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1 have time
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2 have time
Общая лексика: иметь время, успевать, успеть -
3 have time to
sempat -
4 have time
vakti olmak, zamanı olmak* * *zamanı ol -
5 have time
• joutua• joutaa• ennättää• ehtiä• ehättää• keritä• keretä -
6 have time
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7 have time
v.tener tiempo, tener algo de tiempo, tener algún tiempo. -
8 have time
zamanı ol -
9 have time on one's hands
heeft alle tijdhave time on one's hands————————genoeg/te veel vrije tijd hebben -
10 have time on one's hands
разг.(have (got) time (hanging) on one's hands (тж. амер. have (got) time to burn))иметь много свободного времени, иметь уйму времени, болтаться без дела‘And look here, don't bother about the parcel for the museum this time... You'll have enough to bother you without running errands.’ ‘That will be all right,’ I told him. ‘There won't be any trouble at all. I know only too well the amount of time I'll probably have on my hands.’ (N. Lewis, ‘The Volcanoes above Us’, ch. XVIII) — - Не буду затруднять вас доставкой этого пакета в музей... Вам хватит хлопот и без наших поручений... - Пустяки, - сказал я. - Это легче легкого. У меня будет уйма свободного времени.
‘You have plenty of time...’ ‘No, I have not got time to burn.’ (DAE) — - У вас уйма времени... - Нет, лишнего времени у меня нет.
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11 TIME: HAVE TIME
[V]VACO (-ARE -AVI -ATUM)VOCO (-ARE -AVI -ATUM) -
12 have time on hands
Общая лексика: иметь много (свободного) времени, иметь уйму времени -
13 have time on one's hands
Универсальный англо-русский словарь > have time on one's hands
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14 have time for
◙ בעל פנאי ל...* * *◙ ...ל יאנפ לעב◄ -
15 have time on one's hands
להיות פנוי* * *◙ יונפ תויהל◄ -
16 have time off
berlibur -
17 have time on hands
bermalas-malasan - -
18 have time for
tijd hebben voor -
19 have time off from work
expr.freihaben v. -
20 have time for
ha tid för...
См. также в других словарях:
have time — verb To be devoid of compromises over a certain period of time (thus being able to choose what to do with it, instead of following a schedule) … Wiktionary
have time to play with — have money/time, etc. to play with ► to have money, time, etc. available to use: »Swelling tax receipts have given the government more money to play with over the last two years. Main Entry: ↑play … Financial and business terms
time off — {n. phr.} A period of release from work. * /If I had some time off this afternoon, I would finish writing the letters I promised to my family./ … Dictionary of American idioms
time off — {n. phr.} A period of release from work. * /If I had some time off this afternoon, I would finish writing the letters I promised to my family./ … Dictionary of American idioms
Time for Timer — was the collective title for a short series of public service announcements broadcast on Saturday mornings on the ABC television network starting in the early 1970s. The animated spots featured Timer, a tiny (often ranging on microscopic) cartoon … Wikipedia
time off — UK US noun [U] HR ► a period of time when you do not work because of illness or holidays, or because your employer has given you permission to do something else: take/have time off »One in five employees admits to taking time off because of… … Financial and business terms
time — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun 1 what is measured in minutes, hours, days, etc. TIME + VERB ▪ elapse, go by, pass ▪ As time went by we saw less and less of each other. ▪ The changing seasons mark the passing of time … Collocations dictionary
Have I Got News for You — Infobox television show name = Have I Got News for You caption = The titlescreen format = Comedy panel game picture format = 4:3 (1990 – 1998) 16:9 (1998 – present) runtime = 30 minutes (standard) 40 minutes (extended) location = The London… … Wikipedia
Time in physics — In physics, the treatment of time is a central issue. It has been treated as a question of geometry. One can measure time and treat it as a geometrical dimension, such as length, and perform mathematical operations on it. It is a scalar quantity… … Wikipedia
time — /tuym/, n., adj., v., timed, timing. n. 1. the system of those sequential relations that any event has to any other, as past, present, or future; indefinite and continuous duration regarded as that in which events succeed one another. 2. duration … Universalium
have — I. verb (had; having; has) Etymology: Middle English, from Old English habban; akin to Old High German habēn to have, and perhaps to hevan to lift more at heave Date: before 12th century transitive verb 1. a. to hold or maintain as a possession,… … New Collegiate Dictionary