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41 حزم الكتب
v. make one a pile of books -
42 sopra
['sopra]1. prep1) (gen) overguadagna sopra i 2000 euro al mese — he earns over 2,000 euros a month
pesa sopra il chilo — it weighs over o more than a kilo
2) (più in su di) abovesopra l'equatore — north of o above the equator
ha un appartamento sopra il negozio — he has a flat Brit o apartment Am over the shop
mettilo sopra l'armadio — put it on top of the wardrobe Brit o closet Am
4) (intorno a, riguardo a) about, onun dibattito sopra la riforma carceraria — a debate about o on prison reform
2. avv1) (su) up, (in superficie) on topmetti tutto lì o là sopra — put everything up there
sopra è un po' rovinato — (libro, borsa) it's a bit damaged on top
2)3) (prima) aboveper i motivi sopra illustrati — for the above-mentioned reasons, for the reasons shown above
vedi/come sopra — see/as above
4)dormirci sopra fig — to sleep on it
3. smil di sopra — the top, the upper part
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43 пачка
жbundle, batch, packпа́чка ча́я/ма́сла/пече́нья/сигаре́т — pack/packet of tea/butter/bisquits/ciga-rettes
па́чка пи́сем/газе́т — bundle of letters/newspapers
па́чка книг — parcel/ кипа pile of books
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44 hold
I [həuld] past tense, past participle held [held]1. verb1) to have in one's hand(s) or between one's hands:يَحْمِلُ في يدهHe held the mouse by its tail.
2) to have in a part, or between parts, of the body, or between parts of a tool etc:يُمْسِكُ بHold the stamp with tweezers.
3) to support or keep from moving, running away, falling etc:What holds that shelf up?
يَرْفَعُ، يُثَبِّتHold his arms so that he can't struggle.
4) to remain in position, fixed etc when under strain:I've tied the two pieces of string together, but I'm not sure the knot will hold
يَصْمُد، يبقى ثابِتاWill the anchor hold in a storm?
5) to keep (a person) in some place or in one's power:The police are holding a man for questioning in connection with the murder
يَقْبِض عَلىHe was held captive.
6) to (be able to) contain:يتَّسِعُ لِ، يَحْمِلThis drawer holds all my shirts.
7) to cause to take place:يَجْري، يَعْقِدُWe'll hold the meeting in the hall.
8) to keep (oneself), or to be, in a particular state or condition:يُبْقي، يَحْتَفِظُ بShe holds herself very erect.
يُشْغِلُHe held the position of company secretary for five years.
10) to think strongly; to believe; to consider or regard:يرى أن، يعتقِد، يَعْتَبِر، يحْتَرِمHe holds certain very odd beliefs.
11) to continue to be valid or apply:يَسْري مَفعوله، ينطبِقThese rules hold under all circumstances.
12) ( with to) to force (a person) to do something he has promised to do:يُلْزِم بI intend to hold him to his promises.
13) to defend:يُدافِعThey held the castle against the enemy.
14) not to be beaten by:يوقِف، يَصُدThe general realized that the soldiers could not hold the enemy for long.
15) to keep (a person's attention):يحافِظ على إنتباهIf you can't hold your pupils' attention, you can't be a good teacher.
16) to keep someone in a certain state:يُبْقيDon't hold us in suspense, what was the final decision?
17) to celebrate:يَجْري، يُقامThe festival is held on 24 June.
18) to be the owner of:يَمْلُك، يَحْتَفِظُ بHe holds shares in this company.
19) (of good weather) to continue:يَسْتَمِر، يَبْقىI hope the weather holds until after the school sports.
20) ( also hold the line) (of a person who is making a telephone call) to wait:يَنْتَظِرMr Brown is busy at the moment – will you hold or would you like him to call you back?
21) to continue to sing:يَسْتَمِر في الغِناءPlease hold that note for four whole beats.
22) to keep (something):يحْتَفِظ، يُبْقي علىThey'll hold your luggage at the station until you collect it.
23) (of the future) to be going to produce:يَجْلِب، يُعْطي، يَحْمِلُI wonder what the future holds for me?
