-
21 Last-In-First-Out
Abbreviation: LIFO -
22 last in first out
-
23 last in, first out
Investment: LIFOУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > last in, first out
-
24 last-in, first-out stack
Makarov: LIFOУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > last-in, first-out stack
-
25 last-in-first-out method
Oil: LIFOУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > last-in-first-out method
-
26 last-in, first-out
-
27 unsymmetrische Last
Deutsch-Englisch Wörterbuch der Elektrotechnik und Elektronik > unsymmetrische Last
-
28 hold out
تَحَمَّلَ \ abide: to bear: I can’t abide that smell. bear, (bore, borne): to support: This ice will not bear your weight, (usu. with can) to suffer without complaining (sth. that hurts or displeases) I can’t bear that woman. He bore the pain bravely. carry: to support: This bridge will not carry the weight of a bus. endure: to bear (pain, trouble, etc.): Stop that noise! I can’t endure it any longer. hold out: to last: Do you think this old car will hold out until we reach London? The town was surrounded but the people held out till help came. put up with: to bear without complaining: If you live near an airport, you have to put up with the noise. stand: to bear; suffer without complaint: How can you stand that noise? I can’t stand that man! (I dislike him very much), (of things; also stand up) to suffer without becoming worn or broken, etc. A leather football will stand (up to) a lot of kicking. support: to bear the weight of; hold up: A table is supported by its legs. That branch will not support your weight. tolerate: to bear; accept without complaint: I can’t tolerate heat. He can’t tolerate badly cooked food. wear: (of material) to last; not be damaged by use: Leather bags wear better than plastic ones. withstand: to bear (weight, pressure, an attack, etc.) without weakening. \ See Also أطاق (أَطاقَ)، عانى (عَانى)، صمد (صَمَدَ)، صبر على (صَبَرَ على)، دام (دَامَ)، قاوم (قاوَم) -
29 cut out
حَذَفَ \ cancel: to cross out sth. written. cut out: to leave out: You can cut out the last sentence. delete: to strike out or remove (sth. written): Why has your name been deleted from the list of students?. elide: to leave out a letter or sound: In the word ‘haven’t’, the letter ‘o’ has been elided. eliminate: remove or take out: He eliminated a few phrases from the speech he had written. leave out: not to put in; not to include: He left out one letter and wrote ‘heat’ instead of ‘heart’. miss out: not include; to leave out (by mistake or on purpose): My name was missed out from the list. omit: leave out (by mistake or on purpose); fail to include: Her name was omitted from the list. skip: to miss sth. on purpose; not read (sth. dull, etc.): We’ll skip the next few pages. strike: (with off or out) to put a line through a name or word, because it is no longer wanted: They struck his name off the list. Strike out any word that is wrong. \ See Also ألغى (أَلْغَى)، أهمل (أَهْمَلَ)، ترك (تَرَكَ)، شطب (شَطَبَ) -
30 leave out
حَذَفَ \ cancel: to cross out sth. written. cut out: to leave out: You can cut out the last sentence. delete: to strike out or remove (sth. written): Why has your name been deleted from the list of students?. elide: to leave out a letter or sound: In the word ‘haven’t’, the letter ‘o’ has been elided. eliminate: remove or take out: He eliminated a few phrases from the speech he had written. leave out: not to put in; not to include: He left out one letter and wrote ‘heat’ instead of ‘heart’. miss out: not include; to leave out (by mistake or on purpose): My name was missed out from the list. omit: leave out (by mistake or on purpose); fail to include: Her name was omitted from the list. skip: to miss sth. on purpose; not read (sth. dull, etc.): We’ll skip the next few pages. strike: (with off or out) to put a line through a name or word, because it is no longer wanted: They struck his name off the list. Strike out any word that is wrong. \ See Also ألغى (أَلْغَى)، أهمل (أَهْمَلَ)، ترك (تَرَكَ)، شطب (شَطَبَ) -
31 miss out
حَذَفَ \ cancel: to cross out sth. written. cut out: to leave out: You can cut out the last sentence. delete: to strike out or remove (sth. written): Why has your name been deleted from the list of students?. elide: to leave out a letter or sound: In the word ‘haven’t’, the letter ‘o’ has been elided. eliminate: remove or take out: He eliminated a few phrases from the speech he had written. leave out: not to put in; not to include: He left out one letter and wrote ‘heat’ instead of ‘heart’. miss out: not include; to leave out (by mistake or on purpose): My name was missed out from the list. omit: leave out (by mistake or on purpose); fail to include: Her name was omitted from the list. skip: to miss sth. on purpose; not read (sth. dull, etc.): We’ll skip the next few pages. strike: (with off or out) to put a line through a name or word, because it is no longer wanted: They struck his name off the list. Strike out any word that is wrong. \ See Also ألغى (أَلْغَى)، أهمل (أَهْمَلَ)، ترك (تَرَكَ)، شطب (شَطَبَ) -
32 cut out
تَرَكَ (إلى غير رَجْعَةٍ) \ abandon: to leave sth. or sb., not intending to return: The thieves abandoned the stolen car. cut out: to leave out: You can cut out the last sentence. Cut out that silly talking!. forsake: to leave for ever; give up completely: She forsook the religion of her family in favour of that of her husband. leave: to go away from, for ever: He left school when he was 14. I left my job because I wanted more money, to let sb. or sth. remain (in a certain place or condition) I left my daughter in his care (on purpose). Why did you leave the door open? She left her handbag in the bus (by mistake). \ See Also هجر (هَجَرَ)، تَخَلَّى عن، حذف (حَذَفَ)، غادر (غادَرَ) -
33 on one’s last legs
في آخر رَمَق \ on one’s last legs: (of a person or thing) not expected to last much longer; worn out; almost in ruins: That company is on its last legs. -
34 on one’s last legs
عَلَى شَفَا \ on the brink of: close to (sth. dangerous or exciting): on the brink of war. on the point of doing sth.: starting to do sth.: I was on the point of telephoning you, when I got your letter. on one’s last legs: (of a person or thing) not expected to last much longer; worn out; almost in ruins: That company is on its last legs. on the verge of: close to: She was on the verge of tears. \ See Also شفير (الموت أو الإفلاس، إلخ)، عَلى وَشْك -
35 hold out
1) to continue to survive etc until help arrives:يَبْقى حَيّا، يَثْبُتThe rescue team hoped the men in the boat could hold out till they arrived.
