Перевод: с арабского на английский

с английского на арабский

(make+hard)

  • 1 hard

    قَاسٍ \ austere: (of people) severe, self-controlled and serious: He always has an austere expression, and never smiles. bad, (worse, worst): (of things that are never good) serious; severe: a bad accident; a bad cold. brutal: having no feeling; cruel: a brutal war; a brutal act of violence. callous: (of the skin) hardened and thick. cruel: liking to hurt others; unkind; causing pain: It is cruel to lock up a child. He struck her a cruel blow. fierce: (of people, their actions and feelings) violent: a fierce attack; a fierce hatred. grim: very serious; ready to suffer or to make others suffer; not yielding; merciless: he faced his enemy with a grim smile. hard: firm; not soft: as hard as iron, not gentle; unkind; demanding complete obedience He’s a hard father. He’s hard on his children. harsh: (of people and punishments) hard; cruel. inhuman: cruel; lacking natural human kindness. merciless: showing no mercy. relentless: pitiless. rigid: stiff; not bending unable to bend. ruthless: merciless; pitiless: a ruthless enemy. severe: (of things) bad or violent, causing anxiety; (of people) hard and merciless: a severe illness; a severe judge. stern: severe demanding obedience: stern treatment; a stern father. stringent: (of conditions, rules, etc.) severe; demanding exact fulfilment. tough: not easily cut or torn or broken: tough meat; tough glass. violent: using force; fierce: a violent attack; a violent temper. virulent: very harmful to the health; poisonous; full of hate: a virulent disease; a virulent political speech. \ See Also عنيف، خبيث (خبيث)، جامد (جامد)، عديم الشفقة، صارم (صَارِم)، مؤلم (مُؤْلِم)، شنيع (شنيع)، وحشي (وَحْشِيّ)، غليظ (غليظ)‏

    Arabic-English glossary > hard

  • 2 make out

    فَهِمَ \ comprehend: to understand: The child read the story but did not comprehend its meaning. follow: to understand: Could you follow his explanation?. gather: (with a clause as the object) to understand: I gather from your son that he has left school. make out: to understand: I can’t make out what this means. make sense: (of a person, with of) to understand: I can’t make sense of these accounts. realize: to understand (the truth of sth.): Does she realize her mistake? (Does she know about it?) Do you realize that you are in great danger?. see: to understand (a reason, a joke, a need, etc.): I can’t see why he wants it. It’s too hard for him, you see. Yes, I see. understand: to know the meaning of: I don’t understand this question.

    Arabic-English glossary > make out

  • 3 make sense

    فَهِمَ \ comprehend: to understand: The child read the story but did not comprehend its meaning. follow: to understand: Could you follow his explanation?. gather: (with a clause as the object) to understand: I gather from your son that he has left school. make out: to understand: I can’t make out what this means. make sense: (of a person, with of) to understand: I can’t make sense of these accounts. realize: to understand (the truth of sth.): Does she realize her mistake? (Does she know about it?) Do you realize that you are in great danger?. see: to understand (a reason, a joke, a need, etc.): I can’t see why he wants it. It’s too hard for him, you see. Yes, I see. understand: to know the meaning of: I don’t understand this question.

    Arabic-English glossary > make sense

  • 4 make out

    أَدْرَكَ \ appreciate: to understand: I appreciate your point of view. attain: to reach; succeed in getting: He attained his goal of becoming rich. catch up: come level (with): He started early but I soon caught up (or caught him up or caught up with him). catch, (caught): to meet or join sb. or sth. by being at the right place at the right time: I caught the bus outside the cinema. I caught the headmaster as he left his office. comprehend: to understand: The child read the story but did not comprehend its meaning. find, (found): to learn or discover sth. (by experience or study of inquiry): She found him changed. You will find the hotel very comfortable. The judge found the prisoner guilty. I found that my car had been stolen. make out: to understand: I can’t make out what this means. overtake: (of a runner, etc.) to come level with sb., by going faster (and perhaps to pass him): I overtook him and gave him your message. perceive: to notice and understand, especially through the eyes or mind: I can’t perceive any difference between these two coins. We perceived that we were unwelcome, so we left. realize: to understand (the truth of sth.): Does she realize her mistake? (Does she know about it?) Do you realize that you are in great danger?. see: to understand (a reaon, a joke, a need, etc.): I can’t see why he wants it. It’s too hard for him, you see? Yes, I see. tell: (with can) to know; to recognize: Can you tell the difference between these two brothers?. understand: to know the meaning of: I don’t understand this question. \ See Also عرف (عَرِفَ)، فهم (فَهِم)، لحق بـ (لَحِقَ بِـ)‏

