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1 bosom
['bʊzəm]nome lett.1) (chest) petto m.2) (breasts) petto m., seno m.3) fig. (heart, soul) seno m., cuore m.* * *['buzəm] 1. noun1) (a woman's breasts: She has a large bosom.) petto, seno2) (the chest: She held him tenderly to her bosom.) petto3) (the innermost part: in the bosom of his family.) seno2. adjective(intimate; close: a bosom friend.) del cuore* * *bosom /ˈbʊzəm/n.3 (lett.) petto; seno; cuore (fig.): to carry st. in one's bosom, portare qc. sul seno (o sul cuore); to clasp sb. to one's bosom, stringersi q. al seno (o al cuore); I felt a tremor in my bosom, sentii un tremore nel petto● bosom buddy (o bosom friend), amico del cuore (o prediletto)bosomya.( di donna) dall'ampio seno; dal seno prosperoso; pettoruta.* * *['bʊzəm]nome lett.1) (chest) petto m.2) (breasts) petto m., seno m.3) fig. (heart, soul) seno m., cuore m. -
2 bosom bos·om n
['bʊzəm](of woman) fig seno -
3 gather
I ['gæðə(r)]nome sart. piega f., increspatura f.II 1. ['gæðə(r)]1) (collect) raccogliere [fruit, mushrooms, flowers]; raccogliere, accumulare [data, information]; chiamare a raccolta [followers, strength]; prendere [ courage]2) (embrace)to gather sb. to — stringere qcn. contro [oneself, one's bosom]
3) (deduce, conclude)I gather from her (that)... — da quello che mi ha detto deduco che...
4) sart. raccogliere, pieghettare2.verbo intransitivo [people, crowd] radunarsi, raccogliersi; [ family] riunirsi; [ clouds] addensarsi; [ darkness] infittirsi* * *['ɡæðə] 1. verb1) (to (cause to) come together in one place: A crowd of people gathered near the accident.) radunarsi2) (to learn (from what has been seen, heard etc): I gather you are leaving tomorrow.) dedurre3) (to collect or get: He gathered strawberries from the garden; to gather information.) raccogliere4) (to pull (material) into small folds and stitch together: She gathered the skirt at the waist.) increspare2. noun(a fold in material, a piece of clothing etc.) crespa- gather round
- gather together* * *I ['gæðə(r)]nome sart. piega f., increspatura f.II 1. ['gæðə(r)]1) (collect) raccogliere [fruit, mushrooms, flowers]; raccogliere, accumulare [data, information]; chiamare a raccolta [followers, strength]; prendere [ courage]2) (embrace)to gather sb. to — stringere qcn. contro [oneself, one's bosom]
3) (deduce, conclude)I gather from her (that)... — da quello che mi ha detto deduco che...
4) sart. raccogliere, pieghettare2.verbo intransitivo [people, crowd] radunarsi, raccogliersi; [ family] riunirsi; [ clouds] addensarsi; [ darkness] infittirsi -
4 ♦ snake
♦ snake /sneɪk/n.4 (volg.) biscia, anguilla (fig. volg.); pene: to drain the snake, sgrollare (o scrollare) la biscia; orinare● snakes and ladders, il gioco dell'oca □ snake bite ► snakebite □ (fig. slang USA) snake-bitten, sfortunato; scalognato; iellato (pop.) □ snake charmer, incantatore di serpenti □ snake eyes, ( nei dadi) lancio di due; (fig.) insuccesso completo, buco nell'acqua □ ( USA) snake(- rail) fence, staccionata di tronchi d'albero disposti a zigzag □ (zool., Raphidia) snake fly, rafidia □ (fig.) a snake in the grass, un traditore; una serpe □ (fam.) snake oil, olio di serpente; rimedio miracoloso per tutti i mali; panacea □ (fig.) snake pit, manicomio; fossa dei serpenti (fig.) □ (fig.) to cherish a snake in one's bosom, allevare una serpe in seno □ (fig.) to wake snakes, fare il diavolo a quattro.(to) snake /sneɪk/v. i.1 serpeggiare: The path snakes up the mountain, il sentiero s'inerpica serpeggiando sul fianco del monte2 strisciare: The patrol snaked through the undergrowth, la pattuglia avanzava strisciando nel sottobosco● to snake one's way, ( di veicolo) procedere a zigzag; ( di persona) insinuarsi ( tra la folla, ecc.). -