2. noun1) the act of holding:He caught/got/laid/took hold of the rope and pulled
قَبْضَه، مَسْكَهKeep hold of that rope.
2) power; influence:قُوَّه، تَأثيرHe has a strange hold over that girl.
3) (in wrestling etc) a manner of holding one's opponent:مَسْكَة في المُصارَعَه II [həuld] nounThe wrestler invented a new hold.
(in ships) the place, below the deck, where cargo is stored.عَنْبَر أو مَخْزَن السَّفينَه -
45 top-heavy
adjectivehaving the upper part too heavy for the lower:يُخْشى سُقوطه لِثِقَل أعْلاهThat pile of books is top-heavy – it'll fall over!
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46 topple
[ˈtɔpl] verbto (make something) fall:يَنْقَلِب، يَسْقُطThe child toppled over.
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47 tote
[tout] verbto carry:يَنْقُل، يَحْمِلُ شَيْئا يَصْعُب حَمْلُهHe was toting a pile of books about with him.
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48 أخفى
أَخْفَى \ bury: to hide sth. on or under sth.: I found the papers I had lost buried under a pile of books. conceal: to hide. hide: to put or keep out of sight; prevent sth. from being seen or found: He hid the money in a hole. She could not hide her feelings. obscure: to make obscure; block (a view): The sun was obscured by clouds. \ See Also كتم (كَتَم)، حجب (حَجَب) \ أَخْفَى بالقِناع \ mask: to cover with a mask. -
49 bury
أَخْفَى \ bury: to hide sth. on or under sth.: I found the papers I had lost buried under a pile of books. conceal: to hide. hide: to put or keep out of sight; prevent sth. from being seen or found: He hid the money in a hole. She could not hide her feelings. obscure: to make obscure; block (a view): The sun was obscured by clouds. \ See Also كتم (كَتَم)، حجب (حَجَب) -
50 conceal
أَخْفَى \ bury: to hide sth. on or under sth.: I found the papers I had lost buried under a pile of books. conceal: to hide. hide: to put or keep out of sight; prevent sth. from being seen or found: He hid the money in a hole. She could not hide her feelings. obscure: to make obscure; block (a view): The sun was obscured by clouds. \ See Also كتم (كَتَم)، حجب (حَجَب) -
51 hide
أَخْفَى \ bury: to hide sth. on or under sth.: I found the papers I had lost buried under a pile of books. conceal: to hide. hide: to put or keep out of sight; prevent sth. from being seen or found: He hid the money in a hole. She could not hide her feelings. obscure: to make obscure; block (a view): The sun was obscured by clouds. \ See Also كتم (كَتَم)، حجب (حَجَب) -
52 obscure
أَخْفَى \ bury: to hide sth. on or under sth.: I found the papers I had lost buried under a pile of books. conceal: to hide. hide: to put or keep out of sight; prevent sth. from being seen or found: He hid the money in a hole. She could not hide her feelings. obscure: to make obscure; block (a view): The sun was obscured by clouds. \ See Also كتم (كَتَم)، حجب (حَجَب) -
53 отрупвам
pile; heap, shower, submerge (с with)(с работа, внимание и пр. и) overwhelmотрупвам с работа overload/overburden with work, pile work on, overworkотрупвам с внимание load with kindness, heap/shower kindness onотрупвам с почести shower honours onотрупвам с похвали heap/lavish praise onотрупвам с комплименти/ругатни shower wih compliments/abuse, shower/heap compliments/abuse onотрупвам с подаръци load down/shower with presentsотрупвам с поръчки shower orders onотрупвам маса с ястия pile a table with dishesотрупвам чинията на някого с heap s.o.'s plate with* * *отру̀пвам,гл. pile; heap, shower, submerge (с with); (с работа, внимание и пр.) overwhelm; \отрупвам маса с ястия pile a table with dishes; \отрупвам с внимание load with kindness, heap/shower kindness on; \отрупвам с въпроси shower/hail questions (on), ply with questions; \отрупвам с комплименти/ругатни shower with compliments/abuse, shower/heap compliments/abuse on; \отрупвам с поръчки shower orders on; \отрупвам с похвали heap/lavish praise on; \отрупвам с почести shower honours on; \отрупвам с работа overload/overburden with work, pile work on, overwork; \отрупвам чинията на някого с heap s.o.’s plate with.