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1 excitement
noun His arrival caused great excitement; the excitement of travel.) uzbudinājums; uztraukums* * *uztraukums, uzbudinājums -
2 to tremble with excitement
drebēt aiz uztraukuma -
3 at fever pitch
(at a level of great excitement: The crowd's excitement was at fever pitch as they waited for the filmstar to appear.) ārkārtīgs satraukums* * *ārkārtīgā satraukumā -
4 sensational
1) (causing great excitement or horror: a sensational piece of news.) sensacionāls2) (very good: The film was sensational.) brīnišķīgs; kolosāls3) (intended to create feelings of excitement, horror etc: That magazine is too sensational for me.) satraucošs; uzbudinošs* * *sensacionāls; maņu, sajūtu; brīnišķīgs -
5 all over
1) (over the whole of (a person, thing etc): My car is dirty all over.) pilnīgi viss2) (finished: The excitement's all over now.) beidzies3) (everywhere: We've been looking all over for you!) visur* * *visur; beidzies -
6 anticipation
noun I'm looking forward to the concert with anticipation (= expectancy, excitement).) gaidas; cerības* * *nojauta, paredzējums; cerības, gaidas; aizsteigšanās priekšā -
7 anticlimax
(a dull or disappointing ending to a play, activity etc after increasing excitement: After the weeks of preparation, the concert itself was a bit of an anticlimax.) atslābums* * *atslābums, reakcija; antikulminācija -
8 blood pressure
(the (amount of) pressure of the blood on the walls of the blood-vessels: The excitement will raise his blood pressure.) asinsspiediens* * *asinsspiediens -
9 buzz
1. verb1) ((of an insect) to make a noise by beating its wings eg when flying: The bees buzzed angrily.) sanēt; dūkt2) (to be filled with or make a similar noise: My ears are buzzing; The crowd was buzzing with excitement.) dūkt; džinkstēt2. noun((sometimes with a) a buzzing sound: a buzz of conversation.) sanēšana; dūkšana- buzzer* * *dūkšana, sanēšana; baumas; telefona zvans; iztukšot; sanēt, dūkt; izplatīt; pārlidot zemu un lielā ātrumā; zvanīt pa telefonu; piezvanīt pa telefonu; sviest, mest; veca lieta! -
10 contain
[kən'tein]1) (to keep or have inside: This box contains a pair of shoes; How much milk does this jug contain?) saturēt; ietvert2) (to control: He could hardly contain his excitement.) apvaldīt•* * *ietvert, saturēt; apvaldīt; apturēt izplatīšanos; dalīties bez atlikuma -
11 create
[kri'eit]1) (to cause to exist; to make: How was the earth created?; The circus created great excitement.) radīt; izraisīt2) (to give (a rank etc to): Sir John was created a knight in 1958.) iecelt (dižciltīgo kārtā)•- creation- creative
- creatively
- creativeness
- creativity
- creator
- the Creator* * *radīt; veidot tēlu; izraisīt; iecelt; trokšņot -
12 delirious
[di'liriəs]1) (wandering in the mind and talking complete nonsense (usually as a result of fever): The sick man was delirious and nothing he said made sense.) murgojošs; nesakarīgs2) (wild with excitement: She was delirious with happiness at the news.) neprātīgs (aiz prieka, sajūsmas)•* * *murgojošs; neprātīgs; nesakarīgs -
13 drug
1. noun1) (any substance used in medicine: She has been prescribed a new drug for her stomach-pains.) zāles2) (a substance, sometimes one used in medicine, taken by some people to achieve a certain effect, eg great happiness or excitement: I think she takes drugs; He behaves as though he is on drugs.) narkotika2. verb(to make to lose consciousness by giving a drug: She drugged him and tied him up.) dot/lietot narkotikas- druggist- drug-addict
- drugstore* * *droga, zāles; narkotika; narkotizēt; piejaukt narkotiku; lietot narkotikas -
14 electric
[ə'lektrik]1) (of, produced by, or worked by electricity: electric light.) elektrisks2) (full of excitement: The atmosphere in the theatre was electric.) satraucošs; sakaitēts* * *elektrisks; aizrautīgs, aizraujošs -
15 excite
1) (to cause or rouse strong feelings of expectation, happiness etc in: The children were excited at the thought of the party.) uzbudināt; uztraukt2) (to cause or rouse (feelings, emotions etc): The book did not excite my interest.) rosināt; modināt (interesi u.tml.)•- excitability
- excited
- excitedly
- excitement
- exciting* * *uzbudināt, uztraukt; kairināt; modināt, izraisīt; inducēt -
16 ferment
