Перевод: с английского на немецкий

с немецкого на английский

a+thin+slice+of+bread

  • 1 slice

    1. noun
    1) (cut portion) Scheibe, die; (of apple, melon, peach, apricot, cake, pie) Stück, das

    a slice of lifeein Ausschnitt aus dem Leben; see also academic.ru/10177/cake">cake 1. 1)

    2) (share) Teil, der; (allotted part of profits, money) Anteil, der
    3) (utensil) [Braten]wender, der
    2. transitive verb
    1) in Scheiben schneiden; in Stücke schneiden [Bohnen, Apfel, Pfirsich, Kuchen usw.]
    2) (Golf) slicen; (Tennis) unterschneiden; slicen
    3. intransitive verb

    slice through — durchschneiden; durchpflügen [Wellen, Meer]

    Phrasal Verbs:
    * * *
    1. noun
    1) (a thin broad piece (of something): How many slices of meat would you like?) die Scheibe
    2) (a part or share: Who got the largest slice of the profits?) das Stück
    2. verb
    1) (to cut into slices: He sliced the sausage/cucumber.) in Scheiben schneiden
    2) (to cut (as) with a sharp blade or knife: The blade slipped and sliced off the tip of his forefinger.) schneiden
    3) (in golf etc, to hit (a ball) in such a way that it curves away to the right (or in the case of a left-handed player, to the left).) einen Rechts-, Linksdrall haben
    - sliced
    - slicer
    * * *
    [slaɪs]
    I. n
    1. of bread, ham, meat Scheibe f
    \slice of cake/pizza ein Stück nt Kuchen/Pizza
    2. (portion) Anteil m
    \slice of a market Marktanteil m
    3. (tool) Pfannenwender m, SCHWEIZ a. Bratenwender m
    a cake \slice ein Tortenheber m
    a fish \slice eine Fischgabel
    4. (in golf, cricket) verschlagener Ball
    5. (in tennis) Slice m
    6.
    a \slice of the cake ein Stück vom großen Kuchen
    a \slice of life Milieuschilderung f
    II. vt
    1. (cut in slices)
    to \slice sth etw in Scheiben schneiden
    to \slice cake/pizza Kuchen/Pizza in Stücke schneiden
    2. ( fig: reduce by)
    he \sliced three seconds off the previous record er verbesserte den früheren Rekord um drei Sekunden
    they've \sliced two hundred thousand pounds off our budget sie haben unser Budget um zweihunderttausend Pfund gekürzt
    to \slice the ball (in golf, cricket) den Ball verschlagen; (in tennis) den Ball anschneiden
    4.
    any way [or AM no matter how] you \slice it wie man es auch dreht und wendet
    III. vi
    1. (food)
    to \slice easily [or well] sich akk gut schneiden lassen
    to \slice through sth etw durchschneiden
    the prow of the yacht \sliced through the waves ( fig) der Bug der Jacht pflügte durch die Wellen
    he \sliced through the Liverpool defence and scored er durchbrach die Verteidigung der Liverpooler Mannschaft und schoss ein Tor
    * * *
    [slaɪs]
    1. n
    1) (lit) (of cake, lemon, meat etc) Scheibe f; (of bread) Scheibe f, Schnitte f
    2) (fig: portion of population, profits) Teil m; (of land) Stück nt

    a slice of life in contemporary Parisein Ausschnitt m aus dem Leben im heutigen Paris

    a slice of luck —

    that was a slice of luck!das war ein glücklicher Zufall

    3) (esp Brit: food server) Wender m
    2. vt
    1) (= cut) durchschneiden; bread, meat etc (in Scheiben) schneiden

    to slice sth in two — etw durchschneiden, etw in zwei Teile schneiden

    2) ball (an)schneiden
    3. vi
    1) (= cut) schneiden
    2) (SPORT) schneiden
    * * *
    slice [slaıs]
    A s
    1. Scheibe f, Schnitte f, Stück n:
    cut sth into slices etwas in Scheiben schneiden;
    two-slice toaster Zweischeibentoaster m; cake A 1, pie2
    2. fig Stück n (Land etc), (An)Teil m:
    a slice of the profits ein Anteil am Gewinn;
    a slice of luck eine Portion Glück
    3. fig (of) Ausschnitt m (aus), Querschnitt m (durch):
    a slice of life eine lebensechte oder -wahre Darstellung
    4. ( besonders Fisch)Heber m, Schaufel f
    5. TECH Spachtel m/f, Spatel m/f
    6. Golf, Tennis: Slice m
    B v/t
    1. auch slice up in Scheiben schneiden, aufschneiden:
    slice off ein Stück abschneiden ( from von);
    any way you slice it US umg wie man es auch betrachtet; bread Bes Redew
    2. (fig auch die Luft, die Wellen) durchschneiden
    3. slice one’s finger sich in den Finger schneiden
    4. fig aufteilen
    5. besonders TECH spachteln
    6. Golf, Tennis: den Ball slicen
    C v/i
    1. Scheiben, Stücke etc schneiden
    2. slice into one’s finger sich in den Finger schneiden
    3. Golf, Tennis: slicen, einen Slice schlagen oder spielen
    * * *
    1. noun
    1) (cut portion) Scheibe, die; (of apple, melon, peach, apricot, cake, pie) Stück, das