* * *heap: The table is отрупвамed with books. - Масата е отрупана с книги.; lade; overwhelm; ply{plai}; pour* * *1. (с работа, внимание и пр. и) overwhelm 2. pile;heap, shower, submerge (c with) 3. ОТРУПВАМ маса с ястия pile a table with dishes 4. ОТРУПВАМ с внимание load with kindness, heap/shower kindness on 5. ОТРУПВАМ с въпроси shower/hail questions (on), ply with questions 6. ОТРУПВАМ с комплименти/ругатни shower wih compliments/abuse, shower/heap compliments/abuse on 7. ОТРУПВАМ с подаръци load down/ shower with presents 8. ОТРУПВАМ с поръчки shower orders on 9. ОТРУПВАМ с похвали heap/lavish praise on 10. ОТРУПВАМ с почести shower honours on 11. ОТРУПВАМ с работа overload/overburden with work, pile work on, overwork 12. ОТРУПВАМ чинията на някого с heap s.o.'s plate with -
54 stabel
pile, stack* * *pl. (sjøfart) stocks subst. pile (f.eks.of books, bricks
) subst. [større, ordnet] stack (f.eks.of books, bricks, newspapers
) -
55 montón
m.1 heap, pile, bunch, bunch of things.2 lot, great number, large number, bundle.* * *1 heap, pile\ser del montón to be nothing special, be one of the crowd* * *noun m.heap, pile* * *SM1) [gen] heap, pile; [de nieve] pileun hombre del montón — just an ordinary o average chap
2) * (=mucho)tenemos montones — we've got loads o masses *
un montón de — loads of *, masses of *
un montón de gente — loads of people *, masses of people *
a montones: ejemplos hay a montones — there is no shortage of examples
* * *a) ( pila) pile(ser) del montón — (fam)
b) (fam) ( gran cantidad)me duele un montón — it hurts like hell (colloq)
me gusta un montón — I'm crazy about her/it (colloq)
* * *= congeries, heap, stack, wadge, pile, stash, slew.Ex. To be sure, it still has its congeries of mills and factories, its grimy huddle of frame dwellings and congested tenements, its stark, jagged skyline, but its old face is gradually changing.Ex. The raw material of white paper was undyed linen -- or in very early days hempen -- rags, which the paper-maker bought in bulk, sorted and washed, and then put by in a damp heap for four or five days to rot.Ex. Examination reveals positions on the cards where the light passes through all the cards in a stack.Ex. By meeting authors cold print takes on a human voice; wadges of paper covered with words turn into treasure troves full of interest.Ex. However, it would be a time consuming task for the student or researcher to sit down with piles of periodicals, frantically scanning contents lists to try to trace articles on his chosen topic.Ex. It tells the story of a young detective who stumbles across a stash of jewel thieves hiding out in an abandoned house.Ex. His work includes 47 novels, and slews of essays, plays, reviews, poems, histories, and public speeches.----* ahorrar un montón = save + a bundle, save + a ton.* ahorrar un montón de dinero = save + a ton of money.* a montón = aplenty [a-plenty].* a montones = in droves, by the sackful.* costar un montón = cost + a bundle.* del montón = unimpressive, a dime a dozen.* desde hace un montón de tiempo = for yonks.* gastarse un montón de dinero = lash out (on), go to + town on.* hace un montón de tiempo = yonks.* montones = oodles, scores.* montones de = mountain(s) of, scores of, lashings of.* un montón = like crazy, like mad.* un montón de = a pile of, a stack of, a bundle of, a truckload of, a sackful of, a raft of.* un montón de dinero = a huge amount of money.* valer un montón = cost + a bundle.* * *a) ( pila) pile(ser) del montón — (fam)
b) (fam) ( gran cantidad)me duele un montón — it hurts like hell (colloq)
me gusta un montón — I'm crazy about her/it (colloq)
* * *= congeries, heap, stack, wadge, pile, stash, slew.Ex: To be sure, it still has its congeries of mills and factories, its grimy huddle of frame dwellings and congested tenements, its stark, jagged skyline, but its old face is gradually changing.