    Arabic-English glossary > make out

  • 5 make

    كَسَبَ \ come by: to obtain sth: How did you come by that book?. earn: to obtain in return for one’s work: He earns $6000 a year. make: to gain (friends, money, etc.). pay one’s way: to earn enough for one’s needs; not get into debt. profit: to gain: We can profit (gain wisdom or skill) by experience. win: to gain (sth. esp. by hard work, by good fortune, by risking money or by doing better than others): We won a free holiday through a newspaper competition. I won $10 at the horse races. Our team has won every match. gain: to obtain (sth. useful, necessary, wanted etc.). get, got, gotten: to obtain (sth. that one wants): I must get a new car. \ See Also حصل (حَصَّلَ)، جنى (جَنَى)، ربح (رَبِحَ)‏

    Arabic-English glossary > make

  • 6 make

    عَمِلَ (يَعْمَلُ)‏ \ do: to perform (one’s duty, one’s best, right, wrong, etc.): I have a lot to do, (used generally instead of a particular verb of action) to attend to; deal with; set in order Have you done (or written) that report yet? Has the cook done (or prepared) the vegetables for dinner? Have you done (or cleaned) your teeth?. go: to work: This clock goes by electricity. make: to form; build; cause (a rule, a mistake, a difference, trouble, etc.) to be or happen: She made some bread. They made a new road. They made a noise. operate: (of machines, plans, etc.) to be effective. perform: to do (a duty, an action, etc.). work: not to rest or play: He’s working in the garden. My boy works hard at school, have a paid job She works in an office.

    Arabic-English glossary > make

  • 7 make good

    1) to be successful:

    Through hard work and ability, he soon made good.

    يَنْجَح
    2) to repair or compensate for (loss, damages etc):

    The damage you caused to my car must be made good.

    يُصَلِّح، يُعَوِّض

    Arabic-English dictionary > make good

  • 8 a hard time (of it)

    trouble, difficulty, worry etc:

    The speaker had a hard time (of it) trying to make himself heard.

    مَتاعِب، وَقْتٌ صَعْب

    Arabic-English dictionary > a hard time (of it)

  • 9 a hard time (of it)

    trouble, difficulty, worry etc:

    The speaker had a hard time (of it) trying to make himself heard.

    مَتاعِب، وَقْتٌ صَعْب

    Arabic-English dictionary > a hard time (of it)

  • 10 harden

    تَصَلَّبَ \ harden: to make or become hard; to change from liquid to solid. \ قَسَا \ harden: to become hard. \ قَسَّى \ harden: to make hard.

    Arabic-English glossary > harden

  • 11 hit

    [hɪt] present participle ˈhitting: past tense, past participle hit
    1. verb
    1) to (cause or allow to) come into hard contact with:

    He hit his head on/against a low branch

    That boxer can certainly hit hard!

    يَضرُب
    2) to make hard contact with (something), and force or cause it to move in some direction:

    The batsman hit the ball (over the wall).

    يَصْدُم، يَصْطَدِم
    3) to cause to suffer:

    Her husband's death hit her hard.

    يُسبب المُعاناه، يَضْرُب، يصيب ب
    4) to find; to succeed in reaching:

    She used to be a famous soprano but she cannot hit the high notes now.

    يجد، ينجَح في الوُصول إلى
    2. noun
    1) the act of hitting:

    That was a good hit.

    ضَرْب، إصابَه

    He scored five hits.

    نُقْطَه، هَدَف
    3) something which is popular or successful:

    The play/record is a hit

    ( also adjective) a hit song.

    ضَربة ناجِحَه، عمل ناجِح

    Arabic-English dictionary > hit

  • 12 قسى

    قَسَّى \ harden: to make hard. \ قَسَّى \ toughen: make or become tough. \ See Also قسا (قَسَا)‏

    Arabic-English dictionary > قسى

  • 13 أوى

    v. accommodate, shelter, harbour, receive, make hard, lodge, nestle, quarter, harbor

