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121 shuffle
1. verb1) (to move (one's feet) along the ground etc without lifting them: Do stop shuffling (your feet)!; The old man shuffled along the street.) subbe, slepe med føttene; trippe2) (to mix (playing-cards etc): It's your turn to shuffle (the cards).) stokke kort2. noun(an act of shuffling: He gave the cards a shuffle.) subbing; tripping; blandingblande--------snikeIsubst. \/ˈʃʌfl\/1) sleping, subbing (med føttene), slepende gange2) forklaring: dans med glide- og slepetrinn3) ( kortspill) stokking, blanding, tur til å blande4) ( overført) omflytting, ommøblering5) røre, virvar6) krumspring, utflukt, knepbe\/get lost in the shuffle (amer., hverdagslig) bli borte i mengdenIIverb \/ˈʃʌfl\/1) slepe (med), subbe (med)• do you shuffle with your feet?2) (stå og) trippe3) forklaring: danse med glidende eller slepende trinn4) ( kortspill) blande, stokke5) ( overført) komme med utflukter, gjøre krumspring, lure, luske6) ( overført) flytte om, ommøblere, blande7) skubbe, dytte, skyve, slenge, putte, smugle8) lureshuffle away ( overført) lure unnashuffle off kaste av seg, slenge fra seg, kvitte seg med, skyve overlure seg unna, frigjøre seg fra subbe av gårdeshuffle off this mortail coil ( hverdagslig) krepere, gå hedenshuffle on kaste på segshuffle out of ( om vanskelig situasjon) krangle seg ut av, komme seg ut avshuffle the cards stokke kortene ( overført) legge om taktikkenshuffle through fare gjennom, slurve medshuffle up\/together raske sammen -
122 snappy
1) (irritable; inclined to snap: He is always rather snappy on a Monday morning.) irritabel2) (quick; prompt: You'll have to be snappy if you're catching that bus!) lynrask, kvikk3) (smart: He's certainly a snappy dresser.) smart, fiksbiskadj. \/ˈsnæpɪ\/1) ( også overført) som glefser, bisk, morsk2) kneppende, smellende, knasende, knekkende3) kvikk, rask4) (hverdagslig, om vær) friskt5) pigg, klar, våken6) frisk, oppfriskende7) fin, smart, kjekk8) liten og fiks -
123 sour
1. adjective1) (having a taste or smell similar in nature to that of lemon juice or vinegar: Unripe apples are/taste very sour.) sur2) (having a similar taste as a stage in going bad: sour milk.) sur, vond3) ((of a person, his character etc) discontented, bad-tempered or disagreeable: She was looking very sour this morning.) sur, gretten2. verb(to make or become sour.) bli sur, surne- sourly- sournessgretten--------muggen--------mutt--------sur--------surne--------tverrIsubst. \/ˈsaʊə\/(amer.) syrlig drink (med sitron eller lime)IIverb \/ˈsaʊə\/1) surne, bli sur, gå lei (overført)2) syrne, gjøre sur, forsure (overført), spolere (overført)IIIadj. \/ˈsaʊə\/1) sur, syrlig, surnet, dårlig2) ( overført) sur, gretten, bitter3) ( om jord) vassjuk, sur, ufruktbargo\/turn sour surne, bli sur gå skeisgo\/turn sour on gå lei avhave a sour temper være sur av segthe sour truth den bitre sannhet -
124 START
I 1. verb1) (to leave or begin a journey: We shall have to start at 5.30 a.m. in order to get to the boat in time.) dra av gårde, komme av sted, starte2) (to begin: He starts working at six o'clock every morning; She started to cry; She starts her new job next week; Haven't you started (on) your meal yet?; What time does the play start?) begynne, starte3) (to (cause an engine etc to) begin to work: I can't start the car; The car won't start; The clock stopped but I started it again.) starte (opp), sette i gang4) (to cause something to begin or begin happening etc: One of the students decided to start a college magazine.) starte, begynne med2. noun1) (the beginning of an activity, journey, race etc: I told him at the start that his idea would not succeed; The runners lined up at the start; He stayed in the lead after a good start; I shall have to make a start on that work.) start(strek), begynnelse2) (in a race etc, the advantage of beginning before or further forward than others, or the amount of time, distance etc gained through this: The youngest child in the race got a start of five metres; The driver of the stolen car already had twenty minutes' start before the police began the pursuit.) forsprang•- starter- starting-point
- for a start
- get off to a good
- bad start
- start off
- start out
- start up
- to start with II 1. verb(to jump or jerk suddenly because of fright, surprise etc: The sudden noise made me start.) fare opp/sammen2. noun1) (a sudden movement of the body: He gave a start of surprise.) støkk, rykk2) (a shock: What a start the news gave me!) sjokkbegynne--------rykke--------start--------starte( historisk) forkortelse for Strategic Arms Reduction Talks -