Ex: The raw material of white paper was undyed linen -- or in very early days hempen -- rags, which the paper-maker bought in bulk, sorted and washed, and then put by in a damp heap for four or five days to rot.Ex: Examination reveals positions on the cards where the light passes through all the cards in a stack.Ex: By meeting authors cold print takes on a human voice; wadges of paper covered with words turn into treasure troves full of interest.Ex: However, it would be a time consuming task for the student or researcher to sit down with piles of periodicals, frantically scanning contents lists to try to trace articles on his chosen topic.Ex: It tells the story of a young detective who stumbles across a stash of jewel thieves hiding out in an abandoned house.Ex: His work includes 47 novels, and slews of essays, plays, reviews, poems, histories, and public speeches.* ahorrar un montón = save + a bundle, save + a ton.* ahorrar un montón de dinero = save + a ton of money.* a montón = aplenty [a-plenty].* a montones = in droves, by the sackful.* costar un montón = cost + a bundle.* del montón = unimpressive, a dime a dozen.* desde hace un montón de tiempo = for yonks.* gastarse un montón de dinero = lash out (on), go to + town on.* hace un montón de tiempo = yonks.* montones = oodles, scores.* montones de = mountain(s) of, scores of, lashings of.* un montón = like crazy, like mad.* un montón de = a pile of, a stack of, a bundle of, a truckload of, a sackful of, a raft of.* un montón de dinero = a huge amount of money.* valer un montón = cost + a bundle.* * *1 (pila) pileestá en ese montón de libros it's in that pile o stack of booksroba una carta del montón take a card from the pileel jardinero hacía montones con la hierba cortada the gardener was piling up the cut grassun montón de basura a trash heapes un escritor de los del montón he's not an outstanding o exceptional writer, he's rather a run-of-the-mill writeres una chica del montón she's (just) an ordinary girl2 ( fam)me duele un montón it hurts like hell ( colloq)me gusta un montón I'm crazy about her/it ( colloq)tiene discos a montones she's got heaps o stacks of records ( colloq)la gente los compra a montones people buy them by the barrelful o cartload* * *
montón sustantivo masculino
◊ del montón (fam) ordinary, averageb) (fam) ( gran cantidad):◊ un montón de gente loads of people (colloq);
me gusta un montón I like her/him/it a lot
montón sustantivo masculino
1 (pila, taco) heap, pile: haz un montón con ellas, make a pile of them
2 (gran cantidad) me duele un montón, it hurts a lot
un montón de, a load of, lots of
♦ Locuciones: familiar del montón, nothing special, ordinary
' montón' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
alrededor
- buena
- bueno
- cargamento
- desparejada
- desparejado
- montaña
- pila
- potingue
- bola
- ropa
- tambache
English:
accumulation
- busywork
- dozen
- drift
- freebie
- heap
- host
- lash out
- load
- mass
- mound
- neat
- ordinary
- penny
- pile
- potted
- pump
- scrapheap
- snowdrift
- squash
- stack
- lot
- middle
- pack
- wad
- wood
* * *montón nm1. [pila] heap, pile;roba dos cartas del montón take two cards from the pile;Famdel montón ordinary, run-of-the-millme gusta un montón I'm mad about him;me duele un montón it hurts like mad;pregúntale a él que sabe un montón de astronomía ask him, he knows loads about astronomy;a montones by the bucketload;tiene dinero a montones she's got loads of money, she's loaded;en verano vienen turistas a montones in summer the place is crawling with tourists* * *m pile, heap;ser del montón fig be average, not stand out;montones de fam piles of fam, loads of fam ;tiene coches a montones she has loads of cars;había gente a montones there were loads of people;me gusta un montón fam I’m crazy about him/her fam* * *1) : heap, pileun montón de preguntas: a ton of questionsmontones de gente: loads of people* * *montón n1. (pila) pile2. (cantidad) lots -
