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1 to take French leave
aiziet neatvadoties -
2 to take to leave
uzdrošināties -
3 leave
I [li:v] past tense, past participle - left; verb1) (to go away or depart from, often without intending to return: He left the room for a moment; They left at about six o'clock; I have left that job.) aiziet; aizbraukt2) (to go without taking: She left her gloves in the car; He left his children behind when he went to France.) atstāt; pamest3) (to allow to remain in a particular state or condition: She left the job half-finished.) atstāt (kādā noteiktā stāvoklī)4) (to let (a person or a thing) do something without being helped or attended to: I'll leave the meat to cook for a while.) atstāt (paša ziņā)5) (to allow to remain for someone to do, make etc: Leave that job to the experts!) atstāt (kāda ziņā)6) (to make a gift of in one's will: She left all her property to her son.) novēlēt; atstāt mantojumā•- leave out
- left over II [li:v] noun1) (permission to do something, eg to be absent: Have I your leave to go?) atļauja2) ((especially of soldiers, sailors etc) a holiday: He is home on leave at the moment.) atvaļinājums•- take one's leave of- take one's leave* * *atļauja; atvaļinājums; īpašs atvaļinājums; aizbraukšana, aiziešana; atvadīšanās; pamest, atstāt; aizbraukt, aiziet, doties; atstāt kādā stāvoklī; novēlēt, atstāt mantojumā -
4 take off
1) (to remove (clothes etc): He took off his coat.) novilkt (drēbes)2) ((of an aircraft) to leave the ground: The plane took off for Rome (noun take-off).) (par lidmašīnu) pacelties3) (not to work during (a period of time): I'm taking tomorrow morning off.) paņemt brīvdienu; nestrādāt4) (to imitate someone (often unkindly): He used to take off his teacher to make his friends laugh (noun take-off).) atdarināt, attēlot -
5 take one's leave (of)
(to say goodbye (to): I took my leave (of the others) and went out.) atvadīties -
6 take one's leave (of)
(to say goodbye (to): I took my leave (of the others) and went out.) atvadīties -
7 to lose senses, to take leave of one's senses
zaudēt prātuEnglish-Latvian dictionary > to lose senses, to take leave of one's senses
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8 to take leave
aiziet; aizbraukt -
9 to take leave of one's senses
sajukt prātā -
10 risk
[risk] 1. noun((a person, thing etc which causes or could cause) danger or possible loss or injury: He thinks we shouldn't go ahead with the plan because of the risks involved / because of the risk of failure.) risks2. verb1) (to expose to danger; to lay open to the possibility of loss: He would risk his life for his friend; He risked all his money on betting on that horse.)2) (to take the chance of (something bad happening): He was willing to risk death to save his friend; I'd better leave early as I don't want to risk being late for the play.) riskēt•- risky- at a person's own risk
- at own risk
- at risk
- at the risk of
- run/take the risk of
- run/take the risk
- take risks / take a risk* * *risks; riska objekts; riskēt -
11 except
[ik'sept] 1. preposition(leaving out; not including: They're all here except him; Your essay was good except that it was too long.) izņemot2. verb(to leave out or exclude.) izslēgt- excepted- excepting
- exception
- exceptional
- exceptionally
- except for
- take exception to/at* * *izslēgt; iebilst; izņemot -
12 fuel
['fjuəl] 1. noun(any substance by which a fire, engine etc is made to work (eg coal, oil, petrol): The machine ran out of fuel.) kurināmais; degviela2. verb(to give or take fuel: The tanker will leave when it has finished fuelling / being fuelled.) iepildīt degvielu* * *degviela, kurināmais; iepildīt degvielu; uzņemt degvielu -
13 grant
1. verb1) (to agree to, to give: Would you grant me one favour; He granted the man permission to leave.) dot; sniegt2) (to agree or admit: I grant (you) that it was a stupid thing to do.) piekrist; pieļaut2. noun(money given for a particular purpose: He was awarded a grant for studying abroad.) dotācija; stipendija- granted- granting
- take for granted* * *dāvinājums, dāvinājuma akts; dotācija, subsīdija; stipendija; piekāpšanās, atļauja, piekrišana; dāvāt, dāvināt; piešķirt dotāciju; atļaut, piekrist; pieļaut -
14 notice
['nəutis] 1. noun1) (a written or printed statement to announce something publicly: He stuck a notice on the door, saying that he had gone home; They put a notice in the paper announcing the birth of their daughter.) paziņojums2) (attention: His skill attracted their notice; I'll bring the problem to his notice as soon as possible.) uzmanība3) (warning given especially before leaving a job or dismissing someone: Her employer gave her a month's notice; The cook gave in her notice; Please give notice of your intentions.) (darba u.tml.) uzteikums2. verb(to see, observe, or keep in one's mind: I noticed a book on the table; He noticed her leave the room; Did he say that? I didn't notice.) ievērot; pamanīt- noticeably
- noticed
- notice-board
- at short notice
- take notice of* * *brīdinājums, paziņojums; uzmanība; vērošana; apskats, recenzija; uzteikums; ievērot, pamanīt; pieminēt, atzīmēt; uzteikt -
15 answering machine
noun ((also machine) a machine that take messages for you when you cannot answer the phone: to leave a message on the answering machine.) automātiskais [] atbildētājs -
16 grab at
(to try to grasp, seize or take, not necessarily successfully: He grabbed at the boy; He grabbed at the chance to leave.) censties sagrābt
См. также в других словарях:
take French leave — 1. To depart without notice or permission 2. To disappear suspiciously • • • Main Entry: ↑French * * * take French leave phrase to take time away from your job without asking for permission Thesaurus: time off from workhyponym … Useful english dictionary
take your leave — take (your) leave to go away from a gathering. Barlow could only manage a few brief words before taking his leave of this group of happy supporters … New idioms dictionary
take your leave — old fashioned phrase to say goodbye Thesaurus: goodbyes and to say goodbyehyponym ways of saying hellosynonym Main entry: leave … Useful english dictionary
take (your) leave (of somebody) — take (your) ˈleave (of sb) idiom (formal) to say goodbye • With a nod and a smile, she took leave of her friends. Main entry: ↑leaveidiom … Useful english dictionary
take or leave — phrasal 1. : to accept or reject solely according to one s judgment or inclination often of the moment a singer I can take or leave Charles Miller imply that peace is something we Americans can take or leave R.J.Bunche 2. : to give or take left… … Useful english dictionary
take French leave — {v. phr.} To leave secretly; abscond. * /The party was so boring that we decided to take French leave./ * /While the Smith family was in Europe, the house sitter packed up all the silver and took French leave./ See: SLIP AWAY … Dictionary of American idioms
take French leave — {v. phr.} To leave secretly; abscond. * /The party was so boring that we decided to take French leave./ * /While the Smith family was in Europe, the house sitter packed up all the silver and took French leave./ See: SLIP AWAY … Dictionary of American idioms
take\ French\ leave — v. phr. To leave secretly; abscond. The party was so boring that we decided to take French leave. While the Smith family was in Europe, the house sitter packed up all the silver and took French leave. See: slip away … Словарь американских идиом
take your leave of — to bereave The final parting: ... so absolutely unlike the way Frank would have wished to take his leave of us. (M. Thomas, 1982 Frank had died) … How not to say what you mean: A dictionary of euphemisms
take french leave — Depart informally, take leave unceremoniously … New dictionary of synonyms
take French leave — verb a) To leave unannounced b) to desert. to go AWOL Syn: abscond, AWOL … Wiktionary