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81 splendid
['splendid]1) (brilliant, magnificent, very rich and grand etc: He looked splendid in his robes.) μεγαλοπρεπής2) (very good or fine: a splendid piece of work.) λαμπρός•- splendour
- splendidness -
82 squarely
adverb (directly and firmly: He stood squarely in front of me; She looked squarely at me.) ίσια,κατευθείαν -
83 stern
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84 still
I 1. [stil] adjective1) (without movement or noise: The city seems very still in the early morning; Please stand/sit/keep/hold still while I brush your hair!; still (= calm) water/weather.) ακίνητος,γαλήνιος,ήσυχος2) ((of drinks) not fizzy: still orange juice.) χωρίς ανθρακικό2. noun(a photograph selected from a cinema film: The magazine contained some stills from the new film.) φωτογραφία- stillborn II [stil] adverb1) (up to and including the present time, or the time mentioned previously: Are you still working for the same firm?; By Saturday he had still not / still hadn't replied to my letter.) ακόμη2) (nevertheless; in spite of that: Although the doctor told him to rest, he still went on working; This picture is not valuable - still, I like it.) παρ'όλ'αυτά3) (even: He seemed very ill in the afternoon and in the evening looked still worse.) ακόμη -
85 suspicion
[sə'spiʃən]1) (the process of suspecting or being suspected; the/a feeling causing a person to suspect: They looked at each other with suspicion; I have a suspicion that she is not telling the truth.) υποψία2) (a slight quantity or trace: There was a suspicion of triumph in his tone.) ίχνος, υποψία -
86 swell
[swel] 1. past tense - swelled; verb(to make or become larger, greater or thicker: The insect-bite made her finger swell; The continual rain had swollen the river; I invited her to join us on the excursion in order to swell the numbers.) πρήζω, (παρα)φουσκώνω2. noun(a rolling condition of the sea, usually after a storm: The sea looked fairly calm but there was a heavy swell.) φουσκοθαλασσιά3. adjective((especially American) used as a term of approval: a swell idea; That's swell!) θαυμάσιος- swelling- swollen
- swollen-headed
- swell out
- swell up -
87 telescope
['teliskəup] 1. noun(a kind of tube containing lenses through which distant objects appear closer: He looked at the ship through his telescope.) τηλεσκόπιο2. verb(to push or be pushed together so that one part slides inside another, like the parts of a closing telescope: The crash telescoped the railway coaches.) κάνω / γίνομαι φυσαρμόνικα- teletext -
88 themselves
1) (used as the object of a verb or preposition when people, animals etc are the object of actions they perform: They hurt themselves; They looked at themselves in the mirror.) τον εαυτό τους, τους εαυτούς τους2) (used to emphasize they, them or the names of people, animals etc: They themselves did nothing wrong.) (αυτοί) οι ίδιοι3) (without help etc: They decided to do it themselves.) μόνοι τους -
89 tongue
1) (the fleshy organ inside the mouth, used in tasting, swallowing, speaking etc: The doctor looked at her tongue.) γλώσσα (όργανο στοματικό)2) (the tongue of an animal used as food.) γλώσσα (ζώου)3) (something with the same shape as a tongue: a tongue of flame.) γλώσσα, φλόγα4) (a language: English is his mother-tongue / native tongue; a foreign tongue.) γλώσσα (που ομιλείται) -
90 uncomfortable
1) (not relaxed: He looked uncomfortable when she mentioned marriage.) αμήχανος2) (producing a bad physical feeling: That's a very uncomfortable chair.) άβολος, στενάχωρος• -
91 underneath
1. preposition, adverb(at or to a lower position (than); beneath: She was standing underneath the light; Have you looked underneath the bed?) κάτω από/ από κάτω2. noun(the part or side beneath: Have you ever seen the underneath of a bus?) κάτω μέρος -
92 vertical
['və:tikəl](standing straight up at right angles to the earth's surface, or to a horizontal plane or line; upright: The hillside looked almost vertical.) -
93 warningly
adverb She looked warningly at the naughty boy.) προειδοποιητικά -
94 wistful
['wistful](thoughtful and rather sad, (as if) longing for something with little hope: The dog looked into the butcher's window with a wistful expression on his face.) συλλογισμένος, μελαγχολικός- wistfulness -
95 youthful
