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pull+together

  • 1 Pull

    v. trans.
    P. and V. ἕλκειν, ἐφέλκειν, ἐπισπᾶν, Ar. and V. σπᾶν.
    absol., give a pull: Ar. ποτείνειν (Pax. 458).
    Row: Ar. and P. ἐλαύνειν, V. ἐρέσσειν.
    Pull away: P. and V. ποσπᾶν, φέλκειν.
    Pull back: P. and V. νασπᾶν, Ar. and V. ἀντισπᾶν.
    Pull down: P. and V. καθέλκειν, κατασπᾶν.
    Dismantle: P. and V. νασπᾶν, καθαιρεῖν, P. περιαιρεῖν.
    Pull from under: P. and V. ποσπᾶν, Ar. and P. φέλκειν.
    Pull in an opposite direction: P. ἀνθέλκειν, Ar. and V. ἀντισπᾶν.
    Pull off: P. and V. ποσπᾶν, φέλκειν.
    Strip off: see strip.
    Pull out: P. and V. ἐξέλκειν (Plat. but rare P.), Ar. and V. ἐκσπᾶν.
    Pull to: P. ἐπισπᾶν.
    Pull together. When might and right pull together, what pair more potent than this? V. ὅπου γὰρ ἰσχὺς συζυγοῦσι καὶ δίκη, ποία ξυνωρὶς τῆσδε καρτερωτέρα; (Æsch., frag.).
    Pull up: Ar. and P. νέλκειν.
    Uproot: Ar. and P. ἐξορύσσειν, P. ἐκπρεμνίζειν; see Uproot.
    ——————
    subs.
    Use effort.

    Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Pull

  • 2 pull

    [pul] 1. verb
    1) (to (try to) move something especially towards oneself usually by using force: He pulled the chair towards the fire; She pulled at the door but couldn't open it; He kept pulling the girls' hair for fun; Help me to pull my boots off; This railway engine can pull twelve carriages.) τραβώ
    2) ((with at or on) in eg smoking, to suck at: He pulled at his cigarette.) ρουφώ
    3) (to row: He pulled towards the shore.) κάνω κουπί
    4) ((of a driver or vehicle) to steer or move in a certain direction: The car pulled in at the garage; I pulled into the side of the road; The train pulled out of the station; The motorbike pulled out to overtake; He pulled off the road.) πηγαίνω,κινούμαι
    2. noun
    1) (an act of pulling: I felt a pull at my sleeve; He took a pull at his beer/pipe.) τράβηγμα
    2) (a pulling or attracting force: magnetic pull; the pull (=attraction) of the sea.) έλξη
    3) (influence: He thinks he has some pull with the headmaster.) επιρροή
    - pull down
    - pull a face / faces at
    - pull a face / faces
    - pull a gun on
    - pull off
    - pull on
    - pull oneself together
    - pull through
    - pull up
    - pull one's weight
    - pull someone's leg

    English-Greek dictionary > pull

  • 3 pull oneself together

    (to control oneself; to regain one's self-control: At first she was terrified, then she pulled herself together.) ανακτώ την αυτοκυριαρχία μου

    English-Greek dictionary > pull oneself together

  • 4 gather

    ['ɡæðə] 1. verb
    1) (to (cause to) come together in one place: A crowd of people gathered near the accident.) συγκεντρώνω/-ομαι, μαζεύω/-ομαι
    2) (to learn (from what has been seen, heard etc): I gather you are leaving tomorrow.) συνάγω, συμπεραίνω
    3) (to collect or get: He gathered strawberries from the garden; to gather information.) μαζεύω
    4) (to pull (material) into small folds and stitch together: She gathered the skirt at the waist.) σουρώνω
    2. noun
    (a fold in material, a piece of clothing etc.) σούρα
    - gather round
    - gather together

    English-Greek dictionary > gather

  • 5 string

    1. [striŋ] noun
    1) ((a piece of) long narrow cord made of threads twisted together, or tape, for tying, fastening etc: a piece of string to tie a parcel; a ball of string; a puppet's strings; apron-strings.) σπάγγος,κορδόνι
    2) (a fibre etc, eg on a vegetable.) ίνα
    3) (a piece of wire, gut etc on a musical instrument, eg a violin: His A-string broke; ( also adjective) He plays the viola in a string orchestra.) χορδή
    4) (a series or group of things threaded on a cord etc: a string of beads.) αρμαθιά
    2. verb
    1) (to put (beads etc) on a string etc: The pearls were sent to a jeweller to be strung.) αρμαθιάζω
    2) (to put a string or strings on (eg a bow or stringed instrument): The archer strung his bow and aimed an arrow at the target.) περνώ χορδή
    3) (to remove strings from (vegetables etc).) αφαιρώ ίνες,καθαρίζω
    4) (to tie and hang with string etc: The farmer strung up the dead crows on the fence.) δένω
    - stringy
    - stringiness
    - string bean
    - stringed instruments
    - have someone on a string
    - have on a string
    - pull strings
    - pull the strings
    - string out
    - strung up
    - stringent
    - stringently
    - stringency

    English-Greek dictionary > string

См. также в других словарях:

  • pull together — ► pull together cooperate in an undertaking. Main Entry: ↑pull …   English terms dictionary

  • pull together — index cooperate, unite Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …   Law dictionary

  • pull together — verb assemble or get together (Freq. 1) gather some stones pull your thoughts together • Syn: ↑gather, ↑garner, ↑collect • Ant: ↑spread ( …   Useful english dictionary

  • pull together — 1) PHRASAL VERB If people pull together, they help each other or work together in order to deal with a difficult situation. [V P] The nation was urged to pull together to avoid a slide into complete chaos... [V P] They would be far better off,… …   English dictionary

  • pull together — phrasal verb Word forms pull together : present tense I/you/we/they pull together he/she/it pulls together present participle pulling together past tense pulled together past participle pulled together 1) [intransitive] if people pull together,… …   English dictionary

  • pull together — UK US pull together Phrasal Verb with pull({{}}/pʊl/ verb [T] ► to work closely together to achieve something: »We can survive this crisis as long as we all pull together …   Financial and business terms

  • pull together — {v.} To join your efforts with those of others; work on a task together; cooperate. * /Many men must pull together if a large business is to succeed./ * /Tim was a good football captain because he always got his teammates to pull together./ …   Dictionary of American idioms

  • pull together — {v.} To join your efforts with those of others; work on a task together; cooperate. * /Many men must pull together if a large business is to succeed./ * /Tim was a good football captain because he always got his teammates to pull together./ …   Dictionary of American idioms

  • pull\ together — v To join your efforts with those of others; work on a task together; cooperate. Many men must pull together if a large business is to succeed. Tim was a good football captain because he always got his teammates to pull together …   Словарь американских идиом

  • pull together — work together, co operate    If we pull together, we can complete this project on time …   English idioms

  • pull together — phr verb Pull together is used with these nouns as the object: ↑strand, ↑thread …   Collocations dictionary

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