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1 imbecile
['imbəsi:l, ]( American[) -sl]1) (a stupid person; a fool.) bebec2) (a person of very low intelligence who cannot look after himself.) slaboumnež•* * *[ímbisail]1.adjective ( imbecilely adverb)medicine imbecilen, slaboumen; figuratively bebast;2.nounslaboumnež, bebec -
2 ass
[æs]1) (a donkey.) osel2) (a stupid person.) bedak* * *[æs]nounosel; figuratively tepec, bedak, norecto make an ass of s.o. — norčevati se iz kogato make an ass of o.s. — osmešiti se, neumno se vestisell your ass! — pusti neumnosti! -
3 blockhead
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4 donkey
['doŋki]1) (a domesticated animal with long ears related to the horse but smaller.) osel2) (a stupid person: Don't be such a donkey!) osel•- donkey's years/ages* * *[dʌŋki]nounzoology osel; figuratively bedakcolloquially to ride the black donkey — biti trmastthe donkey means one thing, the driver another — mnenja so različna -
5 fat-head
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6 jackass
['‹ækæs]1) (a male ass.) osel2) (a stupid person: the silly jackass!) osel•* * *[džaekæs]nounosel; figuratively butec, osel -
7 booby
['bu:bi]plural - boobies; noun1) (a stupid person.)2) ((slang) a woman's breast.)•- booby trap
- booby-trap -
8 oaf
[əuf](a stupid or clumsy person: That stupid oaf is always knocking things over.) tepec- oafish* * *[óuf]nounbutec, teleban, osel; podtaknjen otrok, podtaknjenec -
9 general
['‹enərəl] 1. adjective1) (of, involving etc all, most or very many people, things etc: The general feeling is that he is stupid; His general knowledge is good although he is not good at mathematics.) splošen2) (covering a large number of cases: a general rule.) splošen3) (without details: I'll just give you a general idea of the plan.) splošen4) ((as part of an official title) chief: the Postmaster General.) glaven2. noun(in the British army, (a person of) the rank next below field marshal: General Smith.) general- generalise
- generalization
- generalisation
- generally
- General Certificate of Education
- general election
- general practitioner
- general store
- as a general rule
- in general
- the general public* * *I [džénərəl]nounmilitary general; figuratively vojskovodja, strateg; American colloquially dekle za vse; archaic občinstvo; večina; plural archaic splošna načelaII [džénərəl]adjectivesplošen, obči, navaden; skupen; glaven; military višje stopnje od polkovnikageneral delivery — izročitev pošiljk na pošti brez dostave, poste restantegeneral reader — človek ki prebere vse, kar mu pride pod rokeBritish English general dealer — trgovec z mešanim blagomnautical general trader — tramperas a general rule — praviloma, na splošno, rednomilitary general service — splošna vojna obveznostpostmaster general British English minister za pošte -
10 sucker
1) ((slang) a person who is easily fooled or is stupid enough to do something: Who is the sucker who bought your car?) bedak2) (a person or thing that sucks: Are these insects bloodsuckers?) krvoses, pijavka3) (an organ on an animal, eg an octopus, by which it sticks to objects.) prisesek4) (a curved pad or disc (of rubber etc) that can be pressed on to a surface and stick there.) prisesek5) (a side shoot coming from the root of a plant.) stranski poganjek* * *[sʌkə]1.noundojenček; odojek; American slang figuratively oseba, ki se da izkoriščati, naivnež, bedak, neizkušen mlad novinec, zelenec, mlečnozobec; botany mladika, poganjek, stranski poganjek iz korenine; zoology prisesek, sesalka; technical vakuum ploščica; sesalna cev; obsolete izsiljevalec, parazitto play s.o. for a sucker — opehariti, prevarati koga;2.transitive verbodstraniti poganjke, mladike (z rastline); intransitive verb pognati mladike, poganjke -
11 sympathy
['simpəði]1) (a feeling of pity or sorrow for a person in trouble: When her husband died, she received many letters of sympathy.) sočustvovanje2) (the state or feeling of being in agreement with, or of being able to understand, the attitude or feelings of another person: I have no sympathy with such a stupid attitude; Are you in sympathy with the strikers?) naklonjenost•- sympathetically
- sympathize
- sympathise* * *[símpəmi]nounsimpatija, simpatiziranje, naklonjenost ( for do, za) sočustvovanje, solidarnost, razumevanje, ujemanje, soglasje; sočutje (for, with za, z); delovanje ali učinkovanje enih organov na drugeto offer one's sympathies to s.o. — izraziti komu svoje sožalje, kondolirati -
12 bumpkin
(a clumsy or stupid country person: a country bumpkin.) nerodnež* * *[bʌm(p)kin]nounnerodnež, teleban -
13 come
1. past tense - came; verb1) (to move etc towards the person speaking or writing, or towards the place being referred to by him: Come here!; Are you coming to the dance?; John has come to see me; Have any letters come for me?) priti2) (to become near or close to something in time or space: Christmas is coming soon.) približevati se3) (to happen or be situated: The letter `d' comes between `c' and è' in the alphabet.) priti, stati4) ((often with to) to happen (by accident): How did you come to break your leg?) priti (do česa)5) (to arrive at (a certain state etc): What are things coming to? We have come to an agreement.) priti do6) ((with to) (of numbers, prices etc) to amount (to): The total comes to 51.) znašati2. interjection(expressing disapproval, drawing attention etc: Come, come! That was very rude of you!) daj, daj!- comer- coming
- comeback
- comedown
- come about
- come across
- come along
- come by
- come down
- come into one's own
- come off
- come on
- come out
- come round
- come to
- come to light
