-
1 tumble
1. verb1) (to (cause to) fall, especially in a helpless or confused way: She tumbled down the stairs; The box suddenly tumbled off the top of the wardrobe.) ramle, falle over ende, trille2) (to do tumbling.) gjøre akrobatkunster2. noun(a fall: She took a tumble on the stairs.) fall, kollbøtte- tumbler- tumblerful
- tumble-drier
- tumblingfall--------tumleIsubst. \/ˈtʌmbl\/1) ( også overført) (plutselig) fall, rundkast2) kollbøtte, saltomortale3) ( om priser) ras, fall4) røre, virvar, uorden, rot5) haugall in a tumble bare rotgive someone\/something a tumble skjenke noe(n) en tanke, vie noe(n) interessetake a tumble falle (over ende), ramle (over ende) falle, styrtesIIverb \/ˈtʌmbl\/1) ramle, falle, rulle, trille2) falle ned, falle over ende, ramle over ende, ramle sammen, velte3) ( om priser) rase, falle4) ( om makthavere) falle, styrte(s)5) tumle6) rulle, trille7) gjøre akrobatkunster, slå kollbøtte, gjøre saltomortale8) få til å falle, få til å tumle9) slenge omkring, kaste hulter til bulter10) rote til, lage uorden i11) buste (til)12) tørke klær i tørketrommel16) skrukke til, krølletumble (about) tumle rundt( overført) virvle rundt, surre rundttumble (down) ( om bygning e.l.) rase sammen, falle sammen, styrte sammentumble down eller tumble over ramle ned, tumle over ende, ramle over ende, veltetumble in ( hverdagslig) krype til køys, gå og legge segtumble into plutselig bli rammet avtumble into bed stupe i sengtumble into ruins ( også overført) slå i stykker, knusetumble over something snuble over noetumble together falle om kull (i en eneste røre)tumble to something ( hverdagslig) forstå noe, bli klar over noe, finne ut av noe, gjennomskue -
2 tumble-drier
noun (a machine for drying clothes by tumbling them around and blowing hot air into them.) tørketrommeltørketrommelsubst. \/ˈtʌmblˌdraɪə\/se ➢ tumble-dryer -
3 tumble-dryer
subst. \/ˈtʌmblˌdraɪə\/ eller tumble-drier eller tumbler-dryertørketrommel -
4 tumble-dry
verb \/ˈtʌmbldraɪ\/tørke i tørketrommel -
5 rough-and-tumble
noun (friendly fighting between children etc.) basing, knuffingIsubst. \/ˌrʌfnˈtʌmbl\/ ( hverdagslig)1) basketak, håndgemeng, slagsmål2) harde takIIadj. \/ˌrʌfnˈtʌmbl\/1) vill, turbulent, uordnet, rotete2) stridt, vanskelig, hardt3) provisorisklead a rough-and-tumble life føre en omflakkende tilværelse -
6 rumble-tumble
-
7 rough
1. adjective1) (not smooth: Her skin felt rough.) ru, knudret, ujevn2) (uneven: a rough path.) ujevn, humpet3) (harsh; unpleasant: a rough voice; She's had a rough time since her husband died.) hard, barsk4) (noisy and violent: rough behaviour.) grov, voldelig5) (stormy: The sea was rough; rough weather.) stormfull, grov6) (not complete or exact; approximate: a rough drawing; a rough idea/estimate.) røff, grov2. noun1) (a violent bully: a gang of roughs.) bølle, ramp2) (uneven or uncultivated ground on a golf course: I lost my ball in the rough.) utenfor fairwayen, rough•- roughly- roughness
- roughage
- roughen
- rough diamond
- rough-and-ready
- rough-and-tumble
- rough it
- rough outbarsk--------grov--------grovkornet--------ru--------råIsubst. \/rʌf\/1) ( spesielt britisk) pøbel, ramp, bølle2) kladd, utkast, skisse3) (golf, bare i entall) rough4) uslipt diamant, edelstein5) vanskelighet, ubehag6) ( på hestesko) broddin (the) rough i stikkordsform cirka, anslagsvis i grove trekk, i det store og hele ( om edelstein) ubehandlettake the rough with the smooth ta det onde med det godethe rough side of one's tongue i glatte lagthrough rough and smooth i vått og tørt, i medgang og motgang, i gode og onde dagerIIverb \/rʌf\/1) grovhugge, blokke ut2) skarpsko (en hest)3) ri inn (en hest)4) (amer., sport) rufferough in\/out skissere, gjøre et utkast tilrough it ( hverdagslig) leve primitivt, slite hardtrough someone up the wrong way irritere noen, ta noen på feil