    a slice of life — ein Ausschnitt aus dem Leben; see also cake 1. 1)

    2) (share) Teil, der; (allotted part of profits, money) Anteil, der
    3) (utensil) [Braten]wender, der
    2. transitive verb
    1) in Scheiben schneiden; in Stücke schneiden [Bohnen, Apfel, Pfirsich, Kuchen usw.]
    2) (Golf) slicen; (Tennis) unterschneiden; slicen
    3. intransitive verb

    slice through — durchschneiden; durchpflügen [Wellen, Meer]

    Phrasal Verbs:
    * * *
    (computers) n.
    Prozessorelement n. n.
    Brotscheibe f.
    Scheibe -n (Elektr.) f.
    Schnitte -n f.
    Stück -e n. v.
    schneiden v.
    (§ p.,pp.: schnitt, geschnitten)

    English-german dictionary > slice

См. также в других словарях:

  • Slice — Slice, n. [OE. slice, sclice, OF. esclice, from esclicier, esclichier, to break to pieces, of German origin; cf. OHG. sl[=i]zan to split, slit, tear, G. schleissen to slit. See {Slit}, v. t.] 1. A thin, broad piece cut off; as, a slice of bacon;… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Slice bar — Slice Slice, n. [OE. slice, sclice, OF. esclice, from esclicier, esclichier, to break to pieces, of German origin; cf. OHG. sl[=i]zan to split, slit, tear, G. schleissen to slit. See {Slit}, v. t.] 1. A thin, broad piece cut off; as, a slice of… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Slice — may refer to:Food*A portion of bread, cake, or meat that is cut flat and thin, cf. sliced bread *Slice (soft drink), a line of fruit flavored drinks *Vanilla slice, a dessert *Mr. Slice, the mascot of Papa John s pizza restaurantports*Backspin,… …   Wikipedia

  • slice — I n. 1) to cut off a slice of 2) a thick; thin slice II v. 1) (C) slice a piece of meat for me; or: slice me a piece of meat 2) (d; intr.) to slice into (to slice into the bread) 3) (d; intr.) to slice through (the icebreaker sliced through the… …   Combinatory dictionary

  • slice — slice1 [slaıs] n [Date: 1400 1500; : Old French; Origin: esclice thin piece broken off , from esclicier to splinter ] 1.) a thin flat piece of food cut from a larger piece slice of ▪ a slice of bread ▪ pizza slices thin/thick slice …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • slice — [[t]sla͟ɪs[/t]] ♦♦♦ slices, slicing, sliced 1) N COUNT: usu with supp, oft N of n A slice of bread, meat, fruit, or other food is a thin piece that has been cut from a larger piece. Try to eat at least four slices of bread a day. ...water… …   English dictionary

  • slice — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun 1 flat piece of food ADJECTIVE ▪ big, generous, great, huge, large, thick ▪ little, small, thin …   Collocations dictionary

  • slice — 1 noun 1 (C) a flat piece of bread, meat etc cut from a larger piece: a slice of bread and butter | Cut the pork into thin slices. 2 (C) a part or share of something good: Everyone wanted a slice of the profits. 3 (C) a kitchen tool used for… …   Longman dictionary of contemporary English

  • slice — /slaɪs / (say sluys) noun 1. a thin, broad, flat piece cut from something: a slice of bread. 2. a part; portion. 3. any of various implements with a thin, broad blade or part, as for turning food in a frying pan, for serving fish at table, for… …  

  • slice — sliceable, adj. slicingly, adv. /sluys/, n., v., sliced, slicing. n. 1. a thin, flat piece cut from something: a slice of bread. 2. a part, portion, or share: a slice of land. 3. any of various implements with a thin, broad blade or part, as for… …   Universalium

  • thin — 1 /TIn/ comparative thinner superlative thickest adjective 1 NOT THICK having a very small distance or a smaller distance than usual between two sides or two flat surfaces: a thin nylon rope | She s only wearing a thin summer jacket. | two thin… …   Longman dictionary of contemporary English

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