56 Stapel
m; -s, -1. pile; hoher, ordentlicher: stack; EDV batch; zu einem Stapel schichten pile up, make a pile of; ein Stapel Bücher / Holz a pile ( oder stack) of books / wood; ein Stapel Wäsche a pile of laundry2. NAUT. stocks Pl.; auf Stapel legen NAUT. lay down; vom Stapel laufen be launched; vom Stapel lassen launch; umg., fig. (äußern) come out with, trot out; (Angriff, Kampagne) launch; (Witz) crack; (Rede) make3. TECH. (Faserlänge) staple* * *der Stapelpile; stack; batch* * *Sta|pel ['ʃtaːpl]m -s, -1) (= geschichteter Haufen, fig: = Vorrat) stack, pile2) (COMM) (= Stapelplatz) store, depot; (= Handelsplatz) trading centre (Brit) or center (US), emporium3) (NAUT = Schiffsstapel) stocks plauf Stápel legen — to lay down
auf Stápel liegen — to be on the stocks
vom Stápel laufen — to be launched
vom Stápel lassen — to launch; (fig) to come out with (inf)
4) (von Wolle, Baumwolle) staple* * *der1) (the wooden framework upon which a ship is supported when being built, repaired etc.) stocks2) (a large, usually neatly shaped, pile eg of hay, straw, wood etc: a haystack.) stack* * *Sta·pel<-s, ->[ˈʃta:pl̩]metw vom \Stapel lassen to launch sthvom \Stapel laufen to be launched, to take the water form4.Flüche vom \Stapel lassen to rain down curses, to railVerwünschungen gegen jdn/etw vom \Stapel lassen to launch into a tirade against sb/stheinen Witz vom \Stapel lassen to crack a joke* * *der; Stapels, Stapel1) pileein Stapel Holz — a pile or stack of wood
2) (Schiffbau) stocks pl.vom Stapel lassen — launch < ship>
* * *1. pile; hoher, ordentlicher: stack; IT batch;zu einem Stapel schichten pile up, make a pile of;ein Stapel Bücher/Holz a pile ( oder stack) of books/wood;ein Stapel Wäsche a pile of laundry2. SCHIFF stocks pl;auf Stapel legen SCHIFF lay down;vom Stapel laufen be launched;vom Stapel lassen launch; umg, fig (äußern) come out with, trot out; (Angriff, Kampagne) launch; (Witz) crack; (Rede) make* * *der; Stapels, Stapel1) pileein Stapel Holz — a pile or stack of wood
2) (Schiffbau) stocks pl.vom Stapel lassen — launch < ship>
* * *- m.batch n.(§ pl.: batches)pack n.stack n. -
57 acumular
v.to accumulate.le gusta acumular recuerdos de sus viajes she likes collecting souvenirs of her tripsMaría acumula sus cosas viejas Mary accumulates her old stuff.María acumula tiquetes Mary accumulates=collects tickets.* * *1 to accumulate, pile up, build up2 (gente) to gather* * *verbto accumulate, amass, gather* * *1.VT [+ posesiones] to accumulate; [+ datos] to amass, gather2.See:* * *1.verbo transitivo <riquezas/poder> to accumulate; < experiencia> to gain2.* * *= accumulate, cumulate, heap, amass, pile, build up, mount, hoard, stockpile, stash, rack up, pile up, store up, cache, tot up, tote up.Ex. Bureaux can be useful for proving trials, and the deferment of commitments until a suitable size of data base has been accumulated in the computer system.Ex. Publish changes as they are accepted, in a periodical publication, cumulating these in a new edition of all or parts of the schedules, as suitable.Ex. It is true that assignments were being heaped upon him with immense rapidity, but he would be able to sort them out and contrive solutions.Ex. Many libraries amass a considerable amount of community literature, some of which is kept on permanent display.Ex. The first thing I did was pile them one on another and then sit on them while I looked at my other presents.Ex. A small committee of librarians, whenever they could spare time from their existing jobs and in their own time, began to build up a card file of information on available resources in the city.Ex. Finally, the scores of amendments, which had been issued to change rules or clarify their meaning, had mounted to the point where catalogers copies of the AACR were seriously out-of-date, if they were not bulging with tip-ins.Ex. What one might call 'fetishistic bibliomania' is a disease -- and few serious book-readers, let alone