-
1 drama
1) (a play for acting on the stage: He has just produced a new drama.) skuespill, drama2) (plays for the stage in general: modern drama.) drama, skuespill3) (the art of acting in plays: He studied drama at college.) drama, teaterkunst/-vitenskap, scenekunst4) (exciting events: Life here is full of drama.) spenning, dramatikk•- dramatic- dramatically
- dramatist
- dramatize
- dramatise
- dramatizationsubst. \/ˈdrɑːmə\/drama, skuespilldrama critic teaterkritikerschool of drama teaterskole -
2 domestic drama
subst.borgerlig (familie)drama -
3 legitimate drama
the subst.det egentlige drama, den seriøse dramatikken -
4 satyric drama
subst.( i oldtidens Hellas) satyrspill -
5 драма
drama, skuespill -
6 დრამა
drama -
7 play
plei 1. verb1) (to amuse oneself: The child is playing in the garden; He is playing with his toys; The little girl wants to play with her friends.) leke2) (to take part in (games etc): He plays football; He is playing in goal; Here's a pack of cards - who wants to play (with me)?; I'm playing golf with him this evening.) spille3) (to act in a play etc; to act (a character): She's playing Lady Macbeth; The company is playing in London this week.) spille, opptre i/som4) ((of a play etc) to be performed: `Oklahoma' is playing at the local theatre.) oppføres, gå5) (to (be able to) perform on (a musical instrument): She plays the piano; Who was playing the piano this morning?; He plays (the oboe) in an orchestra.) spille6) ((usually with on) to carry out or do (a trick): He played a trick on me.) spille (noen) et puss7) ((usually with at) to compete against (someone) in a game etc: I'll play you at tennis.) spille mot8) ((of light) to pass with a flickering movement: The firelight played across the ceiling.) spille, blafre9) (to direct (over or towards something): The firemen played their hoses over the burning house.) rette mot10) (to put down or produce (a playing-card) as part of a card game: He played the seven of hearts.) spille ut2. noun1) (recreation; amusement: A person must have time for both work and play.) lek(ing), underholdning2) (an acted story; a drama: Shakespeare wrote many great plays.) skuespill, drama, teaterstykke3) (the playing of a game: At the start of today's play, England was leading India by fifteen runs.) spill4) (freedom of movement (eg in part of a machine).) spillerom, klaring•- player- playable
- playful
- playfully
- playfulness
- playboy
- playground
- playing-card
- playing-field
- playmate
- playpen
- playschool
- plaything
- playtime
- playwright
- at play
- bring/come into play
- child's play
- in play
- out of play
- play at
- play back
- play down
- play fair
- play for time
- play havoc with
- play into someone's hands
- play off
- play off against
- play on
- play a
- no part in
- play safe
- play the game
- play uplek--------leke--------spill--------spille--------spøkIsubst. \/pleɪ\/1) lek, leking, spill2) spøk, tull3) ordspill4) ( i spill) tur5) hasardspill, gambling, spill6) spill, fremførelse, forestilling7) skuespill, teaterstykke, drama• let's go to a play!8) spill9) bevegelse, gang, virksomhet, aktivitet10) spillerom, armslag11) slark, klaring, rom, slakkslakke på tauet, fire ut mer tau12) arbeidsstans, arbeidsnedleggelse13) (amerikansk fotball, også play offensive)angrepsplanallow\/give something full play la noe få fritt spillerom, la noe få utvikle seg frittgi sine evner fritt utløp, la sine evner få utvikle seg uhindretat play som deltar i lekbe at play delta i lekbe in full play være i full gangbring into play sette i bevegelse, sette i gangcall into play sette i bevegelse, sette i gang, mobilisere, utvikle sette inn, spille inn, gjøre seg gjeldendechild's play se ➢ childcome into play eller be brought into play eller be called into play komme i gang, tre i kraft, gjøre seg gjeldende gjøre seg gjeldende, spille inndirty play skittent spill, stygt spill (i sport)fair play fair play, ærlig spillhold\/keep somebody in play holde noen sysselsattin play på spøk, på tulli lek, som lek ( om ball) i spillmake a play for ( slang) forsøke å sjekke opp( slang) forsøke