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1 toll
I [təul] verb(to ring (a bell) slowly: The church bell tolled solemnly.) zvonitiII [təul] noun1) (a tax charged for crossing a bridge, driving on certain roads etc: All cars pay a toll of $1; ( also adjective) a toll bridge.) cestnina2) (an amount of loss or damage suffered, eg as a result of disaster: Every year there is a heavy toll of human lives on the roads.) davek•* * *I [tóul]1.nounsvečano zvonjenje (zlasti umrlemu); bitje zvona, ure;2.transitive verb & intransitive verbpočasi, enakomerno zvoniti; zvoniti mrliču; biti (o uri, o zvonu) oznanjati (smrt), klicati, vabitiII [tóul]1.nounmitnina, carina, pristojbina, taksa; cestnina, mostnina, sejmarina, mletvina; (pre)voznina; history dajatev, davek; figuratively davek, dolg, žrtevthe toll of the road, the road toll — figuratively cestni davek; žrtve, število mrtvih v prometnih nesrečahto take toll — pobirati mitnino (carino, pristojbino)to take toll of — pridržati, zadržati, odtegniti (kaj)to take toll of s.o. figuratively zdelati, zmučiti kogathoughts pay no toll — figuratively misli so oproščene carine;2.intransitive verbplačati ali pobirati javne dajatve (mitnino, carino, mostnino itd.) -
2 upon
1) (to meet by accident: I chanced on a friend of yours.) naleteti na2) (to discover by accident: I chanced upon some information.) naleteti na* * *I [əpɔn]preposition (= on) na; na osnovi, na temelju; za; priloss upon loss — izguba za izgubo, stalne izgubeupon this — nato, nakarupon inspection — na temelju inšpekcije, takoj po inšpekcijito draw one's sword upon s.o. — izvleči (potegniti) svoj meč proti komuto live upon s.o. — živeti na račun kake osebeupon my word (of honour)! — častna (moja) beseda!II [əpɔn]adverbnato -
3 price
1. noun1) (the amount of money for which a thing is or can be bought or sold; the cost: The price of the book was $10.) cena2) (what one must give up or suffer in order to gain something: Loss of freedom is often the price of success.) cena2. verb1) (to mark a price on: I haven't priced these articles yet.) določiti ceno2) (to find out the price of: He went into the furniture shop to price the beds.) izvedeti za ceno•- pricey
- at a price
- beyond/without price* * *I [práis]nouncena, stroški, izdatki; (borza) tečajna vrednost, borzni kurz; plačilo, nagrada; figuratively cena, žrtevprice fixed — zadnja, najvišja cenaeconomy long price — bruto cena (vključno s carino)economy asked price — zahtevana cenaeconomy price per unit — cena za kosfiguratively every man has his price — vsakega človeka je moč kupitibeyond ( —ali above, without) price — neprecenljiv, nedosegljivto set a price on s.o.'s head — razpisati nagrado na kogaat a heavy price — za visoko ceno, za veliko žrtevslang what price? — kako kaže z...?, kakšne šanse ima...?II [práis]transitive verbeconomy določiti ceno; razpisati nagrado na koga; colloquially vprašati za ceno; figuratively oceniti, ocenjevati
См. также в других словарях:
loss — [ lɔs ] noun *** ▸ 1 no longer having something ▸ 2 having less than before ▸ 3 failure to win race etc. ▸ 4 money lost ▸ 5 death of someone ▸ 6 sadness from death/loss ▸ 7 disadvantage from loss ▸ + PHRASES 1. ) count or uncount the state of not … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
loss — W1S2 [lɔs US lo:s] n [: Old English; Origin: los destruction ] 1.) [U and C] the fact of no longer having something, or of having less of it than you used to have, or the process by which this happens loss of ▪ The court awarded Ms Dixon £7,000… … Dictionary of contemporary English
loss of life — formal phrase the deaths of a lot of people in an accident, war etc There was only minor damage to property and no loss of life. heavy losses (=when a lot of people die): Despite heavy losses, the battalion regrouped and fought on. Thesaurus:… … Useful english dictionary
Heavy cavalry — is the late 19th century misnomer for Cavalry [p.490, Lynn] , troops that from the late 17th to late 19th centuries usually wore armour and were mounted on largest available cavalry horses [p.60, Roemer] , as opposed to light cavalry, in which… … Wikipedia
loss — n. 1) to inflict losses on (our forces inflicted heavy losses on the enemy) 2) (sports) to hand smb. a loss (they handed our team its first loss of the season) 3) to incur, suffer, sustain, take losses (to take heavy losses) 4) to make up, offset … Combinatory dictionary
loss — noun 1 losing of sth ADJECTIVE ▪ appreciable, considerable, significant, substantial ▪ dramatic, great, huge, major, serious … Collocations dictionary
Heavy water — Not to be confused with hard water or tritiated water. Deuterium oxide IUPAC name … Wikipedia
loss — The opposite of gain. Bloomberg Financial Dictionary * * * loss loss [lɒs ǁ lɒːs] noun 1. [countable, uncountable] the fact of no longer having something that you used to have, or having less of it: • loss of earnings through illness ˈjob loss… … Financial and business terms
loss — noun 1 NO LONGER HAVING STH (C, U) the fact of no longer having something you used to have: Job losses were common in the 1980s. (+ of): a temporary loss of memory | weight/blood etc loss | rapid hair loss 2 MONEY (C, U) money that has been lost… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
heavy — [[t]he̱vi[/t]] ♦♦ heavier, heaviest, heavies 1) ADJ GRADED Something that is heavy weighs a lot. These scissors are awfully heavy... Gosh, that was a heavy bag!... The mud stuck to her boots, making her feet heavy and her legs tired. Ant: light… … English dictionary
loss */*/*/ — UK [lɒs] / US [lɔs] noun Word forms loss : singular loss plural losses 1) [countable/uncountable] the state of no longer having something because it has been taken from you or destroyed It was an ancient car anyway, so it was no great loss. job… … English dictionary