2) to continue to fight against an enemy attack:يَصْمُدThe soldiers held out for eight days.
3) to be enough to last:يَكْفيWill our supplies hold out till the end of the month?
-
36 hold out
صَمَدَ \ hold: to remain in a certain position; not slip or break: If the rope doesn’t hold, you’ll fall!. hold out: to last: Do you think this old car will hold out until we reach London? The town was surrounded but the people held out till help came. keep: to remain in good condition; not go bad: Meat won’t keep in very hot weather. stand (stood): to be, or remain, in a certain position: As matters stand (in present conditions) we have no hope of success. -
37 catch out
1) to put out (a batsman) at cricket by catching the ball after it has been hit and before it touches the ground.يَمْسِكُ الطّابَه2) to cause (someone) to fail by means of a trick, a difficult question etc:يُفْشِلُ بالحيلَةِ أو الخِدْعَهThe last question in the exam caught them all out.
-
38 day etc in, day etc out
I do the same boring job day in, day out
تَدُل عَلى تواتُر العملLast summer it rained week in, week out.
-
39 eke out
1) to make (a supply of something) last longer eg by adding something else to it:يُطيل، يُضيف إلى، يُكَمِّلYou could eke out the meat with potatoes.
2) to manage with difficulty to make (a living, livelihood etc):يَحتال على العَيْشThe artist could scarcely eke out a living from his painting.
-
40 fish out
to pull something out with some difficulty:يَسْحَبAt last he fished out the letter he was looking for.
•Remark: The plural fish is never wrong, but sometimes fishes is used in talking about different individuals or species: How many fish did you catch?; the fishes of the Indian Ocean; the story of two little fishes.
См. также в других словарях:
last out — {v.} 1. To be enough until the end of. * /There is enough food in the house to last out the snowstorm./ * /Our candies won t last out the night./ 2. To continue to the end of; continue to live after; live or go through. * /The old man is dying;… … Dictionary of American idioms
last out — {v.} 1. To be enough until the end of. * /There is enough food in the house to last out the snowstorm./ * /Our candies won t last out the night./ 2. To continue to the end of; continue to live after; live or go through. * /The old man is dying;… … Dictionary of American idioms
last out — phrasal verb Word forms last out : present tense I/you/we/they last out he/she/it lasts out present participle lasting out past tense lasted out past participle lasted out 1) [transitive, never passive] to manage to stay alive for a particular… … English dictionary
last\ out — v 1. To be enough until the end of. There is enough food in the house to last out the snowstorm. Our candies won t last out the night. 2. To continue to the end of; continue to live after; live or go through. The old man is dying; he won t last… … Словарь американских идиом
Last In Last Out — LILO, method for arranging a line so that the first to arrive is the first to leave (as opposed to the First In Last Out method in which the first to arrive is the last to leave) … English contemporary dictionary
last out — verb hang on during a trial of endurance ride out the storm • Syn: ↑stay, ↑ride out, ↑outride • Derivationally related forms: ↑stayer (for: ↑stay) … Useful english dictionary
last out — see last 13) … English dictionary
last out — survive; endure … English contemporary dictionary
First in, Last out — First in, Last out, FILO … Universal-Lexikon
last — last1 [last, läst] adj. [ME laste, earlier latest, latst < OE latost, superl. of adj. læt, adv. late: see LATE] 1. alt. superl. of LATE 2. being or coming after all others in place; farthest from the first; hindmost 3. coming after all others… … English World dictionary
last — Ⅰ. last [1] ► ADJECTIVE 1) coming after all others in time or order. 2) most recent in time. 3) immediately preceding in order. 4) lowest in importance or rank. 5) (the last) the least likely or suitable … English terms dictionary