å vinne til seg, bearbeidemake play with gjøre et stort nummer av, kokettere med, bruke til å vise segout of play ( om ball) død, ute av spill, uteplace a play få satt opp et stykkeplay fair with være renhårig motplay on words ordspillsee fair play se til at det går riktig for segIIverb \/pleɪ\/1) leke• what shall we play?2) (om sport og spill, også overført) spille• let's play cards!3) ( sport) spille mot noen, spille mot et lag4) spille, beherske (om musikkinstrument), fremføre, lyde (om selve instrumentet)• do you play the piano?spiller du piano?, kan du spille piano?hun spilte en sonate, hun fremførte en sonateorgelet spiller, orgelet lyder5) (om CD, CD-spiller e.l.) spille6) spille (om rolle, drama, forestilling), fremføre (om drama), spille i\/på (om sted)fremføre\/spille en farsede hadde forestillinger\/konserter i alle storbyene7) spille, spille ut (om kort), flytte (om brikke)8) ( i spill) vedde, by, gamble9) ( om lys) leke, spille, skimre10) være i gang, være i funksjon12) (hverdagslig, spesielt ved streik) gå ledig14) (i sport, om ball eller slag) slå15) rette, sikte, holde i gangplay about løpe omkring og lekeopptre uansvarlig, tulle• stop playing about!play about with leke med, klå på, fingre på, pille påplay along late som om en samarbeiderplay a part spille en rolle ( overført) spille komedieplay around ha mange kjærlighetsforhold, flørtevære utro være promiskuøsplay at gjøre\/gjennomføre halvhjertet late som• just what are you playing at?play a trick on bedra, lure, narreplay away spille bortplay back ( om lydopptak) spille gjennom, høre gjennomplay down bagatellisere, avdramatisere, tone ned, dysse nedplay down to the crowd ( overført) spille for gallerietplayed out utbrent, utslitt, tappet for energi gått av moten, ikke lenger nyttigden teorien har spilt ut sin rolle, denne teorien har ikke lenger noe for segoppbrukt, ferdigplay false ( om spill) spille falsktplay fast and loose with leke med, behandle skjødesløstplay fetch leke kast pinnen (med hund)play first begynneplay for somebody akkompagnere noen, kompe noenplay hard to get gjøre seg kostbar, spille kostbarplay into somebody's hands gi noen overtaket uforvarendeplay it by the ear ta det som det kommer, ta noe som det faller segplay it cool ta det rolig, ha is i magenplay it down on utnytte grovt snyteplay it low\/down on somebody ( hverdagslig) utnytte noen grovt ( hverdagslig) lure noen, bedra noenplay off spille ekstra kamp for å avgjøre en uavgjort kampplay on\/upon spille på, utnytteplay one person off against another sette to personer opp mot hverandreplay oneself out bli utmattet, bli utbrentslite seg utplay out spille ut, spille til ende bruke oppplay over spille gjennomplay safe gardere seg, seife, ikke ta sjanserplay somebody spille mot noen( i kamp e.l.) la noen spille, sette inn noen, plassere noen, stille opp noenplay somebody along lure\/villede noen (over tid)play the field (amer., hverdagslig) more seg, flørte være rundbrenner, feie over så mange som mulig, ta for segplay the fool eller act the fool oppføre seg som en idiot, dumme seg utplay the game ( også overført) følge spilleregleneplay up ( britisk) være plagsom, lage trøbbel, gjøre ugagn (om person), lage vanskeligheter ( britisk) gjøre vondt, være til besværdet dårlige benet mitt begynner å verke igjen erte, irriteresette alle krefter til• play up, the Reds!kom igjen, det røde laget!legge vekt på, fokusere på, slå stort opp, blåse opp, reklamere forplay up to somebody innsmigre seg hos noen, snakke noen etter munnen( teater eller overført) spille opp til noen støtte noen, bakke opp noenplay up with ( slang) kullkaste, forpurre, ødeleggeplay with oneself ( forskjønnende) onanere, masturbere -
8 highbrow
åndssnobbIsubst. \/ˈhaɪbraʊ\/ (hverdagslig, ofte nedsettende)1) åndsaristokrat, intellektuell, intelligenssnobb, åndssnobb2) forklaring: en som har kunstneriske og litterære interesserIIadj. \/ˈhaɪbraʊ\/ (hverdagslig, ofte nedsettende)1) intellektuell, svært lærd, høyt skolert, åndssnobbet2) kulturell, finkulturell -
9 suggest