librarians, are free from a squirrel-like proclivity to hoard books.Ex. This type of dairies are generally interested in stockpiling annual ryegrass as a source of high-quality winter forage.Ex. When I went to the little boys/girls room to relieve myself I was suprised to see the amount of loo rolls stashed in the corner.Ex. How many honorary doctorates has the Judge racked up since then?.Ex. As the bills piled up and the little money she had dried up, friends and neighbors began to worry that she didn't have a prayer.Ex. Large volumes of water can be stored up for irrigation by erecting an earthen or masonry dam across the lower part of the vally of a river or stream.Ex. Previous studies in which squirrels were provisioned with an abundant supply of food found a reduction in the rate of caching.Ex. Babies cry for an average of five hours a day for the first three months and tot up 51 days in their first year, according to survey.Ex. When you tote up the carbon emissions caused by clearing land to grow corn, fertilizing it and transporting it, corn ethanol leaves twice the carbon footprint as gasoline.----* acumular atrasos = build up + backlogs.* acumular demasiado estock = overstock.* acumular experiencia = garner + experience.* acumular polvo = gather + dust, collect + dust.* acumular problemas = build up + problems.* acumular reservas = stockpile.* acumularse = accrue.* * *1.verbo transitivo <riquezas/poder> to accumulate; < experiencia> to gain2.* * *= accumulate, cumulate, heap, amass, pile, build up, mount, hoard, stockpile, stash, rack up, pile up, store up, cache, tot up, tote up.Ex: Bureaux can be useful for proving trials, and the deferment of commitments until a suitable size of data base has been accumulated in the computer system.
Ex: Publish changes as they are accepted, in a periodical publication, cumulating these in a new edition of all or parts of the schedules, as suitable.Ex: It is true that assignments were being heaped upon him with immense rapidity, but he would be able to sort them out and contrive solutions.Ex: Many libraries amass a considerable amount of community literature, some of which is kept on permanent display.Ex: The first thing I did was pile them one on another and then sit on them while I looked at my other presents.Ex: A small committee of librarians, whenever they could spare time from their existing jobs and in their own time, began to build up a card file of information on available resources in the city.Ex: Finally, the scores of amendments, which had been issued to change rules or clarify their meaning, had mounted to the point where catalogers copies of the AACR were seriously out-of-date, if they were not bulging with tip-ins.Ex: What one might call 'fetishistic bibliomania' is a disease -- and few serious book-readers, let alone librarians, are free from a squirrel-like proclivity to hoard books.Ex: This type of dairies are generally interested in stockpiling annual ryegrass as a source of high-quality winter forage.Ex: When I went to the little boys/girls room to relieve myself I was suprised to see the amount of loo rolls stashed in the corner.Ex: How many honorary doctorates has the Judge racked up since then?.Ex: As the bills piled up and the little money she had dried up, friends and neighbors began to worry that she didn't have a prayer.Ex: Large volumes of water can be stored up for irrigation by erecting an earthen or masonry dam across the lower part of the vally of a river or stream.Ex: Previous studies in which squirrels were provisioned with an abundant supply of food found a reduction in the rate of caching.Ex: Babies cry for an average of five hours a day for the first three months and tot up 51 days in their first year, according to survey.Ex: When you tote up the carbon emissions caused by clearing land to grow corn, fertilizing it and transporting it, corn ethanol leaves twice the carbon footprint as gasoline.