5 ■ take to
■ take tov. i. + prep.1 portare (o accompagnare) a (o in, da): I took the cheque to the bank, ho portato in banca l'assegno; I'll take the boy to school, accompagno a scuola il ragazzo; Take me to your boss!, portami dal tuo capo!2 fuggire verso; ritirarsi in; darsi a: to take to the mountains, fuggire verso i monti; ritirarsi sulle montagne; to take to the bush, darsi alla macchia3 (fig.) darsi a; mettersi a; prendere a; cominciare a (fare qc.): to take to drink (o to drinking) darsi al bere (o all'alcol); He's taken to reading detective stories, s'è messo a leggere gialli4 applicare, usare ( uno strumento: per fare qc.): You must take a screwdriver to it, qui ti ci vuole un cacciavite!5 affezionarsi a (q.); prendere (q.) in: to take a liking [a dislike] to sb., prendere q. in simpatia [in antipatia] □ to take sb. to one's arms, prendere q. tra le braccia □ to take to one's bed, mettersi a letto ( per riposarsi o per malattia) □ to take st. to bits (o to pieces), fare a pezzi qc. □ (naut.) to take to the boats, salire sulle lance di salvataggio □ to take to boats (o to water), correre alle barche (o alle navi); imbarcarsi □ to take sb. to one's breast (o bosom), stringere al petto q. □ (leg.) to take sb. to court, portare q. in tribunale; citare q. in giudizio □ to take st. to heart, prendere a cuore qc. □ to take to one's heels, darsela a gambe; scappare □ to take sb. to one side, prendere q. in disparte (o da parte) □ (naut.) to take to the open sea, prendere il largo □ to take to the road, darsi al vagabondaggio; (teatr.: di una compagnia) fare una tournée in provincia □ to take sb. to task, rimproverare q. □ (arc.) to take to wife, prendere in moglie; sposare. -
6 heave
I [hiːv]nome (effort to move) sforzo m.II 1. [hiːv]2)3) (throw) gettare, lanciare (at a)2.1) [sea, ground] sollevarsi2) (pull) tirare con uno strattone•- heave to- heave up* * *[hiːv]1. nsforzo, (of waves) movimento, Geol rigetto2. vtthey heaved the washing machine into the bathroom — hanno trascinato a fatica la lavatrice nel bagno
to heave a sigh — emettere or mandare un sospiro
to heave anchor Naut — salpare l'ancora
3. vi1) (sea, chest, stomach) alzarsi ed abbassarsito heave at or to heave on — (pull) tirare con forza
2) (feel sick) avere i conati di vomito3) hove liter: pt, ppto heave in sight or into view — comparire all'orizzonte
•- heave to* * *heave /hi:v/n.1 sforzo, strappo (per sollevare o lanciare qc.); sollevamento2 [u] il sollevarsi; il gonfiarsi; spinta: the heave of the sea, il gonfiarsi del mare ( che preme sulla nave); la spinta del mare3 lancio; tiro5 (geol.) rigetto orizzontale(to) heave /hi:v/A v. t.1 sollevare; alzare ( lentamente, con sforzo); (naut.) alare, alzare, issare, levare: to heave tree trunks, sollevare tronchi d'albero; to heave the anchor, levare l'ancora2 lanciare, scagliare ( un oggetto); emettere; gettare: to heave a sigh of relief, emettere un sospiro di sollievoB v. i.4 vomitare; avere conati di vomito● (naut.) to heave ( the chain) short, alzare l'ancora in posizione verticale ( pronti per salpare) □ to heave in sight (o into view), ( di una nave) apparire all'orizzonte; ( di una persona) apparire, comparire.* * *I [hiːv]nome (effort to move) sforzo m.II 1. [hiːv]2)3) (throw) gettare, lanciare (at a)2.1) [sea, ground] sollevarsi2) (pull) tirare con uno strattone•- heave to- heave up -
7 bust
I 1. [bʌst]1) (breasts) busto m. (anche art.), petto m., seno m.2) AE colloq. (binge)3) AE colloq. (failure) (person) fallito m. (-a); (business, career) fallimento m., fiasco m.2. 3.aggettivo colloq.1) (broken) rotto, sfasciato2) (bankrupt)II 1. [bʌst]to go bust — fare fallimento, fallire
