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1 afranselen
v. beat, thrash, lambaste, clobber; cane, flog, spank -
2 harses
〈 informeel〉1 nut, skull♦voorbeelden:1 gebruik je harses! • use your loaf/noddle!hou je harses! • shut your trap!hoe haal je het in je harses • how did you get that idea in that fat skull of yours?iemand een dreun voor z'n harses geven • clobber someone -
3 iemand een dreun voor z'n harses geven
iemand een dreun voor z'n harses gevenVan Dale Handwoordenboek Nederlands-Engels > iemand een dreun voor z'n harses geven
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4 iemand een dreun/opstopper verkopen
iemand een dreun/opstopper verkopenVan Dale Handwoordenboek Nederlands-Engels > iemand een dreun/opstopper verkopen
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5 verkopen
1 [verkocht worden] sell♦voorbeelden:II 〈 overgankelijk werkwoord〉1 [tegen een prijs overdoen] sell2 [toedienen] give3 [ten beste geven] 〈zie voorbeelden 3〉♦voorbeelden:1 drugs verkopen • peddle/push drugsnee verkopen • give (someone) no for an answermet winst/verlies verkopen • sell at a profit/losséénmaal! andermaal! verkocht! • going! going! gone!¶ als je dat doet, ben je verkocht • if you do that, you're done for -
6 verslaan
2 [verslag maken van] write an account of; 〈 in het bijzonder met betrekking tot journalisten〉 cover; 〈 notuleren〉 take the minutes♦voorbeelden:na het slechte nieuws waren wij totaal verslagen • after hearing the bad news we were absolutely crushedvolkomen verslaan • clobber, slaughteriemand verslaan met schaken • defeat someone at chess -
7 volkomen verslaan
volkomen verslaanclobber, slaughterVan Dale Handwoordenboek Nederlands-Engels > volkomen verslaan
См. также в других словарях:
clobber — n. personal possessions; an informal term; as, did you take all your clobber?. Syn: stuff. [WordNet 1.5] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
clobber — (v.) 1941, British air force slang, probably related to bombing; possibly echoic. Related: Clobbered; clobbering. In late 19c. British slang the word principally had to do with clothing, e.g. clobber (n.) clothes, (v.) to dress smartly; clobber… … Etymology dictionary
clobber — [v] hit, beat belt, blast, drub, lambaste*, lick, shellac*, slam, slug, smash, smear, smother, thrash, trim, wallop, whip; concepts 189,252 … New thesaurus
clobber — ► NOUN Brit. informal ▪ clothing and personal belongings. ORIGIN of unknown origin … English terms dictionary
clobber — clobber1 [kläb′ər] vt. [< ?] Slang 1. a) to beat or hit repeatedly; maul b) to strike with great force 2. to defeat decisively clobber2 [kläb′ər] n. [Brit. Slang] Brit. Slang … English World dictionary
Clobber — For other uses, see Clobber (disambiguation). Clobber is an abstract strategy game invented in 2001 by combinatorial game theorists Michael H. Albert, J.P. Grossman and Richard Nowakowski. It has subsequently been studied by Elwyn Berlekamp and… … Wikipedia
clobber — 1 verb (T) informal 1 to hit someone very hard: I ll clobber you if you say that again. 2 to defeat someone very easily in a way that is embarrassing for the team that loses: The Dallas Cowboys clobbered the Buffalo Bills last night. 3 to affect… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
clobber — clob|ber1 [ˈklɔbə US ˈkla:bər] v [T] informal 1.) to hit someone very hard 2.) to affect or punish someone or something badly, especially by making them lose money ▪ The paper got clobbered for libel. ▪ The company has been clobbered by falling… … Dictionary of contemporary English
clobber — [[t]klɒ̱bə(r)[/t]] clobbers, clobbering, clobbered 1) N UNCOUNT You can refer to someone s possessions, especially their clothes, as their clobber. [BRIT, INFORMAL] 2) VERB If you clobber someone, you hit them. [INFORMAL] [V n] Hillary clobbered… … English dictionary
clobber — I UK [ˈklɒbə(r)] / US [ˈklɑbər] verb [transitive] Word forms clobber : present tense I/you/we/they clobber he/she/it clobbers present participle clobbering past tense clobbered past participle clobbered informal 1) to defeat someone easily 2) to… … English dictionary
clobber — I. noun Etymology: origin unknown Date: 1879 slang British clothes 1 II. transitive verb (clobbered; clobbering) Etymology: origin unknown Date: circa 1943 1. to pound mercilessly; … New Collegiate Dictionary