* acumular atrasos = build up + backlogs.* acumular demasiado estock = overstock.* acumular experiencia = garner + experience.* acumular polvo = gather + dust, collect + dust.* acumular problemas = build up + problems.* acumular reservas = stockpile.* acumularse = accrue.* * *acumular [A1 ]vt‹riquezas/poder› to accumulate, amass; ‹experiencia› to gainto accumulatese acumula mucho polvo aquí a lot of dust accumulates o gathers herelos intereses se van acumulando the interest is accumulating o ( frml) accruing, the interest is piling up ( colloq)el trabajo se iba acumulando work was piling o mounting up* * *
acumular ( conjugate acumular) verbo transitivo ‹riquezas/poder› to accumulate;
‹ experiencia› to gain
acumularse verbo pronominal [ trabajo] to pile up, mount up;
[ intereses] to accumulate;
[ deudas] to mount up;
[ polvo] to accumulate
acumular verbo transitivo to accumulate
' acumular' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
perecedera
- perecedero
English:
accumulate
- amass
- build up
- collect
- gather
- hoard
- pile up
- run up
- stockpile
- store
- store up
- accrue
- build
* * *♦ vtto accumulate;le gusta acumular recuerdos de sus viajes she likes collecting souvenirs of her trips;el tren fue acumulando retrasos en las diferentes paradas the train got further and further delayed at every stop* * *v/t accumulate* * *acumular vt: to accumulate, to amass* * *acumular vb to accumulate -
58 stos
m (G stosu) 1. (rzeczy jedna na drugiej) stack, pile- stos papierów/książek a stack of papers/books- ułożyć talerze/cegły w stos to stack up plates/bricks- poukładaj książki w stosy put the books into piles2. (sterta drewna do spalenia) log pile- stos pogrzebowy a funeral pyre3. sgt Hist. (kara śmierci) stake- spalenie na stosie the burning at the stake, auto-da-fé- spłonąć na stosie to be burnt at the stake- pójść na stos to go to the stake4. Górn. crib, cribwork 5. Leśn. pile a. stack of logs- □ stos atomowy Fiz. atomic pile- stos pacierzowy przest. backbone* * *(śmieci, ubrań) heap, pile; (talerzy, książek) stack; ( ofiarny) pyre* * *mi1. (= sterta) pile; (= kupa) heap; (poukładany, równy) stack; stos atomowy fiz. atomic pile, nuclear reactor; stos pacierzowy anat., przest. vertebral l. spinal column.2. ( do spalenia) pile; (zwł. ofiarny l. pogrzebowy) pyre; stos pogrzebowy funeral pyre; rzad. balefire.3. ( rodzaj kary) the stake; spalić kogoś na stosie burn sb at the stake; skazać na stos sentence sb to the stake; zginąć na stosie perish at the stake.4. górn. crib, cribwork.5. komp. stack.6. leśn. stack of logs.The New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > stos
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59 apilar
v.1 to pile up.Ricardo apila libros Richard piles up books.2 to amass, to hoard.Ella apila dinero She amasses money.3 to crowd.* * *1 to pile up, heap up1 to pile up, heap up* * *verbto heap up, pile up* * *1.VT to pile up, heap up2.See:* * *1.verbo transitivo to pile up, put... into a pile2.apilarse v pron to pile up* * *= stack, pile, stash, pile up, stack + Nombre + up.Ex. Cards are filed in drawers, approximately 1000 cards per drawer, which when stacked together may form a catalogue cabinet.Ex. The first thing I did was pile them one on another and then sit on them while I looked at my other presents.Ex. When I went to the little boys/girls room to relieve myself I was suprised to see the amount of loo rolls stashed in the corner.Ex. As the bills piled up and the little money she had dried up, friends and neighbors began to worry that she didn't have a prayer.Ex. These heavy duty frosted plastic bins can be set side by side or stacked up in those tighter spaces.----* apilarse = clump together.* * *1.verbo transitivo to pile up, put... into a pile2.apilarse v pron to pile up* * *= stack, pile, stash, pile up, stack + Nombre + up.Ex: Cards are filed in drawers, approximately 1000 cards per drawer, which when stacked together may form a catalogue cabinet.