måterough up banke noen opp, mishandle frese opp, gjøre ujevn, rufse tilIIIadj. \/rʌf\/1) ( om overflate) ubehandlet, rå, grov, ru, ujevn2) ( om dyr) raggete, lurvete, bustete3) (nedsettende, om mennesker) grov, røff, rå, ubehøvlet, upolert4) vanskelig, krevende, ubehagelig5) røff, rå, primitiv, voldelig, voldsom6) (hverdagslig, britisk) urettferdig, urimelig7) (om vær\/vind) surt, stormfull(t)8) ( om terreng) kupert, ulendt, krevende• they tried to find the burying ground, but the country was so rough they had to give it upde prøvde å finne gravplassen, men terrenget var så ulendt at de måtte gi opp9) ( hverdagslig) uvel, dårlig, deprimert10) kortfattet, summarisk12) omtrentlig, grovat a rough estimate se ➢ estimate, 1be rough on someone være urimelig mot noengo through a rough school se ➢ school, 1in rough outlines i grove trekkrough justice se ➢ justiceIVadv. \/rʌf\/1) grovt2) rått, voldsomt3) hardt, hensynsløst, urettferdigcut up rough begynne å bråke, begynne å yppelive rough leve primitivtplay rough bryte reglene, sette hardt mot hardtsleep rough være uteligger, sove på gaten, sove under åpen himmeltreat somebody rough behandle noen dårlig\/urimelig -
8 tumbler-drier
subst. \/ˈtʌmbləˌdraɪə\/se ➢ tumble-dryer
См. также в других словарях:
tumble — tum‧ble [ˈtʌmbl] verb [intransitive] JOURNALISM if prices, figures etc tumble, they go down suddenly and by a large amount: • Stock market prices have tumbled over the past week. tumble noun [countable usually singular] : • The announcement… … Financial and business terms
tumble — [tum′bəl] vi. tumbled, tumbling [ME tumblen, freq. of tumben < OE tumbian, to fall, jump, dance; akin to Ger tummeln, taumeln < OHG * tumalon, freq. of tumon, to turn < IE base * dheu , to be turbid > DULL] 1. to do somersaults,… … English World dictionary
Tumble — Tum ble, v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Tumbled}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Tumbling}.] [OE. tumblen, AS. tumbian to turn heels over head, to dance violently; akin to D. tuimelen to fall, Sw. tumla, Dan. tumle, Icel. tumba; and cf. G. taumeln to reel, to stagger.]… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Tumble — Tum ble, v. t. 1. To turn over; to turn or throw about, as for examination or search; to roll or move in a rough, coarse, or unceremonious manner; to throw down or headlong; to precipitate; sometimes with over, about, etc.; as, to tumble books or … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
tumble — (v.) c.1300, to perform as an acrobat, also to fall down, perhaps from a frequentative form of O.E. tumbian dance about, of unknown origin. Related to M.L.G. tummelen to turn, dance, Du. tuimelen to tumble, O.H.G. tumon, Ger. taumeln to turn,… … Etymology dictionary
tumble — ► VERB 1) fall suddenly, clumsily, or headlong. 2) move in a headlong manner. 3) decrease rapidly in amount or value. 4) rumple; disarrange. 5) (tumble to) informal come to understand; realize. ► NOUN 1) … English terms dictionary
tumble in — ● tumble … Useful english dictionary
Tumble — Tum ble, n. Act of tumbling, or rolling over; a fall. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
tumble — index agitate (shake up), disorganize, subvert, upset Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
tumble — [v] fall or make fall awkwardly bowl down, bring down, descend, dip, disarrange, disarray, disorder, disturb, do a pratfall, down, drop, fall headlong*, flatten, floor, flop, go belly up*, go down, hit the dirt*, jumble, keel, keel over, knock… … New thesaurus
tumble — I n. (colloq.) fall 1) to take a tumble 2) a bad, nasty tumble (she took a nasty tumble) 3) a tumble from sign of recognition 4) to give smb. a tumble (they wouldn t give us a tumble) II v. 1) (d; intr.) to tumble into (to tumble into bed) 2) (d; … Combinatory dictionary