-
1 tremendous
trə'mendəs(very large; very great: That required a tremendous effort; The response to our appeal was tremendous.) enorm, voldsomfantastisk--------veldigadj. \/trəˈmendəs\/, \/trɪˈmendəs\/1) ( hverdagslig) kolossal, enorm, diger, voldsom, mektig2) ( hverdagslig) fantastisk, veldig, utrolig3) fryktelig, forferdelig, skrekkelig -
2 demand
1. verb1) (to ask or ask for firmly and sharply: I demanded an explanation.) kreve, fordre2) (to require or need: This demands careful thought.) kreve2. noun1) (a request made so that it sounds like a command: They refused to meet the workers' demands for more money.) krav, fordring2) (an urgent claim: The children make demands on my time.) rift (om), sterk etterspørsel, krav3) (willingness or desire to buy or obtain (certain goods etc); a need for (certain goods etc): There's no demand for books of this kind.) etterspørsel, behov•- on demandbehov--------behøve--------etterspørsel--------fordre--------forlange--------trengeIsubst. \/dɪˈmɑːnd\/1) begjæring, fordring, krav2) etterspørseldemand and supply tilgang og etterspørseldemand for etterspørsel etterin demand etterspurtmake demands on a person stille krav til noenon demand på forespørselIIverb \/dɪˈmɑːnd\/1) forlange, fordre, kreve2) påkreve3) kreve å få vite4) spørre (myndig) etter -
3 rate
reit 1. noun1) (the number of occasions within a given period of time when something happens or is done: a high (monthly) accident rate in a factory.) prosent, tall, hyppighet2) (the number or amount of something (in relation to something else); a ratio: There was a failure rate of one pupil in ten in the exam.) hyppighet3) (the speed with which something happens or is done: He works at a tremendous rate; the rate of increase/expansion.) tempo, fart4) (the level (of pay), cost etc (of or for something): What is the rate of pay for this job?) takst, sats5) ((usually in plural) a tax, especially, in United Kingdom, paid by house-owners etc to help with the running of their town etc.) kommuneskatt2. verb(to estimate or be estimated, with regard to worth, merit, value etc: I don't rate this book very highly; He doesn't rate very highly as a dramatist in my estimation.) vurdere, anslå, regnes- rating- at this
- at that rate
- rate of exchangeanslå--------rate--------taksere--------takst--------vurdereIsubst. \/reɪt\/1) hastighet(sgrad), fart, takt, tempo• at the rate he goes on, it will not take longslik han holder på, vil det ikke ta lang tid2) antall per tidsenhet, frekvens, hyppighet, -prosent, -tall, -verdi3) sats, takst, tariff4) ( handel) kurs5) pris, beløp, kostnad, verdi6) klasse, rang (spesielt militærvesen), (fartøys)klasseat a certain rate til en viss grad, i et visst monnat a furious rate i rasende fartat a great rate i høy grad, i stor skala til en gunstig pris i høy hastighet, i rask taktat a high rate til høy pris med høy forekomst i høy hastighet, i full fart, i rask taktat an easy rate ( om hastighet) i et makelig tempo ( om pris) til en billig penge ( om skatt) med lav prosentsatsat any rate i alle fall, i hvert fall, under alle omstendigheterat a\/the rate of med en hastighet på• they were driving at a\/the rate of 70 kilometres an hourmed en pris på med et antall påat that rate (overført, hverdagslig) i så fallat this rate (overført, hverdagslig) hvis det fortsetter på denne måten, på dette viset(letter) postage rate portotakstrate of climb ( luftfart) stigningshastighetrate of exchange valutakurs, vekslingskursrate of fire ( militærvesen) skuddhastighetrate of flow strømningshastighet, strømningsmengderate of inflation inflasjonstaktrate of interest rentefot, rentesats, renterate of wages\/salaries lønnssats, lønnsnivårates kommuneskatt(er) eller avdragtaxes and rates kommune- og statsskatterIIverb \/reɪt\/1) vurdere, anslå, sette, taksere• what do you rate his fortune at?• rate a loss at £1002) ligne, taksere, anslå verdi (for å fastslå eiendomsskatt)3) regne, betrakte, anse4) klassifisere, gradere (også militærvesen)5) justere, regulere6) (amer.) være berettiget til, være kvalifisert for, ha (tilstrekkelige) kvalifikasjoner for, fortjene, være verdt7) (amer.) bli regnet med, komme i betraktning, regnes for noe, telle med8) bruke seg på, skjelle ut, lekse ordentlig opp for9) ( forsikring) tariffere, tariffesterate at taksere tilrate up ( forsikring) sette i en høyere tariffklasse -