1) (break) spaccare, sfasciare2) [ police] smantellare [ drugs ring]; fare irruzione in [ premises]; arrestare [ suspect]3) (financially) rovinare, fare fallire [person, firm]2.- bust up••to bust a gut doing sth. — colloq. rompersi la schiena a fare qcs
* * *past participle; see bust II* * *I [bʌst] n(bosom) petto, seno, Art busto- bust upII [bʌst] fam1. adj(broken) rotto (-a), scassato (-a)to go bust — (bankrupt) fallire, fare fallimento
2. vt1)See:burst 2.2) (Police: arrest) pizzicare, beccare, (raid) fare irruzione in3) (break) scassare* * *bust (1) /bʌst/n.2 (scult.) busto.bust (2) /bʌst/n.1 (econ.) congiuntura negativa; recessionebust (3) /bʌst/A pass. e p. p.di to bustB a. ( slang)1 rotto; scassato2 fallito; in bancarotta: to go bust, fallire, fare fallimento; andare in rovina NOTA D'USO: - failed o bankrupt?-.(to) bust /bʌst/A v. t.1 (fam.) rompere; spaccare; fracassare; sfasciare; scassinare; far saltare; far scoppiare: He busted my nose, mi ha spaccato il naso; to bust a safe, scassinare una cassaforte; I've busted a tyre, mi è scoppiata una gomma2 ( slang USA) colpire; dare, mollare un pugno a: He busted me on the nose, mi ha mollato un pugno sul naso7 ( slang USA) fare fiasco in; ( a scuola) essere bocciato in, cannare (pop.); I busted math, ho cannato matematicaB v. i.1 (fam.) rompersi; spaccarsi; scassarsi; fracassarsi; scoppiare: The main pipe has busted, s'è spaccato il tubo principale● (volg. USA) to bust one's ass, ammazzarsi di lavoro; farsi un culo così (volg.) □ ( slang) to bust a gut, crepare dal ridere; ridere a crepapelle; ( anche) fare l'impossibile (per riuscire a fare qc.), fare i salti mortali, dannarsi l'anima □ (fam. USA) to bust st. wide open, portare alla luce (un imbroglio, ecc.); denunciare; far scoppiare ( un caso).* * *I 1. [bʌst]1) (breasts) busto m. (anche art.), petto m., seno m.2) AE colloq. (binge)3) AE colloq. (failure) (person) fallito m. (-a); (business, career) fallimento m., fiasco m.2. 3.aggettivo colloq.1) (broken) rotto, sfasciato2) (bankrupt)II 1. [bʌst]to go bust — fare fallimento, fallire
1) (break) spaccare, sfasciare2) [ police] smantellare [ drugs ring]; fare irruzione in [ premises]; arrestare [ suspect]3) (financially) rovinare, fare fallire [person, firm]2.- bust up••to bust a gut doing sth. — colloq. rompersi la schiena a fare qcs
См. также в других словарях:
The Bosom of Abraham — The Bosom of Abraham † Catholic Encyclopedia ► The Bosom of Abraham In the Holy Bible, the expression the Bosom of Abraham is found only in two verses of St. Luke s Gospel (xvi, 22, 23). It occurs in the parable of the Rich Man and… … Catholic encyclopedia
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in the bosom of someone — in the bosom of (someone) literary if you are in the bosom of a group of people, especially your family, you are with people who love you and make you feel safe. She was glad to be home again, back in the bosom of her family … New idioms dictionary
in the bosom of someone — in the bosom of (someone/something) in a safe or comfortable place, esp. with family. How often had I dreamed about being back in the bosom of my family? Etymology: based on the idea of a mother holding her baby against her bosom (= breast) … New idioms dictionary
in the bosom of something — in the bosom of (someone/something) in a safe or comfortable place, esp. with family. How often had I dreamed about being back in the bosom of my family? Etymology: based on the idea of a mother holding her baby against her bosom (= breast) … New idioms dictionary
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