1) (young: The boy looked very youthful.) νέος, νεανικός2) (energetic, active, young-looking etc: Exercise will keep you youthful.) νεανικός3) (of youth: youthful pleasures.) νεανικός -
96 Askance
adv.Look askanee at: P. and V. ὑποβλέπειν (acc.), Ar. and V. παραβλέπειν (acc.), V. παρεμβλέπειν εἰς (acc.); met., P. ὑφορᾶσθαι (acc.), see Suspect.Be looked askance at: V. ὑποβλέπεσθαι.Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Askance
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97 Jealousy
subs.P. and V. φθόνος, ὁ, P. ζηλοτυπία, ἡ, φιλονεικία, ἡ.Suspicion: P. and V. ὑποψία, ἡ.Looked on with jealousy, adj.: P. and V. ἐπίφθονος.Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Jealousy
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98 Look
v. intrans.P. and V. ὁρᾶν, θεᾶσθαι, θεωρεῖν, ἀθρεῖν, βλέπειν, ἀποβλέπειν, σκοπεῖν, V. εἰσορᾶν (or mid., rare P.), V. προσλεύσσειν, προσδέρκεσθαι, εἰσδέρκεσθαι, Ar. ard V. λεύσσειν, δέρκεσθαι.Have a certain appearance: Ar. and V. βλέπειν, δέρκεσθαι.Look thoughtful: V. πεφροντικὸς βλέπειν.Look stern: P. δεινὸν ἐμβλέπειν (Plat.).Look thievish: Ar. κλέπτον βλέπειν.Look lovely: V. καλὸν βλέπειν (Eur., Cycl. 553).Seem: P. and V. φαίνεσθαι, δοκεῖν.Look (in any direction): see Face.Look about one: P. and V. περισκοπεῖν, V. παπταίνειν.Look after: Ar. and P. ἐπιμέλεσθαι (gen.), P. and V. ἐπιστρέφεσθαι (gen.), φροντίζειν (gen.), τημελεῖν (acc. or gen.) (Plat. but rare P.), κήδεσθαι (gen.) (also Ar. but rare P.), V. μέλεσθαι (gen.).Superintend: P. and V. ἐπιστατεῖν (dat. or gen.), ἐφίστασθαι (dat.).Look at: P. and V. βλέπειν εἰς (acc.), ἀποβλέπειν εἰς, or πρός (acc.), προσβλέπειν (acc.) (Plat.), ἐμβλέπειν (dat.), σκοπεῖν (acc.), ἀποσκοπεῖν εἰς, or πρός (acc.), P. ἐπιβλέπειν εἰς (acc.), or ἐπί (acc.), V. εἰσβλέπειν (acc.), εἰσδέρκεσθαι (acc.), προσδέρκεσθαι (acc.).Look in the face: P. and V. ἐμβλέπειν (dat.), προσβλέπειν (acc.), P. εἰς πρόσωπον ἐμβλέπειν.Look into: P. and V. ἐμβλέπειν (εἰς, acc.).Look on: see look upon.Be a spectator: P. and V. θεᾶσθαι, θεωρεῖν.Wait and see how events are going: P. περιορᾶσθαι.Look out of window: Ar. ἐκ θυρίδος παρακύπτειν (Thesm. 797).Look out for, be on the watch for: P. and V. φυλάσσειν (acc.). προσδοκᾶν (acc.), Ar. and P. ἐπιτηρεῖν (acc.), V. καραδοκεῖν (acc.).Look round: see look about one.Look to: P. and V. ἀποβλέπειν πρός (acc.), βλέπειν πρός (acc.).We look to our neighbours: P. πρὸς τοὺς πλησίον βλέπομεν (Dem. 120).Care for: V. μέλεσθαι (gen.); see care for.Provide for: P. and V. προσκοπεῖν (acc.); see provide for.Look through: P. διορᾶν.Look up to, met.; see Respect.They looked up to them, emulated and honoured them: P. ἀπέβλεπον, ἐζήλουν, ἐτίμων (Dem. 426).Look upon: P. and V. προσορᾶν (acc.) (Plat.), ἐμβλέπειν (εἰς, acc.). V. εἰσβλέπειν (acc.).Consider: P. and V. ἡγεῖσθαι, ἄγειν.——————subs.Appearance: P. and V. ὄψις. ἡ, V. πρόσοψις, ἡ.Good looks: see Beauty.Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Look
См. также в других словарях:
Looked — Look Look (l[oo^]k), v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Looked}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Looking}.] [OE. loken, AS. l[=o]cian; akin to G. lugen, OHG. luog[=e]n.] 1. To direct the eyes for the purpose of seeing something; to direct the eyes toward an object; to… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
looked — down·looked; looked; un·looked; … English syllables
"Looked Up" Plus Four — EP by The Like Young Released 2002 Genre … Wikipedia
looked-for — adj. same as {anticipated}, 2; as, his looked for advancement. [prenominal] Syn: anticipated. [WordNet 1.5] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
looked after — index safe Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
looked for — index foreseeable, foreseen, immediate (imminent), prospective Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
looked toward — index future Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
looked at the bright side — looked at the cup half full, relate to something in a optimistic manner … English contemporary dictionary
looked at the dark side — looked at the cup half empty, relate to something in a pessimistic manner … English contemporary dictionary
looked back — looked behind, glanced behind, turned his face around … English contemporary dictionary
looked down on him — looked at him from a high place, was condescending to him, treated him as inferior … English contemporary dictionary