125 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.) stille2) ((of drinks) not fizzy: still orange juice.) ikke musserende2. noun(a photograph selected from a cinema film: The magazine contained some stills from the new film.) stillfoto- 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.) fremdeles2) (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.) likevel3) (even: He seemed very ill in the afternoon and in the evening looked still worse.) endablid--------ennå--------fredelig--------likevel--------stilleIsubst. \/stɪl\/1) ( poetisk) stillhet2) ( film og foto) still, stillbilde, stillfoto3) destillasjonsapparat, destillerapparat4) brennevinsbrenneriIIverb \/stɪl\/1) stille, tilfredsstille2) bringe til taushet3) berolige, dempe, bli\/gjøre stille, roeIIIadj. \/stɪl\/1) stille, rolig2) (om vin, mineralvann e.l.) ikke musserende, uten kullsyre, som ikke bruserstill water runs deep stille vann har dypest grunnIVadv. \/stɪl\/1) stille, rolig• sit still!2) fremdeles, stadig, ennå• are you still here?3) ( ved komparativ) enda• you are good, but I am better still!du er god, men jeg er enda bedre!4) ( gammeldags) bestandigkeep still holde seg i ro, sitte stilleVkonj. \/stɪl\/likevel, dog• it was futile, but still they fought• still, he is your brother -
126 sunrise
noun (the rising of the sun in the morning, or the time of this.) soloppgang, solrenningsubst. \/ˈsʌnraɪz\/soloppgangat sunrise ved soloppgang -
127 sweat
swet 1. noun(the moisture given out through the skin: He was dripping with sweat after running so far in the heat.) svette2. verb1) (to give out sweat: Vigorous exercise makes you sweat.) svette2) (to work hard: I was sweating (away) at my work from morning till night.) svette over, slite med•- sweater- sweaty
- sweatiness
- a cold sweat Isubst. \/swet\/1) svette2) ( overført) møye, slit, besvær3) svetting, svettebad, svettekur4) ( teknikk e.l.) fuktighet, svetting, svetteprosess, fuktningsprosessbe a bit of a sweat være litt av et slitbe in a cold sweat kaldsvettebe in (all of) a sweat bade i svette ( overført) være svært nervøsbloody sweat ( bibelsk) blodsdråperbreak out in(to) a sweat begynne å svetteby the sweat of one's brow\/face i sitt ansikts sved, med ens eget slitno sweat (spesielt amer., hverdagslig) ingen sak, ikke noe problem• I've climbed that hill. No sweat!jeg har klatret opp det fjellet. Ikke noe problem!an old sweat en gammel kriger, en veteranIIsweat) \/swet\/1) svette, få til å svette2) arbeide hardt, slite3) engste seg• give them a new test on Monday. Let them sweatgi dem en ny prøve på mandag. La dem engste seg4) svette ut, utdunste, utsondre5) ( medisin) sette på svettekur• Dr. Dylan decided to sweat the patientdr. Dylan bestemte seg for å sette pasienten på svettekur6) ( hverdagslig) presse, tyne, plyndre7) ( teknikk e.l.) svette, la svette, la gjære8) skrape svetten av, tørke svetten avsweat blood slite vondt, slite beinhardtsweated labour hardt arbeid (for sultelønn), slavearbeidsweated through gjennomsvettsweat it out slite hardt (uten å gi opp), holde ut til sluttensweat out ( hverdagslig) lide seg gjennomkjempe seg frem til( teknikk e.l.) fordampe, sildre\/dunste ut, sive gjennom, utsondre (amer. hverdagslig) slite vondt, plagessweat out a cold svette ut en forkjølelsesweat over something svette over noesweat workers arbeidere som må slite for føden, utnyttede arbeidere -
128 tea
ti:1) (a type of plant grown in Asia, especially India, Ceylon and China, or its dried and prepared leaves: I bought half a kilo of tea.) te, tebusk2) (a drink made by adding boiling water to these: Have a cup of tea!) te3) (a cup etc of tea: Two teas, please!) kopp med te4) (a small meal in the afternoon (afternoon tea) or a larger one in the early evening, at which tea is often drunk: She invited him to tea.) mellommat; kveldsmat•- tea-bag- teacup
- tea-party
- teapot
- tearoom
- tea-set
- tea-service
- teaspoon
- teaspoonful
- tea-time
- tea-towelteIsubst. \/tiː\/1) ( om drikk eller måltid) te• two teas, please!to (kopper) te, takk!2) te(sort)3) teselskap4) teblad5) ( plantearten Camellia sinensis) tebusk6) kraft, kjøttkraft, (klar) buljong7) ( slang) gress, marihuanaearly morning tea morgentefive o'clock tea eller afternoon tea ettermiddagstegive away with a pound of tea gi bort gratis, kaste etterhave tea drikke temy cup of tea noe for megmin stil, min typenot for all the tea in China ( hverdagslig) ikke for alt i verdentea and sympathy ( hverdagslig) trøst og støtteIIverb \/tiː\/1) drikke te2) by på te
См. также в других словарях:
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Morning — Morn ing (m[^o]rn [i^]ng), n. [OE. morning, morwening. See {Morn}.] 1. The first or early part of the day, variously understood as the earliest hours of light, the time near sunrise; the time from midnight to noon, from rising to noon, etc. [1913 … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
morning — ► NOUN 1) the period of time between midnight and noon, especially from sunrise to noon. 2) sunrise. ► ADVERB (mornings) informal ▪ every morning. ORIGIN from MORN(Cf. ↑morn), on the pattern of evening … English terms dictionary
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morning — morn|ing1 W1S1 [ˈmo:nıŋ US ˈmo:r ] n [U and C] [Date: 1200 1300; Origin: morn + ing (as in evening)] 1.) the early part of the day, from when the sun rises until 12 o clock in the middle of the day ▪ It was a nice sunny morning. ▪ I hated those… … Dictionary of contemporary English
morning — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ this, tomorrow, yesterday ▪ following, next ▪ previous ▪ Friday, Saturday … Collocations dictionary
Morning — Not to be confused with Mourning. Early morning redirects here. For the play, see Early Morning. For other uses, see Morning (disambiguation). Morning mist … Wikipedia