4 stupendous
stju'pendəs(astonishing or tremendous.) overveldende, kjempemessig, formidabeladj. \/stjʊˈpendəs\/1) fantastisk, utrolig2) forbløffende3) kolossal, diger, enorm, formidabel -
5 to-do
(a fuss: a tremendous to-do about the missing papers.) oppstyr, ståheisubst. \/təˈduː\/, \/tʊˈduː\/( hverdagslig) oppstuss, oppstyr, ståhei, oppstandelse -
6 vitality
См. также в других словарях:
Tremendous — Tre*men dous, a. [L. tremendus that is to be trembled at, fearful, fr. tremere to tremble. See {Tremble}.] Fitted to excite fear or terror; such as may astonish or terrify by its magnitude, force, or violence; terrible; dreadful; as, a tremendous … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
tremendous — index far reaching, major, portentous (eliciting amazement), prodigious (enormous) Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
tremendous — (adj.) 1630s, awful, dreadful, terrible, from L. tremendus fearful, terrible, lit. to be trembled at, gerundive form of tremere to tremble (see TREMBLE (Cf. tremble)). Hyperbolic or intensive sense of extraordinarily great or good, immense is… … Etymology dictionary
tremendous — stupendous, monumental, prodigious, *monstrous Analogous words: enormous, immense, *huge, vast, gigantic, colossal: astounding, amazing, flabbergasting (see SURPRISE): terrifying, alarming, startling, frightening (see FRIGHTEN) … New Dictionary of Synonyms
tremendous — [adj] huge, overwhelming amazing, appalling, astounding, awesome, awful, blimp, colossal, cracking, deafening, dreadful, enormous, excellent, exceptional, extraordinary, fabulous, fantastic, fearful, formidable, frightful, gargantuan, gigantic,… … New thesaurus
tremendous — ► ADJECTIVE 1) very great in amount, scale, or intensity. 2) informal extremely good or impressive. DERIVATIVES tremendously adverb. ORIGIN Latin tremendus, from tremere tremble … English terms dictionary
tremendous — [tri men′dəs] adj. [L tremendus < tremere, to TREMBLE] 1. Archaic such as to make one tremble; terrifying; dreadful 2. a) very large; great; enormous b) Informal wonderful, amazing, extraordinary, etc. SYN. ENORMOUS tremendously … English World dictionary
tremendous — 01. Wayne Gretzky was a [tremendous] hockey player, probably the best in the world. 02. Their company is very successful; they are earning [tremendous] amounts of money. 03. There has been a [tremendous] increase in the number of people who use… … Grammatical examples in English
tremendous — [[t]trɪme̱ndəs[/t]] ♦♦♦ 1) ADJ GRADED: usu ADJ n (emphasis) You use tremendous to emphasize how strong a feeling or quality is, or how large an amount is. [INFORMAL] I felt a tremendous pressure on my chest... There s tremendous tension between… … English dictionary
tremendous — tre|men|dous S2 [trıˈmendəs] adj [Date: 1600 1700; : Latin; Origin: tremendus, from tremere; TREMBLE] 1.) very big, fast, powerful etc ▪ Suddenly, there was a tremendous bang, and the whole station shook. ▪ She was making a tremendous effort to… … Dictionary of contemporary English
tremendous — tre|men|dous [ trə mendəs ] adjective ** 1. ) usually before noun used for emphasizing that something such as an amount, achievement, or feeling is extremely great, important, or strong: a tremendous success I have tremendous respect for my… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English