Ex: The first thing I did was pile them one on another and then sit on them while I looked at my other presents.Ex: When I went to the little boys/girls room to relieve myself I was suprised to see the amount of loo rolls stashed in the corner.Ex: As the bills piled up and the little money she had dried up, friends and neighbors began to worry that she didn't have a prayer.Ex: These heavy duty frosted plastic bins can be set side by side or stacked up in those tighter spaces.* apilarse = clump together.* * *apilar [A1 ]vtto pile up, put … into a pile■ apilarseto pile up* * *
apilar ( conjugate apilar) verbo transitivo
to pile up, put … into a pile
apilar verbo transitivo to pile up, put into a pile
' apilar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
amontonar
English:
heap
- pile
- pile up
- stack
* * *♦ vtto pile up* * *v/t pile up* * *apilar vtamontonar: to heap up, to pile up* * *apilar vb to pile up -
60 stapeln
I v/t stack, pile upII v/refl pile up; das Geschirr / die Wäsche stapelt sich the dishes are / washing is piling ( oder piled) up* * *sta|peln ['ʃtaːpln]1. vtto stack (AUCH COMPUT); (= lagern) to store2. vrto pile up* * *(to arrange in a large, usually neat, pile: Stack the books up against the wall.) stack* * *sta·peln[ˈʃta:pl̩n]I. vtHolz \stapeln to stack [up sep] woodII. vr* * *1. 2.reflexives Verb pile up; (gestapelt sein) be piled up* * *A. v/t stack, pile upB. v/r pile up;das Geschirr/die Wäsche stapelt sich the dishes are/washing is piling ( oder piled) up* * *1. 2.reflexives Verb pile up; (gestapelt sein) be piled up* * *(Computer) v.to batch v. v.to pile v.to stack v.
См. также в других словарях:
pile — pile1 S2 [paıl] n ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(arrangement of things)¦ 2¦(large amount)¦ 3 a pile of something 4 the bottom of the pile 5 the top of the pile 6¦(house)¦ 7¦(material)¦ 8¦(post)¦ 9 make a/your pile 10 piles … Dictionary of contemporary English
pile — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun ADJECTIVE ▪ big, enormous, great, huge, large, massive ▪ little, small ▪ … Collocations dictionary
pile — pile1 [ paıl ] noun ** ▸ 1 things put on things ▸ 2 large amount of something ▸ 3 surface of cloth/carpet ▸ 4 piling ▸ 5 hemorrhoids ▸ 6 very large old building ▸ + PHRASES 1. ) count a number of things put on top of each other: She sorted her… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
pile — I UK [paɪl] / US noun Word forms pile : singular pile plural piles ** 1) a) [countable] a number of things put on top of each other She sorted her clothes into tidy piles. pile of: a pile of books and papers b) a lot of things that have been put… … English dictionary
pile*/ — [paɪl] noun I 1) [C] a number of things that are put on top of each other in an untidy way Rubbish lay in piles in the street.[/ex] a pile of books and papers[/ex] 2) [C] informal a large amount of something By the time he was 40, he d made piles … Dictionary for writing and speaking English
pile — 1 noun 1 LARGE AMOUNT/MASS (C) a) a tidy collection of several things of the same kind placed on top of each other; stack 1 (1): We put the newspapers in piles on the floor. | The record I want is at the bottom of the pile. (+ of): a pile of… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
pile — [[t]pa͟ɪl[/t]] ♦♦♦ piles, piling, piled 1) N COUNT: usu N of n A pile of things is a mass of them that is high in the middle and has sloping sides. ...a pile of sand. ...a little pile of crumbs... The leaves had been swept into huge piles. Syn … English dictionary
pile — 01. I have a [pile] of homework to do this weekend. 02. My children never wash their clothes; they just leave a [pile] of dirty laundry on the floor in their bedrooms. 03. If you find any rocks in the garden, just [pile] them over there by the… … Grammatical examples in English
pile up — verb 1. collect or gather (Freq. 4) Journals are accumulating in my office The work keeps piling up • Syn: ↑accumulate, ↑cumulate, ↑conglomerate, ↑gather, ↑amass … Useful english dictionary
Voltaic pile — A copper zinc voltaic pile. A voltaic pile on disp … Wikipedia
Zamboni pile — The Zamboni pile (also referred to as a Duluc Dry Pile ) is an early electric battery, invented by Giuseppe Zamboni in 1812.A Zamboni pile is an electrostatic battery and is constructed from discs of silver foil, zinc foil, and paper.… … Wikipedia