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121 miss
I n infml II vi infml III vt vulg infmlA beautiful but wicked girl of a good family missed one month. Then she missed another month. She went to a doctor and found out what she intensely feared — У красивой, но ветреной девушки из хорошей семьи менструации не наступили один месяц. Не наступили они и на второй месяц. Тогда она пошла к врачу и убедилась в том, чего так боялась
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122 miss a beat
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123 miss II
1. n
1) промах;
2) отсутствие;
to give smth. a ~ избегать чего-л., a lucky ~ счастливое избавление;
2. v
1) промахнуться, не достичь цели (тж. перен.) ;
2) упустить (возможность) ;
3) пропустить, проглядеть, не услышать, не застать, опоздать( на поезд и т. п.) ;
4) скучать, чувствовать отсутствие (кого-л., чего-л.) ;
5) избежать;
to ~ out выпустить, опустить (слово, строчку и т. п.) -
124 miss a figure
амер.When a person has made a mistake or is out in his calculations, they say, ‘You missed a figure that time.’ (Fr. Marryat, ‘A Diary in America’, part II, ch. XXXIV) — Когда человек допускает ошибку или просчет, американцы говорят: "На этот раз вы пропустили фигуру"
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125 miss fire
не достичь цели, не дать желаемого, должного эффекта [этим. воен. дать осечку]...every effort I make to save the country "misses fire". (M. Twain, ‘The Innocents at Home’, ch. III) —...все мои попытки спасти отечество "дали осечку"
He let out; but I shied just in time. He missed fire... (H. Lawson, ‘While the Billy Boils’, First Series, ‘Stiffner and Jim’) — Стиффнер поднял ногу, но я вовремя отскочил, и он лягнул воздух...
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126 leave out
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127 cut out
حَذَفَ \ cancel: to cross out sth. written. cut out: to leave out: You can cut out the last sentence. delete: to strike out or remove (sth. written): Why has your name been deleted from the list of students?. elide: to leave out a letter or sound: In the word ‘haven’t’, the letter ‘o’ has been elided. eliminate: remove or take out: He eliminated a few phrases from the speech he had written. leave out: not to put in; not to include: He left out one letter and wrote ‘heat’ instead of ‘heart’. miss out: not include; to leave out (by mistake or on purpose): My name was missed out from the list. omit: leave out (by mistake or on purpose); fail to include: Her name was omitted from the list. skip: to miss sth. on purpose; not read (sth. dull, etc.): We’ll skip the next few pages. strike: (with off or out) to put a line through a name or word, because it is no longer wanted: They struck his name off the list. Strike out any word that is wrong. \ See Also ألغى (أَلْغَى)، أهمل (أَهْمَلَ)، ترك (تَرَكَ)، شطب (شَطَبَ) -
128 leave out
حَذَفَ \ cancel: to cross out sth. written. cut out: to leave out: You can cut out the last sentence. delete: to strike out or remove (sth. written): Why has your name been deleted from the list of students?. elide: to leave out a letter or sound: In the word ‘haven’t’, the letter ‘o’ has been elided. eliminate: remove or take out: He eliminated a few phrases from the speech he had written. leave out: not to put in; not to include: He left out one letter and wrote ‘heat’ instead of ‘heart’. miss out: not include; to leave out (by mistake or on purpose): My name was missed out from the list. omit: leave out (by mistake or on purpose); fail to include: Her name was omitted from the list. skip: to miss sth. on purpose; not read (sth. dull, etc.): We’ll skip the next few pages. strike: (with off or out) to put a line through a name or word, because it is no longer wanted: They struck his name off the list. Strike out any word that is wrong. \ See Also ألغى (أَلْغَى)، أهمل (أَهْمَلَ)، ترك (تَرَكَ)، شطب (شَطَبَ)
См. также в других словарях:
miss out on — miss out (on (something)) to fail to use or enjoy an opportunity. Other people my age are married and have families, and I am beginning to feel I am missing out. We missed out on a chance to get a cheaper mortgage … New idioms dictionary
miss out — (on (something)) to fail to use or enjoy an opportunity. Other people my age are married and have families, and I am beginning to feel I am missing out. We missed out on a chance to get a cheaper mortgage … New idioms dictionary
miss out — phrasal verb Word forms miss out : present tense I/you/we/they miss out he/she/it misses out present participle missing out past tense missed out past participle missed out 1) [intransitive] to lose an opportunity to do or have something We will… … English dictionary
miss out — 1) PHRASAL VERB If you miss out on something that would be enjoyable or useful to you, you are not involved in it or do not take part in it. [V P on n] We re missing out on a tremendous opportunity... [V P] Well, I m glad you could make it. I… … English dictionary
miss out — v. (D; intr.) to miss out on (to miss out on a profitable deal) * * * [ mɪs aʊt] (D; intr.) to miss out on (to miss out on a profitable deal) … Combinatory dictionary
ˌmiss ˈout — phrasal verb to lose an opportunity to do or have something We will be repeating the questions later, so you won t miss out.[/ex] Come with us or you ll miss out on all the fun.[/ex] … Dictionary for writing and speaking English
miss out on — not be there, be unable to attend If I have a job, I ll miss out on the soccer games after school … English idioms
miss out (on something) — ˌmiss ˈout (on sth) derived to fail to benefit from sth useful or enjoyable by not taking part in it • Of course I m coming I don t want to miss out on all the fun! Main entry: ↑missderived … Useful english dictionary
miss out on something — miss out (on (something)) to fail to use or enjoy an opportunity. Other people my age are married and have families, and I am beginning to feel I am missing out. We missed out on a chance to get a cheaper mortgage … New idioms dictionary
miss out on — Miss … A concise dictionary of English slang
miss out — {v.}, {informal} To fail; lose or not take a good chance; miss something good. * /Jim s mother told him he missed out on a chance to go fishing with his father because he came home late./ * /You missed out by not coming with us; we had a great… … Dictionary of American idioms