-
121 respective
[-tiv]adjective (belonging to etc each person or thing mentioned: Peter and George went to their respective homes.) atitinkamas, kiekvienas savo -
122 respectively
[-tiv-]adverb (referring to each person or thing mentioned, in the order in which they are mentioned: Peter, James and John were first, second and third, respectively.) atitinkamai -
123 seed
[si:d] 1. noun1) (the (part of) the fruit of a tree, plant etc from which a new plant may be grown: sunflower seeds; grass seed.) sėkla2) (the beginning from which anything grows: There was already a seed of doubt in her mind.) sėkla, grūdas3) ((in a sporting competition etc) a seeded player.) atrinktas žaidėjas2. verb1) ((of a plant) to produce seed: A plant seeds after it has flowered.) brandinti sėklas2) (in golf, tennis etc, to arrange (good players) in a competition so that they do not compete against each other till the later rounds.) atrinkti•- seeded- seedling
- seedy
- seediness
- seedbed
- go to seed -
124 segregate
['seɡriɡeit](to separate from others; to keep (people, groups etc) apart from each other: At the swimming-pool, the sexes are segregated.) atskirti -
125 semaphore
['seməfo:](a system of signalling with flags held in each hand: He signalled the message to them in semaphore.) semaforas -
126 separate
1. ['sepəreit] verb1) ((sometimes with into or from) to place, take, keep or force apart: He separated the money into two piles; A policeman tried to separate the men who were fighting.) išskirti, išskirstyti, atskirti2) (to go in different directions: We all walked along together and separated at the cross-roads.) išsiskirti3) ((of a husband and wife) to start living apart from each other by choice.) (neoficialiai) išsiskirti2. [-rət] adjective1) (divided; not joined: He sawed the wood into four separate pieces; The garage is separate from the house.) atskiras2) (different or distinct: This happened on two separate occasions; I like to keep my job and my home life separate.) skirtingas, atskiras•- separable
- separately
- separates
- separation
- separatist
- separatism
- separate off
- separate out
- separate up -
127 serve out
(to distribute to each of a number of people: She served out the pudding.) išdalinti -
128 share
[ʃeə] 1. noun1) (one of the parts of something that is divided among several people etc: We all had a share of the cake; We each paid our share of the bill.) dalis2) (the part played by a person in something done etc by several people etc: I had no share in the decision.) balsas, rolė3) (a fixed sum of money invested in a business company by a shareholder.) akcija2. verb1) ((usually with among, between, with) to divide among a number of people: We shared the money between us.) pa(si)dalinti2) (to have, use etc (something that another person has or uses); to allow someone to use (something one has or owns): The students share a sitting-room; The little boy hated sharing his toys.) gyventi kartu (kur), dalintis (kuo)3) ((sometimes with in) to have a share of with someone else: He wouldn't let her share the cost of the taxi.) pa(si)dalinti•- share and share alike
См. также в других словарях:
each — W1S1 [i:tʃ] determiner, pron, adv [: Old English; Origin: Alc] 1.) every one of two or more things or people, considered separately →↑every ▪ She had a bottle in each hand. ▪ Grill the fish for five minutes on each side. ▪ Each member of the team … Dictionary of contemporary English
each — [ itʃ ] function word, quantifier *** Each can be used in the following ways: as a determiner (followed by a singular countable noun): in each corner of the room as a pronoun: three windows, with a different view from each (followed by of ): I… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
each — 1. singular or plural. Each is treated as singular when it stands by itself as a pronoun, when it comes before a singular noun (each house), and when it is followed by of and a plural noun (each of the houses): • Each group is responsible for its … Modern English usage
Each — ([=e]ch), a. or a. pron. [OE. eche, [ae]lc, elk, ilk, AS. [ae]lc; [=a] always + gel[=i]c like; akin to OD. iegelik, OHG. [=e]ogil[=i]h, MHG. iegel[=i]ch, G. jeglich. [root]209. See 3d {Aye}, {Like}, and cf. {Either}, {Every}, {Ilk}.] 1. Every one … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
each — adj every, *all each adv Each, apiece, severally, individually, respectivelyare comparable when they refer to every one of the many or several persons or things comprising a group. All imply distribution. Each and apiece usually connote equality… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
each — [ēch] adj., pron. [ME ech, elc, each, every < OE ælc < * agilic, akin to OHG iogilith (Ger jeglich) < PGmc * aiw galic: see AYE1 & ALIKE] every one of two or more considered separately [each (one) of you will be notified] adv. apiece… … English World dictionary
each — [adj] every all, any, exclusive, individual, one by one*, particular, personal, piece by piece*, respective, separate, several, single, specific, various, without exception; concept 577 Ant. none each [adv] apiece; for one all, a pop*, a shot*,… … New thesaurus
each — O.E. ælc any, all, every, each (one), short for a gelic ever alike, from a ever (see AYE (Cf. aye) (2)) + gelic alike (see LIKE (Cf. like) (adj.)). From a common West Germanic expression *aiwo galika (Cf. Du. elk, O.Fris … Etymology dictionary
each — ► DETERMINER & PRONOUN ▪ every one of two or more people or things, regarded and identified separately. ► ADVERB ▪ to, for, or by every one of a group. ● each and every Cf. ↑each and every ORIGIN Old English … English terms dictionary
EACH — is an acronym that may refer to: *European Association for Communication in Healthcare *Educational Action Challenging Homophobia *European Association for sick Children in Hospitals … Wikipedia
each — index respectively Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary