИ <ПРИХОДИТЬ/ПРИЙТИ, ВПАДАТЬ/ВПАСТЬ> В РАЖ coll[VP; subj: human]=====⇒ to become so angry or excited that one cannot control o.s.:- [in refer, to anger only] X got hot under the collar;- a fit of rage overcame X.♦ Спорить с Виктором бесполезно: он входит в раж и начинает на всех кричать. It doesn't pay to argue with Victor. He gets all worked up and starts yelling at everyone.♦ [Ефим] вернулся к машинке и, впав в некий раж, стал быстро-быстро стучать по клавишам, не соображая, что пишет (Войнович 6)... When he [Yefim] returned to the typewriter, a fit of rage overcame him and he began banging away at the keys without stopping to think (6a).Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > впадать в раж
-
20 впасть в раж
• ВХОДИТЬ/ВОЙТИ <ПРИХОДИТЬ/ПРИЙТИ, ВПАДАТЬ/ВПАСТЬ> В РАЖ coll[VP; subj: human]=====⇒ to become so angry or excited that one cannot control o.s.:- [in refer, to anger only] X got hot under the collar;- a fit of rage overcame X.♦ Спорить с Виктором бесполезно: он входит в раж и начинает на всех кричать. It doesn't pay to argue with Victor. He gets all worked up and starts yelling at everyone.♦ [Ефим] вернулся к машинке и, впав в некий раж, стал быстро-быстро стучать по клавишам, не соображая, что пишет (Войнович 6)... When he [Yefim] returned to the typewriter, a fit of rage overcame him and he began banging away at the keys without stopping to think (6a).Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > впасть в раж
- 1
- 2
См. также в других словарях:
hot under the collar — {adj. phr.}, {informal} Angry. * /Mary gets hot under the collar if you joke about women drivers./ * /Tom got hot under the collar when his teacher punished him./ … Dictionary of American idioms
hot under the collar — {adj. phr.}, {informal} Angry. * /Mary gets hot under the collar if you joke about women drivers./ * /Tom got hot under the collar when his teacher punished him./ … Dictionary of American idioms
hot under the collar — If you re hot under the collar, you re feeling angry or bothered … The small dictionary of idiomes
hot under the collar — ► hot under the collar informal angry or resentful. Main Entry: ↑hot … English terms dictionary
hot under the collar — adjective very angry • Similar to: ↑angry • Usage Domain: ↑colloquialism * * * (informal).See angry sense 1. → hot * * * hot under the collar … Useful english dictionary
hot under the collar — informal if someone is hot under the collar, they are angry. He got very hot under the collar when I suggested that he might be mistaken. The issue of waste disposal is getting a lot of people hot under the collar … New idioms dictionary
hot\ under\ the\ collar — adj. phr. informal Angry. Mary gets hot under the collar if you joke about women drivers. Tom got hot under the collar when his teacher punished him … Словарь американских идиом
hot under the collar — upset, becoming angry, hot and bothered It s only a joke. Don t get hot under the collar … English idioms
hot under the collar — If you re hot under the collar, you re feeling angry or bothered. (Dorking School Dictionary) … English Idioms & idiomatic expressions
hot under the collar — very annoyed or nervous We disagree with each other from time to time, and we both get a little hot under the collar … English dictionary
hot under the collar — informal angry or resentful. → hot … English new terms dictionary