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41 adverbial
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42 advisable
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43 advisory
adjective (giving advice: an advisory leaflet; He acted in an advisory capacity.) posvetovalen* * *[ədváizəri]adjectiveposvetovalen, svetovalen -
44 aged
1) (['ei‹id] old: an aged man.) star, prileten2) ([ei‹d] of the age of: a child aged five.) star* * *[eidžd]1.adjectivestar, postarenan aged horse — nad šest let star konj;2.nounstarci, starke -
45 ageless
adjective (never growing old or never looking older: ageless beauty.) ki mu ni videti let* * *[éidžlis]adjectiveki ni star, ki se ne stara; večen -
46 age-old
adjective (done, known etc for a very long time: an age-old custom.) prastar* * *[éidžould]adjectivepradaven, zelo star -
47 aghast
(struck with horror: She was aghast at the mess.) zgrožen* * *[əgá:st]adjective (at nad) prestrašen, zastrašen, prepadel, osupelto stand aghast at — biti prepaden nad, biti ves iz sebe zaradi -
48 agile
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49 agitated
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50 agonizing
adjective (causing agony: an agonizing pain.) neznosen* * *[aegənaiziŋ]adjective ( agonizingly adverb)mučen; smrten -
51 agreeable
adjective (pleasant: She is a most agreeable person.) prijeten* * *[əgríəbl]adjective ( agreeably adverb)(to) sprejemljiv; prijeten, ustrezen, primeren, skladen; naklonjenfamiliarly I am agreeable — meni je prav -
52 agricultural
adjective poljedelski* * *[əgrikʌlčərəl]adjective ( agriculturally adverb)poljedelski, kmetijski, poljskiagricultural engineering, agricultural technology — agrotehnika -
53 aground
adjective, adverb((of ships) (stuck) on the bed of the sea etc in shallow water: Our boat ran aground.) nasedel* * *[əgráund]adverb & predicative adjectivena dnu, na tleh; na dno, na tla; nasedel; figuratively v stiski, v težavah, v zadregito run ( —ali go, strike) aground — nasesti; priti v zadrego -
54 aimless
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55 airless
1) ((of weather) still and windless: It was a hot, airless night.) zadušen2) ((of a room etc) stuffy and without fresh air.) zatohel* * *[ʌ/əlis]adjectivebrezzračen, brezvetern; zatohel -
56 airy
1) (with plenty of (fresh) air: an airy room.) zračen2) (light-hearted and not serious: an airy disregard for authority.) netakten* * *[ʌ/əri]adjective ( airily adverb)zračen; lahek; visok; vesel, živahen; puhel, površen -
57 alarming
adjective (disturbing or causing fear: alarming news.) vznemirljiv* * *[əlá:miŋ]adjective ( alarmingly adverb)vznemirljiv, razburljiv -
58 alcoholic
1) (of or containing alcohol: Is cider alcoholic?) alkoholen2) (caused by alcohol: an alcoholic stupor.) zaradi alkohola* * *[ælkəhɔlik]1.adjectivealkoholičen, alkoholen;2.nounalkoholik -
59 alive
1) (living and not dead: Queen Victoria was still alive in 1900.) živ2) (full of activity: The town was alive with policemen on the day of the march.) mrgoleč•- alive to* * *I [əláiv]adverbpri življenju(colloquially) look alive — pohiti!, pazi!II [əláiv]adjectiveživ, živahen; electrical pod napetostjo; veljaven; dovzeten; zavesten; produktivenare you alive to what is going on? — veste, kaj se dogaja?to be fully alive to s.th. — jasno se česa zavedatiman alive! — človek božji!there's no man alive who can... — nihče na svetu ne more... -
60 alkaline
См. также в других словарях:
adjective — 1. general. The term adjective was itself an adjective for a hundred years before it became used as a noun for one of the parts of speech. Joseph Priestley, in The Rudiments of English Grammar (1761), was perhaps the first English grammarian to… … Modern English usage
Adjective — Ad jec*tive, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Adjectived}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Adjectiving}.] To make an adjective of; to form or change into an adjective. [R.] [1913 Webster] Language has as much occasion to adjective the distinct signification of the verb,… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Adjective — Ad jec*tive ([a^]d j[e^]k*t[i^]v), a. [See {Adjective}, n.] [1913 Webster] 1. Added to a substantive as an attribute; of the nature of an adjunct; as, an adjective word or sentence. [1913 Webster] 2. Not standing by itself; dependent. [1913… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
adjective — late 14c., as an adjective, adjectival, in noun adjective, from O.Fr. adjectif (14c.), from L. adjectivum that is added to (the noun), neut. of adjectivus added, from pp. of adicere to throw or place (a thing) near, from ad to (see AD (Cf. ad ))… … Etymology dictionary
adjective — [aj′ik tiv] n. [ME & OFr adjectif < L adjectivus, that is added < adjectus, pp. of adjicere, to add to < ad , to + jacere, to throw: see JET1] any of a class of words used to modify a noun or other substantive, as by describing qualities … English World dictionary
Adjective — Ad jec*tive, n. [L. adjectivum (sc. nomen), neut. of adjectivus that is added, fr. adjicere: cf. F. adjectif. See {Adject}.] 1. (Gram.) A word used with a noun, or substantive, to express a quality of the thing named, or something attributed to… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
adjective — ► NOUN Grammar ▪ a word used to describe or modify a noun, such as sweet, red, or technical. DERIVATIVES adjectival adjective. ORIGIN Old French adjectif, from Latin adicere add … English terms dictionary
adjective — index procedural Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
adjective — [n] word that modifies a noun accessory, additional, adjunct, adnoun, attribute, attributive, dependent, descriptive, identifier, modifier, qualifier; concept 275 … New thesaurus
Adjective — Examples That s an interesting idea. (attributive) That idea is interesting. (predicative) Tell me something interesting. (postpositive) The good, the bad, and the ugly. (substantive) In grammar, an adjective is a describing word; the main… … Wikipedia
adjective — /ˈædʒəktɪv / (say ajuhktiv) noun 1. Grammar a. one of the major word classes in many languages, comprising words that typically modify a noun. b. such a word, as wise in a wise ruler, or in she is wise. –adjective 2. Grammar relating to an… …