    Arabic-English dictionary > أوى

  • 14 احتمل

    v. resist, make hard, tolerate, support

    Arabic-English dictionary > احتمل

  • 15 منح حق اللجوء

    v. make hard

    Arabic-English dictionary > منح حق اللجوء

  • 16 شد

    شَدَّ \ fasten: to fix or be fixed firmly: Fasten those buttons. fix: make firm; fasten: The lamp is fixed to the wall. pull: (the opposite of push) to draw (sth.) towards oneself: Pull the rope to ring the bell. Don’t pull so hard, or you’ll break it. tie: to fasten or bind (with rope, etc.): They tied the prisoner’s hands. He tied his horse to a tree. I tied a knot in the rope (or I tied the rope in a knot). tighten: to make or become tight: Tighten this knot. \ See Also ربط (رَبَطَ)‏ \ شَدَّ \ wrench: to seize or move with a wrench: I wrenched the gun out of his hand. \ See Also اِنْتَزَع بِعُنْف \ شَدَّ \ screw: to fasten or tighten with screws: I screwed a handle on to the door. Please screw up that box. \ See Also ثَبَّتَ بالبَراغي \ شَدَّ \ tape: to fasten with tape. \ See Also ثَبَّتَ بشريط \ شَدَّ \ tug: to pull hard and suddenly. \ See Also جَذَبَ بِقُوَّة \ شَدَّ \ rope: to tie with a rope: The climbers were roped together. \ See Also ربط (رَبَطَ)، قَيَّد بِحَبْل \ شَدَّ أزْرَه \ back: to support; say that sb. will win: I’m backing him in this race. \ شَدَّ إلى النِّير \ yoke: to put (two animals) under joint control by the use of a yoke. \ شَدَّ بقوّة \ heave: to pull hard at sth., esp. a rope. \ شَدُّ الحَبْل \ tug of war: a competition for two teams, which pull opposite ends of a rope. \ شَدَّ رباط \ lash: to tie (sth.) tightly to sth. else: He lashed some poles together to form a footbridge.

    Arabic-English dictionary > شد

  • 17 قاس

    قَاسٍ \ austere: (of people) severe, self-controlled and serious: He always has an austere expression, and never smiles. bad, (worse, worst): (of things that are never good) serious; severe: a bad accident; a bad cold. brutal: having no feeling; cruel: a brutal war; a brutal act of violence. callous: (of the skin) hardened and thick. cruel: liking to hurt others; unkind; causing pain: It is cruel to lock up a child. He struck her a cruel blow. fierce: (of people, their actions and feelings) violent: a fierce attack; a fierce hatred. grim: very serious; ready to suffer or to make others suffer; not yielding; merciless: he faced his enemy with a grim smile. hard: firm; not soft: as hard as iron, not gentle; unkind; demanding complete obedience He’s a hard father. He’s hard on his children. harsh: (of people and punishments) hard; cruel. inhuman: cruel; lacking natural human kindness. merciless: showing no mercy. relentless: pitiless. rigid: stiff; not bending unable to bend. ruthless: merciless; pitiless: a ruthless enemy. severe: (of things) bad or violent, causing anxiety; (of people) hard and merciless: a severe illness; a severe judge. stern: severe demanding obedience: stern treatment; a stern father. stringent: (of conditions, rules, etc.) severe; demanding exact fulfilment. tough: not easily cut or torn or broken: tough meat; tough glass. violent: using force; fierce: a violent attack; a violent temper. virulent: very harmful to the health; poisonous; full of hate: a virulent disease; a virulent political speech. \ See Also عنيف، خبيث( خبيثجامد( جامد)، عديم الشفقة، صارم (صَارِم)، مؤلم (مُؤْلِم)، شنيع( شنيعوحشي (وَحْشِيّ)، غليظ( غليظ)‏ \ قاسٍ (إنْسَان)‏ \ brute: a cruel person. \ See Also فَظّ \ قَاسٍ جدًّا \ scathing: severely faultfinding; bitterly unkind in one’s blame: a scathing report. \ قَاسٍ كالصَّخْر \ rocky: full of rocks; as hard as rock: a rocky coast. \ See Also صخري (صَخْرِيّ)‏

    Arabic-English dictionary > قاس

  • 18 أصدر

    أَصْدَرَ \ emit: to send out (heat, light, smell, sound, etc.). issue: to send out (orders) officially; supply (stamps, food, clothes, etc.) officially: Winter coats were issued to the soldier. \ أَصْدَرَ حفيفًا أو صوتًا خفيفًا (حَفَّ)‏ \ rustle: to make a noise like dry leaves rubbing against each other. \ أَصْدَرَ حُكْمًا (حَكَمَ بِـ)‏ \ rule: to give an official decision: The judge ruled that the prisoner was wrongly charged. \ أَصْدَرَ رائحةً كَرِيهَة \ stink: to have a very nasty smell. \ See Also أنتن (أَنْتَنَ)‏ \ أَصْدَرَ صَفيرًا (صَفَّرَ)‏ \ whistle: to make the sound of a whistle: I whistled as I walked along. The wind whistled through the trees. \ أَصْدَرَ صوت الفَوَران (فارَ)‏ \ fizz: to make a noise like gas escaping from water. \ أَصْدَرَ صَوْتًا كالجَرْش (جَرَشَ)‏ \ crunch: to make a noise of sth. being crunched: The ice crunched as he stepped on it. \ أَصْدَرَ صوتًا كالعُوَاء (عَوَى)‏ \ howl: to make a long loud noise: The boys howled with laughter. \ أَصْدَرَ طَقّة أو تَكْتكَة (طَقّ أو تَكْتَكَ)‏ \ click: (make, to cause to make) a short sharp little sound: The door clicked. He clicked his fingers at me. \ أَصْدَرَ طنينًا (طَنَّ أو هَدَرَ)‏ \ boom: to make a deep hollow sound: The speaker had a loud booming voice. \ See Also دَوِيًّا أو هَديرًا \ أَصْدَرَ قَعْقَعَة (قَعْقَعَ أو قَرْقَعَ)‏ \ clatter: to (make) a repeated noise of hard things knocking together: The boys clattered down the stairs. \ See Also قرقعة (قَرْقَعَة)، طَقْطَقَة أو دَبْدَبَة \ أَصْدَرَ مرسومًا بِـ \ decree: to declare by decree; decide officially. \ أَصْدَرَ نَقِيقًا (نَقَّ)‏ \ croak: to make a deep rough noise in the throat. \ أَصْدَرَ نَهيقًا (نَهَقَ)‏ \ bray: to make the noise made by a donkey. \ أَصْدَفُ (الرُّكْبَتَيْن)‏ \ knock-kneed: with legs bent inward, so that the knees knock each other in walking.

