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1 beat down
1) ((of the sun) to give out great heat: The sun's rays beat down on us.) letűz (nap)2) (to (force to) lower a price by bargaining: We beat the price down; We beat him down to a good price.) lealkuszik (árat) -
2 beat off
(to succeed in overcoming or preventing: The old man beat off the youths who attacked him; He beat the attack off easily.) elhárít, visszaver -
3 fall on/upon
(to attack: The robbers fell on the old man and beat him; They fell hungrily upon the food.) nekiesik -
4 pick a quarrel/fight with (someone)
(to start a quarrel, argument or fight with (someone) on purpose: He was angry because I beat him in the race, and he tried to pick a fight with me afterwards.) beleköt vkibeEnglish-Hungarian dictionary > pick a quarrel/fight with (someone)
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5 pick a quarrel/fight with (someone)
(to start a quarrel, argument or fight with (someone) on purpose: He was angry because I beat him in the race, and he tried to pick a fight with me afterwards.) beleköt vkibeEnglish-Hungarian dictionary > pick a quarrel/fight with (someone)
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6 club
zárt kör, klub, golfütő, ütő, treff, bunkósbot to club: egyesít, bunkósbottal üt, bunkósbottal megüt* * *1. noun1) (a heavy stick etc used as a weapon.) bunkósbot2) (a bat or stick used in certain games (especially golf): Which club will you use?) golfütő3) (a number of people meeting for study, pleasure, games etc: the local tennis club.) egyesület, klub4) (the place where these people meet: He goes to the club every Friday.) klub5) (one of the playing-cards of the suit clubs.) treff2. verb(to beat or strike with a club: They clubbed him to death.) bunkósbottal (meg)üt- clubs -
7 give (someone) a hammering
(to hammer (= beat) (a person): His father gave him a hammering for stealing.) jól elpáhol -
8 give (someone) a hammering
(to hammer (= beat) (a person): His father gave him a hammering for stealing.) jól elpáhol
См. также в других словарях:
beat him — hit him; defeated him, won over him … English contemporary dictionary
beat him up — hit him, struck him, battered him … English contemporary dictionary
beat him hands down — defeated him easily, won over him by a large margin … English contemporary dictionary
beat the living daylights out of him — beat him out of shape, hit him senselessly, knocked him unconscious … English contemporary dictionary
Beat Me Daddy, Eight to the Bar — is a song written by Don Raye in 1940, following the American boogie woogie tradition of syncopated piano music. It was first recorded by the Will Bradley orchestra, most notably with Freddie Slack on piano, who placed it in Billboard s top 10 in … Wikipedia
beat\ to\ the\ draw — • beat to the punch • beat to the draw v. phr. slang To do something before another person has a chance to do it. John was going to apply for the job, but Ted beat him to the draw. Lois bought the dress before Mary could beat her to the punch … Словарь американских идиом
beat\ to\ the\ punch — • beat to the punch • beat to the draw v. phr. slang To do something before another person has a chance to do it. John was going to apply for the job, but Ted beat him to the draw. Lois bought the dress before Mary could beat her to the punch … Словарь американских идиом
beat sb at their own game — ► INFORMAL to use the methods by which someone has tried to defeat you to your own advantage: »By buying two competitors who tried to beat him at his own game, he created the three networks he now owns. Main Entry: ↑beat … Financial and business terms
beat something down to something — ˌbeat sb/sth ˈdown (to sth) derived to persuade sb to reduce the price at which they are selling sth • He wanted $8 000 for the car but I beat him down to $6 000. • I beat down the price to $6 000. Main entry: ↑beatderived … Useful english dictionary
beat somebody down — ˌbeat sb/sth ˈdown (to sth) derived to persuade sb to reduce the price at which they are selling sth • He wanted $8 000 for the car but I beat him down to $6 000. • I beat down the price to $6 000. Main entry: ↑beatderived … Useful english dictionary
beat somebody down to something — ˌbeat sb/sth ˈdown (to sth) derived to persuade sb to reduce the price at which they are selling sth • He wanted $8 000 for the car but I beat him down to $6 000. • I beat down the price to $6 000. Main entry: ↑beatderived … Useful english dictionary