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1 мати
I ж ім.II дієсл.Мати Божа! виг. — my goodness!
1) to have; to possess; to have gotмати інтерв'ю з кимсь — to interview smb.
мати місце — to have a place; to take place, to occur, to happen
не мати ні друзів, ні рідні — to have neither kith nor kin
2) з інф. (бути повинним, змушеним) to must, to have to3)мати голову на плечах — to have one's head screwed on the right way, to know what is what
мати гострий язик — to have a glib ( sharp) tongue, to have one's tongue well oiled
мати значення — to matter, to be of importance ( consequence)
мати важливе значення — to be important, to be significant
це не має значення — it doesn't matter; it is of no importance
мати вагу — to be influential ( про особу); to carry weight ( про думку) ( consequence)
мати доступ — to have access (to)
мати звичку (до чого-небудь) — to be accustomed (to); to be in the habit (of), to be given (to)
мати зуб (на кого-небудь) — to have a grudge ( against), to be out to get smb.
мати можливість — to be in a position, to have the possibility ( opportunity) of (+ gerund), to have a ( good) chance
мати на увазі — to bear ( to have) in mind
я не мав на увазі — І did not mean this (that, it); it was not my intention (to)
мати на озброєнні — військ, to operate; to mount; to be armed with
мати претензії — to claim, to lay claim (to), to pretend (to), to aspire (to)
мати силу юр. — to be valid; ( від якоїсь дати) to come into force
мати смак (чого-небудь) — to taste (of)
мати смисл — to be not unreasonable, to make sense
мати тенденцію — to tend, to trend
мати щось проти когось — to have smth. against someone
мати юридичну дію — to enure, to inure, to operate
См. также в других словарях:
have (got) (someone's) number — to understand the way someone behaves. They ve got our number – they play harder against us than anybody else. She seems to know exactly what people our age want – she definitely has our number … New idioms dictionary
have (got) somebody's number — have (got) sb s ˈnumber idiom (informal) to know what sb is really like and what they plan to do • He thinks he can fool me but I ve got his number. Main entry: ↑numberidiom … Useful english dictionary
have (got) something on somebody — ˌhave (got) sth ˈon sb derived no passive (informal) (not used in the progressive tenses) to know sth bad about sb, especially sth that connects them with a crime • I m not worried they ve got nothing on me. Main entry … Useful english dictionary
have got against — phrasal verb have against or have got against [transitive, never progressive] Word forms have against : present tense I/you/we/they have/have got against he/she/it has/has got against present participle having/having got against past tense… … English dictionary
have ˈgot sth aˌgainst sb — phrasal verb to dislike someone for a particular reason I don t know what he s got against me.[/ex] We ve nothing against him personally, it s just that we don t trust politicians.[/ex] … Dictionary for writing and speaking English
have — [ weak əv, həv, strong hæv ] (3rd person singular has [ weak əz, həz, strong hæz ] ; past tense and past participle had [ weak əd, həd, strong hæd ] ) verb *** Have can be used in the following ways: as an auxiliary verb in perfect tenses of… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
have it in you — to have the ability to do something His last performance was wonderful; I didn t know he had it in him! [=I didn t know he was capable of such a performance] I don t think she has it in her to be cruel. [=I don t think she s capable of being cru … Useful english dictionary
have no idea — 1. To be unaware of what is happening 2. To be ignorant or naive • • • Main Entry: ↑idea * * * have (got) no idea informal not know at all she had no idea where she was going * * … Useful english dictionary
have something on the ball — {v. phr.}, {slang}, {colloquial} To be smart, clever; to be skilled and have the necessary know how. * /You can trust Syd; he s got a lot on the ball OR he s got something on the ball./ … Dictionary of American idioms
have something on the ball — {v. phr.}, {slang}, {colloquial} To be smart, clever; to be skilled and have the necessary know how. * /You can trust Syd; he s got a lot on the ball OR he s got something on the ball./ … Dictionary of American idioms
have a screw loose — {v. phr,}, {slang} To act in a strange way; to be foolish. * /Now I know he has a screw loose he stole a police car this time./ * /He was a smart man but had a screw loose and people thought him odd./ … Dictionary of American idioms