    Arabic-English dictionary > أصدر

  • 19 austere

    قَاسٍ \ austere: (of people) severe, self-controlled and serious: He always has an austere expression, and never smiles. bad, (worse, worst): (of things that are never good) serious; severe: a bad accident; a bad cold. brutal: having no feeling; cruel: a brutal war; a brutal act of violence. callous: (of the skin) hardened and thick. cruel: liking to hurt others; unkind; causing pain: It is cruel to lock up a child. He struck her a cruel blow. fierce: (of people, their actions and feelings) violent: a fierce attack; a fierce hatred. grim: very serious; ready to suffer or to make others suffer; not yielding; merciless: he faced his enemy with a grim smile. hard: firm; not soft: as hard as iron, not gentle; unkind; demanding complete obedience He’s a hard father. He’s hard on his children. harsh: (of people and punishments) hard; cruel. inhuman: cruel; lacking natural human kindness. merciless: showing no mercy. relentless: pitiless. rigid: stiff; not bending unable to bend. ruthless: merciless; pitiless: a ruthless enemy. severe: (of things) bad or violent, causing anxiety; (of people) hard and merciless: a severe illness; a severe judge. stern: severe demanding obedience: stern treatment; a stern father. stringent: (of conditions, rules, etc.) severe; demanding exact fulfilment. tough: not easily cut or torn or broken: tough meat; tough glass. violent: using force; fierce: a violent attack; a violent temper. virulent: very harmful to the health; poisonous; full of hate: a virulent disease; a virulent political speech. \ See Also عنيف، خبيث (خبيث)، جامد (جامد)، عديم الشفقة، صارم (صَارِم)، مؤلم (مُؤْلِم)، شنيع (شنيع)، وحشي (وَحْشِيّ)، غليظ (غليظ)‏

    Arabic-English glossary > austere

  • 20 bad, (worse, worst)

    قَاسٍ \ austere: (of people) severe, self-controlled and serious: He always has an austere expression, and never smiles. bad, (worse, worst): (of things that are never good) serious; severe: a bad accident; a bad cold. brutal: having no feeling; cruel: a brutal war; a brutal act of violence. callous: (of the skin) hardened and thick. cruel: liking to hurt others; unkind; causing pain: It is cruel to lock up a child. He struck her a cruel blow. fierce: (of people, their actions and feelings) violent: a fierce attack; a fierce hatred. grim: very serious; ready to suffer or to make others suffer; not yielding; merciless: he faced his enemy with a grim smile. hard: firm; not soft: as hard as iron, not gentle; unkind; demanding complete obedience He’s a hard father. He’s hard on his children. harsh: (of people and punishments) hard; cruel. inhuman: cruel; lacking natural human kindness. merciless: showing no mercy. relentless: pitiless. rigid: stiff; not bending unable to bend. ruthless: merciless; pitiless: a ruthless enemy. severe: (of things) bad or violent, causing anxiety; (of people) hard and merciless: a severe illness; a severe judge. stern: severe demanding obedience: stern treatment; a stern father. stringent: (of conditions, rules, etc.) severe; demanding exact fulfilment. tough: not easily cut or torn or broken: tough meat; tough glass. violent: using force; fierce: a violent attack; a violent temper. virulent: very harmful to the health; poisonous; full of hate: a virulent disease; a virulent political speech. \ See Also عنيف، خبيث (خبيث)، جامد (جامد)، عديم الشفقة، صارم (صَارِم)، مؤلم (مُؤْلِم)، شنيع (شنيع)، وحشي (وَحْشِيّ)، غليظ (غليظ)‏

    Arabic-English glossary > bad, (worse, worst)

См. также в других словарях:

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