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1 band
bænd I noun1) (a strip of material to put round something: a rubber band.) bånd; strikk2) (a stripe of a colour etc: a skirt with a band of red in it.) stripe, bord3) (in radio etc, a group of frequencies or wavelengths: the medium waveband.) båndII 1. noun1) (a number of persons forming a group: a band of robbers.) bande, gjeng2) (a body of musicians: a brass band; a dance band.) band, musikkorps2. verb(to unite or gather together for a purpose: They banded together to oppose the building of the garage.) binde sammen, forenebande--------bind--------ring--------stripeIsubst. \/bænd\/1) bånd (som binder sammen\/rundt)2) stripe, remse, bord3) ( økonomi e.l.) kategori4) belte, mavebelte (på sigar)5) ( EDB) sporgruppe6) ( radio) bånd7) ( mekanikk) (driv)reim8) glatt ring9) (amer., på fugl) ringband conveyor eller band feeder transportbåndbands en slags prestekrage, advokats embetskrageband selecting switch ( radio) båndvelgerto beat the band (amer., hverdagslig) som et pisket skinnIIsubst. \/bænd\/1) (mindre) orkester, musikkorps, band2) forening3) tropp, skare, flokkthe Band of Hope forklaring: britisk avholdsorganisasjonband of robbers røverbandeIIIverb \/bænd\/1) sette bånd rundt\/på2) plassere i kategori3) (amer., om fugl) ringmerkeband (oneself) together forene (seg), slå seg sammen, gå sammen -
2 carve
1) (to make designs, shapes etc by cutting a piece of wood etc: A figure carved out of wood.) skjære ut; hugge ut, meisle2) (to cut up (meat) into slices: Father carved the joint.) skjære (i skiver)•- carving- carve outsnitteverb \/kɑːv\/1) skjære, snitte i, risse inn (i), skjære ut (i)2) hugge (ut), meisle, gravere3) ( matlaging) skjære for, skjære opp, tranchere (kjøtt)carve one's own future skape seg sin egen fremtid, komme seg frem på egenhåndcarve out hugge ut, skjære ut, stykke opp (eiendom) tilkjempe seg, lage seg, skape seg, vinnecarve up ( hverdagslig) dele (opp), dele inn (områder)( slang) skjære i småbiter, snitte opp -
3 watchman
noun ((often night-watchman) a man employed to guard a building etc against thieves, especially at night: The bank-robbers shot the (night-)watchman.) vakt(mann); vektervaktmannsubst. (flertall: watchmen) \/ˈwɒtʃmən\/, flertall: \/ˈwɒtʃmən\/1) nattevakt, vaktmann2) ( gammeldags) vekter
См. также в других словарях:
robbers — Local oral history often preserved reasonably accurate memories of the crimes of robbers, *smugglers, and *highwaymen for several generations, especially if the inns they frequented and the *gallows and gibbets where they died were still… … A Dictionary of English folklore
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Fielding, Henry — born April 22, 1707, Sharpham Park, Somerset, Eng. died Oct. 8, 1754, Lisbon, Port. British novelist and playwright. Fielding attended Eton College but left early and lost his family s support. In his 25 plays, all written early, he was… … Universalium
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Raw-Head and Bloody-Bones — A traditional *bogeyman; also used allusively for robbers, etc., whose rumoured activities created panic. The earliest citation in the OED, from 1550, lists Hobgoblin, Rawhed, and Bloody bone , with punctuation implying that the latter are two … A Dictionary of English folklore