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1 you're a fool
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2 another
pron & adj drugi, još jedan / one # = jedan drugog, uzajamno; sunch # = još jedan takav; he's a fool, you're # = on je budala, a i ti si; will you have # cup of tea = hoćete li još šalicu čaja; wait # day or two = pričekaj još dan dva; he will remain there for # there years = on će ostati tamo još tri godine; not # word! = ni riječi više!* * *
drugi
drugo
još jedan
neki drugi
slijedeće
slijedećih
sljedeći -
3 put down
vt 1. metnuti, položiti; odložiti, pustiti (put that gun down at once); [fig] nastupiti odlučno, energično (to pšut one's foot down) 2. (silom) suzbiti, ugušiti, zaustaviti, spriječiti (to # a rebellion = ugušiti pobunu); ušutkati, utišati (dosadna govornika i dr.); napustiti, ukinuti 3. poniziti (koga), sniziti (komu čin, položaj i dr.), lišiti koga moći i dr. (to # the mighty) 4. napisati, staviti na papir; upisati se u spisak i dr. (put me down for 10 pounds = napiši da sam priložio 10 funti) 5. smanjiti, sniziti (npr. izdatke) (to # one's expenditure) 6. smatrati, držati koga (za što) (I put him down as a fool; how should you put him down at?=što mislite koliko mu je godina?) 7. pripisati (to=komu, čemu) (to put the accident down to the negligence= pripisati nesretan slučaj nemaru; to # to a p's account=staviti komu u račun)* * *
deponirati
metnuti
polagati
položiti
spustiti
staviti dolje
zabilježiti
См. также в других словарях:
fool me once, shame on you; fool me twice, shame on me — This means that you should learn from your mistakes and not allow people to take advantage of you repeatedly … The small dictionary of idiomes
fool me once, shame on you; fool me twice, shame on me — Earlier, and still current, with the verb deceive. 1611 Tarlton’s Jests (1844) 11 For Who deceives me once, God forgive him; if twice, God forgive him; but if thrice, God forgive him, but not me, because I could not beware. 1650 A. WELLDON Secret … Proverbs new dictionary
fool me once, shame on you; fool me twice, shame on me — This means that you should learn from your mistakes and not allow people to take advantage of you repeatedly. (Dorking School Dictionary) … English Idioms & idiomatic expressions
fool with — To meddle with officiously, irresponsibly or thoughtlessly • • • Main Entry: ↑fool * * * toy with; play idly with I like fooling with cameras ■ tease (a person) we ve just been fooling with you * * * fool with [phrasal verb] … Useful english dictionary
fool with something — fool with (something) 1. to be busy with something without a special purpose. Sammy was always fooling with his model trains. 2. to try to fix or use something complicated. I m not an expert, but I ve spent 14 years fooling with computers and… … New idioms dictionary
fool with — (something) 1. to be busy with something without a special purpose. Sammy was always fooling with his model trains. 2. to try to fix or use something complicated. I m not an expert, but I ve spent 14 years fooling with computers and thought I… … New idioms dictionary
You can't do that on stage anymore, vol. 3 — Album par Frank Zappa Sortie Novembre 1989 Enregistrement Entre le 10 décemb … Wikipédia en Français
You Can't Do That on Stage Anymore, Vol. 3 — Álbum en directo de Frank Zappa Publicación 13 de noviembre de 1989. Grabación 1971/1974 Género(s) Art rock … Wikipedia Español
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fool — [[t]fu͟ːl[/t]] ♦♦♦ fools, fooling, fooled 1) N COUNT (disapproval) If you call someone a fool, you are indicating that you think they are not at all sensible and show a lack of good judgement. You fool! she shouted... He d been a fool to get… … English dictionary
fool, you — A common insult since the seventeenth century, perhaps used with more insulting contempt now than then. In Shakespeare’s time ‘fool’, ‘poor fool’, and the like could be used on occasion as terms of endearment or genuine pity. In modern times… … A dictionary of epithets and terms of address