- come upon
- come up with
- come what may
- to come* * *I [kʌm]intransitive verb (to, into; out of, from; within) priti, prihajati, dospeti; prikazati, približati se; izvirati; postati; zgoditi, pripetiti se; znašati; delati seto come and go — sem in tja hoditi; prikazovati se in izginjatipast participle od comeslang to come a cropper — pasti; utrpeti škodoslang how comes? — kako to, čemu?to come to the point — jasno se izraziti; skušati pridobitito come short — zamuditi; ne imeti uspeha, pogoretito come to terms — dogovoriti, zediniti se; sprijazniti se, popustitito come — bodoč, naslednjicome what may — naj se zgodi, kar hočeto come to o.s. — zavedeti sefirst come, first served — kdor prej pride, prej meljecolloquially he's as stupid as they come — neumen je, kar se dacome now! — daj že!come! — no!II [kʌm]1.nounprihod;2.interjectionbeži beži!; glej glej! -
14 dunce
(a person who is slow at learning or stupid: I was an absolute dunce at school.) slab učenec* * *[dʌns]nountopoglavec, butec, omejenec -
15 honest
['onist] 1. adjective1) ((of people or their behaviour, statements etc) truthful; not cheating, stealing etc: My secretary is absolutely honest; Give me an honest opinion.) odkrit, pošten2) ((of a person's appearance) suggesting that he is honest: an honest face.) odkrit3) ((of wealth etc) not gained by cheating, stealing etc: to earn an honest living.) pošten•- honestly2. interjection(used to express mild anger etc: Honestly! That was a stupid thing to do!) Veš kaj!- honesty* * *[ɔnist]adjective ( honestly adverb)pošten, odkrit, odkritosrčen; nepokvarjen, pravi, pristen; pošteno zaslužen; humorously vrl, pošten; archaic neomadeževan, nedolžen (ženska)to be quite honest about it — po pravici povedati; da povem po praviciAmerican slang & humorously honest Injun — častna besedacolloquially honestly! — kaj res! (začudenje); zares!, častna beseda! -
16 insult
1. verb(to treat (a person) rudely or contemptuously: He insulted her by telling her she was not only ugly but stupid too.) žaliti2. noun((a) comment or action that insults: She took it as an insult that he did not shake hands with her.) žalitev* * *I [ínsʌlt]nounžalitev (to za koga), sramotenje, psovanjeto offer an insult to s.o. — užaliti kogaII [insʌlt]transitive verbužaliti, žaliti, sramotiti, psovati -
17 clueless
adjective ((of a person) stupid: He's quite clueless about art.) neveden -
18 face-saving
adjective (of something which helps a person not to look stupid or not to appear to be giving in: He agreed to everything we asked and as a face-saving exercise we offered to consult him occasionally.) ki ohrani ugled
См. также в других словарях:
stupid person — noun a person who is not very bright The economy, stupid! • Syn: ↑stupid, ↑stupe, ↑dullard, ↑dolt, ↑pudding head, ↑pudden head, ↑poor fish, ↑pillock … Useful english dictionary
stupid — adj Stupid, slow, dull, dense, crass, dumb are comparable when they mean conspicuously lacking in intelligence or power to absorb ideas or impressions or exhibiting such a lack. Stupid can apply to a sluggish slow witted lack of intelligence,… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
stupid — [sto͞o′pid, styo͞o′pid] adj. [L stupidus < stupere, to be stunned or amazed < IE * steup , to strike: see STEEP1] 1. in a state of stupor; dazed; stunned; stupefied 2. lacking normal intelligence or understanding; slow witted; dull 3.… … English World dictionary
stupid — I. adjective Etymology: Middle French stupide, from Latin stupidus, from stupēre to be numb, be astonished more at type Date: 1541 1. a. slow of mind ; obtuse b. given to unintelligent decisions or acts ; acting in an unintelligent or careless… … New Collegiate Dictionary
stupid — stupidly, adv. stupidness, n. /stooh pid, styooh /, adj., stupider, stupidest, n. adj. 1. lacking ordinary quickness and keenness of mind; dull. 2. characterized by or proceeding from mental dullness; foolish; senseless: a stupid question. 3.… … Universalium
stupid — 1. adjective /ˈst(j)uːpɪd/ a) Lacking in intelligence or exhibiting the quality of having been done by someone lacking in intelligence. Many people think that dummies are stupid and not very clever. b) To the point of stupor. Neurobiology bores… … Wiktionary
stupid — stu•pid [[t]ˈstu pɪd, ˈstyu [/t]] adj. er, est, n. 1) lacking ordinary quickness and keenness of mind; dull 2) characterized by or proceeding from mental dullness; foolish; senseless: a stupid question[/ex] 3) tediously dull, esp. due to lack of… … From formal English to slang
stupid — adj. (stupider, stupidest) adj. & n. adj. 1 unintelligent, slow witted, foolish (a stupid fellow). 2 typical of stupid persons (put it in a stupid place). 3 uninteresting or boring. 4 in a state of stupor or lethargy. 5 obtuse; lacking in… … Useful english dictionary
stupid — /ˈstjupəd / (say styoohpuhd) adjective 1. lacking ordinary activity and keenness of mind; dull. 2. characterised by, indicative of, or proceeding from mental dullness: a stupid act. 3. tediously dull or uninteresting: a stupid book. 4. in a state …
person — per|son [ pɜrsn ] noun count *** 1. ) an individual human, usually an adult. The plural is people, but in formal or official language the form persons is used: Tickets cost $50 per person. She s the type of person who is always happy to help out … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
person */*/*/ — UK [ˈpɜː(r)s(ə)n] / US [ˈpɜrs(ə)n] noun [countable] Word forms person : singular person plural people Get it right: person: The usual plural form of person is people (not persons), and this is used in all ordinary contexts: Wrong: Children… … English dictionary