sə'‹est, ]( American also) səɡ-1) (to put (an idea etc) before another person etc for consideration; to propose: He suggested a different plan; I suggest doing it a different way; She suggested to me one or two suitable people for the committee; I suggest that we have lunch now.) foreslå2) (to put (an idea etc) into a person's mind; to hint: Are you suggesting that I'm too old for the job?; An explanation suddenly suggested itself to me.) antyde; melde seg, trenge seg på•antyde--------foreslåverb \/səˈdʒest\/, \/səɡˈdʒest\/1) foreslå2) henstille, anmode3) antyde, gi et vink om, gi et hint om, la forstå, la ane4) tyde på, vitne om, tale for5) minne om, lede tankene hen på, vekke assosiasjoner om, fremkalle• what does it suggest to you?6) inspirere, gi ideen til, vekke7) påstå, mene, hevde• do you suggest that I'm lying?8) suggererebe suggested by være foranlediget avI suggest that... ( jus) er det ikke (snarere) slik å forstå at...suggest itself dukke opp, melde seg, oppstå -
10 throwback
subst. \/ˈθrəʊbæk\/1) tilbakeslag, hindring, motgang2) ( biologi) reversjon, atavisme3) ( overført) tilbakevending4) ( radio) (akustisk) tilbakekobling5) ( i fortelling eller film) tilbakeblikk -
11 the theatre
1) (the profession of actors: He's in the theatre.) teateret2) (drama: His special interest is the theatre.) teateret, drama -
12 buskin
subst. \/ˈbʌskɪn\/1) høy støvel2) koturne (sko med tykk såle og høy hæl, brukt av antikkens tragedieskuespillere)3) tragedie, tragisk drama -
13 catastrophe
kə'tæstrəfi(a sudden great disaster: earthquakes and other natural catastrophes; Her brother's death was a catastrophe for the family.) katastrofe- catastrophicallykatastrofe--------tragediesubst. \/kəˈtæstrəfɪ\/1) katastrofe2) ( i drama) avgjørende hendelse, vending, katastrofe -
14 closet play
subst. eller closet dramalesedrama -
15 denouement
subst. \/deɪˈnuːmɑːŋ\/1) (fransk, i drama e.l.) oppklaring, avsløring, løsning2) utgang, resultat -
16 dramatic
1) (of or in the form of a drama: a dramatic performance.) dramatisk, skuespiller-2) (vivid or striking: a dramatic improvement; She made a dramatic entrance.) oppsiktsvekkende, dramatisk3) ((of a person) showing (too) much feeling or emotion: She's very dramatic about everything.) overdrevet, dramatiskdramatiskadj. \/drəˈmætɪk\/dramatisk, teatralskdramatic critic teaterkritikerdramatic criticism teaterkritikkdramatic irony dramatisk ironi -
17 evolution
evolusjon--------utviklingʃ(ə)n\/, \/ˌevəˈluːʃ(ə)n\/, \/ˌevəˈljuːʃ(ə)n\/1) utvikling, (gradvis) forandring, evolusjon2) (hendelses)forløp3) fremstilling, utvikling4) ( kjemi) utvikling, avgiving5) ( militærvesen eller sjøfart) manøver, evolusjon6) ( bevegelsesmønster i estetisk sport) tur, piruett, figur7) ( matematikk) rotutdragningtheory of evolution evolusjonsteori, utviklingslære -
18 fable
'feibl1) (a story (usually about animals) that teaches a lesson about human behaviour: Aesop's fables.) fabel2) (a legend or untrue story: fact or fable?) oppdiktet historie•- fabulous- fabulouslydikte--------fabel--------fable--------legendeIsubst. \/ˈfeɪbl\/1) fabel2) saga, myte, legende3) skrøne, løgn, oppdiktet historie4) ( gammeldags) handling, intrige, innhold, hendelsesforløp, motiv (i drama e.l.)5) sladderIIverb \/ˈfeɪbl\/1) ( gammeldags) fable, dikte2) lyve, skrøne, fortelle oppdiktede historier3) fortelle(s), berette(s) -
19 festival
'festəvəl1) (an occasion of public celebration: In Italy, each village holds a festival once a year.) fest, høytid, stevne2) (a season of musical, theatrical etc performances: Every three years the city holds a drama festival; ( also adjective) a festival programme.) festspill, -festivalIsubst. \/ˈfestəv(ə)l\/, \/ˈfestɪv(ə)l\/1) fest2) festival, festspill3) årsfest, festlig tilstelning, høytidelighetthe festival of Christmas julehøytiden, julehelgenfestival of music musikkfestivalthe high festivals de store høytideneIIadj. \/ˈfestəv(ə)l\/, \/ˈfestɪv(ə)l\/fest-, høytids-, festival-, festglad -
20 form
