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1 blow
I [bləu] noun1) (a stroke or knock: a blow on the head.) χτύπημα2) (a sudden misfortune: Her husband's death was a real blow.) πλήγμαII [bləu] past tense - blew; verb1) ((of a current of air) to be moving: The wind blew more strongly.) φυσώ2) ((of eg wind) to cause (something) to move in a given way: The explosion blew off the lid.) παίρνω, παρασύρω3) (to be moved by the wind etc: The door must have blown shut.) παρασύρομαι από φύσημα4) (to drive air (upon or into): Please blow into this tube!) φυσώ5) (to make a sound by means of (a musical instrument etc): He blew the horn loudly.) παίζω (πνευστό)•- blowhole- blow-lamp
- blow-torch
- blowout
- blowpipe
- blow one's top
- blow out
- blow over
- blow up -
2 blow up
1) (to break into pieces, or be broken into pieces, by an explosion: The bridge blew up / was blown up.) ανατινάζω, εκρήγνυμαι2) (to fill with air or a gas: He blew up the balloon.) φουσκώνω3) (to lose one's temper: If he says that again I'll blow up.) ξεσπώ -
3 blowpipe
noun (a tube from which a dart (often poisonous) is blown.) φυσοκάλαμο -
4 drift
[drift] 1. noun1) (a heap of something driven together, especially snow: His car stuck in a snowdrift.) παρασυρόμενη μάζα2) (the direction in which something is going; the general meaning: I couldn't hear you clearly, but I did catch the drift of what you said.) τροπή,νόημα2. verb1) (to (cause to) float or be blown along: Sand drifted across the road; The boat drifted down the river.) παρασέρνω,-ομαι2) ((of people) to wander or live aimlessly: She drifted from job to job.) περιπλανιέμαι•- drifter- driftwood -
5 gale
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6 horn
[ho:n]1) (a hard object which grows (usually in pairs) on the head of a cow, sheep etc: A ram has horns.) κέρατο2) (the material of which this is made: spoons made of horn; ( also adjective) horn spoons.) κοκάλινος,κοκαλένιος3) (something which is made of horn: a shoehorn.) κόκαλο(παπουτσιών)4) (something which looks like a horn in shape: a snail's horns.) κεραία5) (the apparatus in a car etc which gives a warning sound: The driver blew his horn.) κόρνα6) (an instrument, formerly an animal's horn but now made of brass, that is blown to produce a musical sound: a hunting-horn.) κέρας7) ((also French horn) the type of coiled brass horn that is played in orchestras etc.) κόρνο•- horned- - horned
- horny -
7 mine
I pronoun(something which belongs to me: Are these pencils yours or mine? He is a friend of mine (= one of my friends).) δικός μουII 1. noun1) (a place (usually underground) from which metals, coal, salt etc are dug: a coalmine; My father worked in the mines.) ορυχείο2) (a type of bomb used underwater or placed just beneath the surface of the ground: The ship has been blown up by a mine.) νάρκη2. verb1) (to dig (for metals etc) in a mine: Coal is mined near here.) εξορύσσω,βγάζω2) (to place explosive mines in: They've mined the mouth of the river.) ναρκοθετώ3) (to blow up with mines: His ship was mined.) ανατινάζω με νάρκη•- miner- mining
- minefield -
8 pipe
1. noun1) (a tube, usually made of metal, earthenware etc, through which water, gas etc can flow: a water pipe; a drainpipe.) σωλήνας2) (a small tube with a bowl at one end, in which tobacco is smoked: He smokes a pipe; ( also adjective) pipe tobacco.) πίπα,τσιμπούκι3) (a musical instrument consisting of a hollow wooden, metal etc tube through which the player blows or causes air to be blown in order to make a sound: He played a tune on a bamboo pipe; an organ pipe.) αυλός2. verb1) (to convey gas, water etc by a pipe: Water is piped to the town from the reservoir.) διοχετεύω2) (to play (music) on a pipe or pipes: He piped a tune.) παίζω στη φλογέρα3) (to speak in a high voice, make a high-pitched sound: `Hallo,' the little girl piped.) μιλώ/λέω με ψιλή φωνή•- piper- pipes
- piping 3. adjective((of a sound) high-pitched: a piping voice.) στριγγός,διαπεραστικός- pipeline
- piping hot -
9 sky-high
adverb, adjective (very high: The car was blown sky-high by the explosion; sky-high prices.) στα μεσούρανα/ουρανομήκης/απρόσιτος -
10 snowdrift
noun (a bank of snow blown together by the wind: There were deep snowdrifts at the side of the road.) χιονοστιβάδα -
11 tile
1. noun1) (a piece of baked clay used in covering roofs, walls, floors etc: Some of the tiles were blown off the roof during the storm.) κεραμίδι2) (a similar piece of plastic material used for covering floors etc.) πλακάκι2. verb(to cover with tiles: We had to have the roof tiled.) σκεπάζω με κεραμίδια / πλακάκια- tiled -
12 TNT
[ti:en'ti:](a type of explosive material: The bridge was blown up with TNT.) εκρηκτική ύλη (τρινιτροτολουόλη) -
13 windfall
1) (an apple etc blown from a tree.) καρπός που πέφτει με τον αέρα2) (any unexpected gain or success.) ουρανοκατέβατη τύχη -
14 Savour
subs.How sweet a savour of pig's flesh has blown towards me: Ar. ὡς ἡδύ μοι προσέπνευσε χοιρείων κρεῶν (Ran. 338).Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Savour
См. также в других словарях:
Blown — Blown, p. p. & a. 1. Swollen; inflated; distended; puffed up, as cattle when gorged with green food which develops gas. [1913 Webster] 2. Stale; worthless. [1913 Webster] 3. Out of breath; tired; exhausted. Their horses much blown. Sir W. Scott.… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Blown — Blown, p. p. & a. Opened; in blossom or having blossomed, as a flower. Shak. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
blown — blown; un·blown; … English syllables
blown — blown1 [blōn] vi., vt. pp. of BLOW1 adj. 1. swollen or bloated 2. out of breath, as from exertion 3. flyblown 4. made by blowing or by using a blowpipe, etc. blown2 [blōn] … English World dictionary
blown up — index inflated (enlarged) Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
blown — [bləun US bloun] the past participle of ↑blow … Dictionary of contemporary English
blown — the past participle of blow1 … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
blown — early 15c., inflated, adjective from O.E. blawen, pp. of BLOW (Cf. blow) (v.1). Figurative sense of inflated by pride is from late 15c. Meaning out of breath is from 1670s. As a pp. adjective from BLOW (Cf. blow) (v.2), it was O.E. geblowenne … Etymology dictionary
blown — adjective breathing hard; exhausted. → blow blown1 past participle of blow1. adjective informal (of a vehicle) provided with a turbocharger. blown2 past participle of blow3 … English new terms dictionary
blown-up — adjective as of a photograph; made larger the enlarged photograph revealed many details • Syn: ↑enlarged • Similar to: ↑large, ↑big * * * ˈ ̷ ̷| ̷ ̷ adjective : enlarged … Useful english dictionary
blown — blown1 /blohn/, adj. 1. inflated; swollen; expanded: a blown stomach. 2. destroyed, melted, inoperative, misshapen, ruined, or spoiled: to replace a blown fuse; to dispose of blown canned goods. 3. being out of breath. 4. flyblown. 5. formed by… … Universalium