-
1 row
I rəu noun(a line: two rows of houses; They were sitting in a row; They sat in the front row in the theatre.) rekke, radII 1. rəu verb1) (to move (a boat) through the water using oars: He rowed (the dinghy) up the river.) ro2) (to transport by rowing: He rowed them across the lake.) ro2. noun(a trip in a rowing-boat: They went for a row on the river.) rotur- rower- rowing-boat
- row-boat III noun1) (a noisy quarrel: They had a terrible row; a family row.) krangel, husbråk2) (a continuous loud noise: They heard a row in the street.) bråk, brudulje, spetakkelbråk--------krangel--------rad--------rekke--------ro--------strid--------tretteIsubst. \/rəʊ\/1) rad, rekke2) benkerad, rad3) ( strikking eller hekling) omgang, rad4) trang gate, smuga hard\/long row to hoe en hard nøtt å knekke, en vanskelig oppgavehoe one's own row passe sine egne sakerin a row på rad og rekkepå rad, i et strekkin rows på rad og rekkeIIsubst. \/raʊ\/1) ( høyrøstet) krangel2) bråk, spetakkel, støy• what's the row?• why don't you kick up a row about it?get into a row bli skjelt uthave a row kranglehold\/shut your row! ( slang) hold kjeft!make\/kick up a row lage bråk, skape leven, lage spetakkelstop that row! hold opp med det bråket!IIIsubst. \/raʊ\/roturbe out for a row være ute og rogo for a row ro seg en turIVverb \/rəʊ\/1) ro• he rows No. 5 in the Oxford crew2) ro om kapp med, konkurrere motrow a race ro om kappVverb \/raʊ\/1) krangle, bråke, lage bråk2) skjelle ut, kjefte pårow with someone krangle med noen
См. также в других словарях:
hard\ row\ to\ hoe — • hard row to hoe • tough row to hoe n. phr. A hard life to live; a very hard job to do. She has a hard row to hoe with six children and her husband dead. Young people without enough education will have a tough row to hoe when they have to… … Словарь американских идиом
hard row to hoe — or[tough row to hoe] {n. phr.} A hard life to live; a very hard job to do. * /She has a hard row to hoe with six children and her husband dead./ * /Young people without enough education will have a tough row to hoe when they have to support… … Dictionary of American idioms
hard row to hoe — or[tough row to hoe] {n. phr.} A hard life to live; a very hard job to do. * /She has a hard row to hoe with six children and her husband dead./ * /Young people without enough education will have a tough row to hoe when they have to support… … Dictionary of American idioms
(a) hard row to hoe — American a difficult situation to deal with. Teachers have a tough row to hoe in today s schools … New idioms dictionary
tough\ row\ to\ hoe — • hard row to hoe • tough row to hoe n. phr. A hard life to live; a very hard job to do. She has a hard row to hoe with six children and her husband dead. Young people without enough education will have a tough row to hoe when they have to… … Словарь американских идиом
a row to hoe — phrasal : a task to accomplish usually used with a modifying adjective have had a hard row to hoe Coast Artillery Journal I d like to be a surgeon, but it s a long row to hoe Sat. Eve. Post … Useful english dictionary
row — I ARRANGEMENT OR SEQUENCE ♦♦♦ rows (Pronounced [[t]ro͟ʊ[/t]] in row 1 and 2, and [[t]ra͟ʊ[/t]] in row 3.) 1) N COUNT: oft N of n A row of things or people is a number of them arranged in a line. ...a row of pretty little cottages... Several men… … English dictionary
hoe — [[t]ho͟ʊ[/t]] hoes, hoeing, hoed 1) N COUNT A hoe is a gardening tool with a long handle and a small square blade, which you use to remove small weeds and break up the surface of the soil. 2) VERB If you hoe a field or crop, you use a hoe on the… … English dictionary
row — row1 [ rou ] noun count *** 1. ) a series of people or things arranged in a straight line: The teacher stopped in front of a little boy in the front row. row of: a row of houses/stores/chairs row upon row (=a lot of rows): She could see row upon… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
row — I UK [rəʊ] / US [roʊ] noun [countable] Word forms row : singular row plural rows *** 1) a) a series of people or things arranged in a straight line The teacher stopped in front of a little boy in the front row. row of: a row of… … English dictionary
row — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) v. paddle, scull, oar. See navigation. n. rank, file, tier, range; quarrel, brawl, rumpus, melée. See continuity, length, disorder, contention. II (Roget s IV) n. Syn. series, line, rank, file; see line… … English dictionary for students