I 1. fo:m noun1) ((a) shape; outward appearance: He saw a strange form in the darkness.) form, skikkelse2) (a kind, type or variety: What form of ceremony usually takes place when someone gets a promotion?) type, form, slag3) (a document containing certain questions, the answers to which must be written on it: an application form.) formular, skjema4) (a fixed way of doing things: forms and ceremonies.) formalitet, formsak5) (a school class: He is in the sixth form.) (skole)klasse2. verb1) (to make; to cause to take shape: They decided to form a drama group.) danne, stifte2) (to come into existence; to take shape: An idea slowly formed in his mind.) ta form, danne seg3) (to organize or arrange (oneself or other people) into a particular order: The women formed (themselves) into three groups.) opprette, danne4) (to be; to make up: These lectures form part of the medical course.) danne, utgjøre•- be in good form
- in the form of II fo:m noun(a long, usually wooden seat: The children were sitting on forms.) (tre)benkart--------blankett--------fasong--------figur--------form--------formular--------klasse--------skikkelse--------skjema--------slag--------sortIsubst. \/fɔːm\/1) form, utforming, fasong2) skikkelse, figur3) form, versjon4) skjema, blankett5) benk (uten rygg), skolebenk6) (skole)klasse, kull7) manerer, oppførsel8) ( grammatikk) ordform9) ( sport) form, kondisjon• he is in\/on great form for the match10) støpeform11) (boktrykking, også forme) formbe off\/out of form ( sport e.l.) ikke være i form, være utrentfor form's sake for formens skyld, for ordens skyldin due form i behørig formin form i (god) kondisjon (fysisk og mentalt)i riktig formin the form of i form avlose form ( om veddeløpshester e.l.) miste formen, være i dårlig form, ha dårlig kondisjonlow forms of life ( biologi) lavere former for livrun true to form eller be true to form oppføre seg som ventet, være seg selv liktake form ta formtake the form of forme seg tilIIverb \/fɔːm\/1) danne (seg), stifte(s)2) forme (ved opplæring eller trening)3) utvikle, skaffe seg, stifte4) tenke ut, utforme i tankene, danne seg, gjøre seg opp• have you formed an opinion?5) utgjøre6) ( militærvesen) formere (seg), stille (seg) opp, danne formasjon• form two deep!form into forme seg til, danne seg tilform up stille seg opp
- 1
- 2
См. также в других словарях:
Drama Desk Award — Awarded for Excellence in theatre Presented by Drama Desk Country United States First awarded … Wikipedia
Drama, Greece — Drama Δράμα Location … Wikipedia
Drama (disambiguation) — Drama, which is the form of literature usually performed as theatre, may refer to: Drama, a general genre of dramatic works, such as literature, film, television drama, game, ets. Drama film Dramatic programming, television drama series content… … Wikipedia
Drama Centre London — Established 1963 Location London, United Kingdom Affiliations Central Saint Martins University of the Arts London Website … Wikipedia
Drama Theory — is a Problem Structuring Method of Operational Research. It is based on game theory and adapts the use of games to complex organisational situations, accounting for emotional responses that can provoke irrational reactions and lead the players to … Wikipedia
Drama (Album) — Drama Studioalbum von Yes Veröffentlichung 18. August 1980 Label Atlantic Records Format … Deutsch Wikipedia
Drama — Saltar a navegación, búsqueda Contenido 1 Género dramático 2 Antecedentes históricos 3 El drama como género literario … Wikipedia Español
Drama (regional unit) — Drama Περιφερειακή ενότητα Δράμας Regional unit Municipalities of Drama … Wikipedia
Drama! — Single by Erasure from the album Wild! B side … Wikipedia
Drama Studio London — (DSL) is a drama school based in Ealing, London, England, United Kingdom. It is accredited by the National Council for Drama Training, London and is a Member of the Conference of Drama Schools. It is one of only twenty one specialist performing… … Wikipedia
drama on television — Drama has been associated with BBC television since before the Second World War and with ITV since 1955. The latter, on its opening night, screened excerpts from Oscar Wilde’s The Importance of Being Earnest. Classic drama from playwrights… … Encyclopedia of contemporary British culture