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(extremely busy)

См. также в других словарях:

  • busy — bus|y1 [ bızi ] adjective *** 1. ) having many things to do: The parents of young children are always busy. a busy doctor He is an extremely busy man. busy with: Irina and Marcus were busy with preparations for their wedding. a ) not able to do a …   Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • busy — I UK [ˈbɪzɪ] / US adjective Word forms busy : adjective busy comparative busier superlative busiest *** Metaphor: Being very busy at work is like being covered with things or surrounded by something such as water or the ground, so that you cannot …   English dictionary

  • busy*/*/*/ — [ˈbɪzi] adj I 1) having a lot of things to do He is an extremely busy man.[/ex] It s been a very busy day.[/ex] We have enough work here to keep us busy for weeks.[/ex] Irina and Marcus were busy with preparations for their wedding.[/ex] We re… …   Dictionary for writing and speaking English

  • busy — /ˈbɪzi / (say bizee) adjective (busier, busiest) 1. actively and attentively engaged: busy with his work. 2. not at leisure; otherwise engaged. 3. full of or characterised by activity. 4. officious; meddlesome; prying. 5. Chiefly US → engaged… …  

  • Busy beaver — In computability theory, a busy beaver (from the colloquial expression for an industrious person) is a Turing machine that attains the maximum operational busyness (such as measured by the number of steps performed, or the number of nonblank… …   Wikipedia

  • busy — adj. VERBS ▪ be, look, seem ▪ become, get ▪ keep, remain, stay (esp. AmE) ▪ …   Collocations dictionary

  • very busy — extremely busy, quite occupied, has a lot of work …   English contemporary dictionary

  • extremely — adv. Extremely is used with these adjectives: ↑able, ↑abstract, ↑abusive, ↑accurate, ↑active, ↑adaptable, ↑addictive, ↑adept, ↑advanced, ↑advantageous, ↑afraid, ↑ …   Collocations dictionary

  • up to one's ears in — extremely busy, overly busy, stressed …   English contemporary dictionary

  • up to the eyes — extremely busy, very busy, occupied …   English contemporary dictionary

  • flat out like a lizard drinking — Extremely busy, at top speed. This is word play on two different meanings of the standard English flat out . The literal sense is to lie fully stretched out (like a lizard), and the figurative sense means as fast as possible. The phrase also… …   Australian idioms

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