1. [fə'ment] verb1) (to (make something) go through a particular chemical change (as when yeast is added to dough in the making of bread): Grape juice must be fermented before it becomes wine.) rūgt; raudzēt2) (to excite or be excited: He is the kind of person to ferment trouble.) satraukt; celt nemieru2. ['fə:ment] noun(a state of excitement: The whole city was in a ferment.) nemiers; satraukums* * *ferments; rūgšana; nemiers, satraukums; rūgt; raudzēt; būt nemiera pārņemtam; satraukt -
17 fever
['fi:və]((an illness causing) high body temperature and quick heart-beat: She is in bed with a fever; a fever of excitement.) drudzis; uzbudinājums; satraukums- feverish- feverishly
- at fever pitch* * *drudzis; uzbudinājums, satraukums -
18 flurry
American - flurries; noun1) (a sudden rush (of wind etc); light snow: A flurry of wind made the door bang; a flurry of excitement; The children expected a lot of snow but there were only flurries.) (vēja, lietus) brāzma; snieģelis2) (a confusion: She was in a flurry.) nemiers; satraukums* * *brāzma; nemiers, satraukums; satraukt -
19 fluster
1. noun(excitement and confusion caused by hurry: She was in a terrible fluster when unexpected guests arrived.) uztraukums; uzbudinājums2. verb(to cause to be worried or nervous; to agitate: Don't fluster me!) uztraukt; uzbudināt* * *uztraukums, uzbudinājums; uzbudināt, uztraukt; uztraukties; apskurbt -
20 flutter
1. verb1) (to (cause to) move quickly: A leaf fluttered to the ground.) plivināt; plivināties2) ((of a bird, insect etc) to move the wings rapidly and lightly: The moth fluttered round the light.) lidināties; laidelēties2. noun1) (a quick irregular movement (of a pulse etc): She felt a flutter in her chest.) (par pulsu, sirdi) neregulāri sist; dauzīties2) (nervous excitement: She was in a great flutter.) satraukums* * *plivināšana; satraukums; sensācija, kņada; risks; vibrācija; mirgošana; laidelēties, lidināties; plivināt; plivināties; trīcēt, drebēt; strauji dauzīties; vibrēt
См. также в других словарях:
Excitement — Ex*cite ment . [Cf. OF. excitement, escitement.] 1. The act of exciting, or the state of being roused into action, or of having increased action; impulsion; agitation; as, an excitement of the people. [1913 Webster] 2. That which excites or… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
excitement — index ardor, commotion, furor, interest (concern), passion, provocation, turmoil Burton s Legal Thesaurus … Law dictionary
excitement — early 15c., encouragement; c.1600, something that tends to excite, from EXCITE (Cf. excite) + MENT (Cf. ment). Meaning condition of mental and emotional agitation is from 1846 … Etymology dictionary
excitement — [n] enthusiasm; incitement action, activity, ado, adventure, agitation, animation, bother, buzz*, commotion, confusion, discomposure, disturbance, dither*, drama, elation, emotion, excitation, feeling, ferment, fever, flurry, frenzy, furor, fuss … New thesaurus
excitement — ► NOUN 1) a feeling of great enthusiasm and eagerness. 2) something that arouses such a feeling. 3) sexual arousal … English terms dictionary
excitement — [ek sīt′mənt, iksīt′mənt] n. [ME < OFr] 1. an exciting or being excited; agitation 2. something that excites … English World dictionary
excitement — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ considerable, extreme, great, high, intense, tremendous ▪ breathless, feverish, giddy (esp. AmE) … Collocations dictionary
excitement — ex|cite|ment W3S3 [ıkˈsaıtmənt] n 1.) [U] the feeling of being excited ▪ The news caused great excitement among scientists. ▪ sexual excitement excitement of ▪ the excitement of becoming a parent excitement at ▪ children filled with excitement at … Dictionary of contemporary English
excitement — n. 1) to arouse, create, stir up excitement 2) to feel excitement 3) considerable, great, intense; mounting excitement 4) excitement builds (to a climax); mounts 5) excitement about, at, over * * * [ɪk saɪtmənt] at create great intense … Combinatory dictionary
excitement — noun 1 (U) the feeling of being excited: squeals of excitement (+ of): The new job held none of the excitement of her career in the police. (+ at): their excitement at the discovery | The news that Ms Street had eloped with Jean caused great… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
excitement */*/ — UK [ɪkˈsaɪtmənt] / US noun Word forms excitement : singular excitement plural excitements 1) [uncountable] the feeling of being excited The long wait only added to our excitement. There was great excitement amongst the crowd as they waited for… … English dictionary