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attic+fr

  • 1 a avea gărgăuni (la cap)

    to have maggots in the brain / rats in the attic / bats in the belfry / a bee in the bonnet.

    Română-Engleză dicționar expresii > a avea gărgăuni (la cap)

  • 2 a-i lipsi o doagă

    to have a screw / a tile / a slate loose / off
    to be wrong in the upper story
    to be a / one button short
    to be off one's base / chump / rocker
    to have a crack
    to have bats in one's / in belfry / rats in the attic
    to want two pence in the shilling
    to be not (quite) all there
    to be a bit mad
    to have taken leave of / to be out of one's senses
    to have lost a button
    not to have one's button on
    sl. to have got apartments to let
    sl. amer. to have a cylinder missing.

    Română-Engleză dicționar expresii > a-i lipsi o doagă

  • 3 a-i sări o doagă

    to be queer in one's attic
    to have a tile loose
    to be one button short.

    Română-Engleză dicționar expresii > a-i sări o doagă

См. также в других словарях:

  • Attic — At tic, a. [L. Atticus, Gr. ?.] Of or pertaining to Attica, in Greece, or to Athens, its principal city; marked by such qualities as were characteristic of the Athenians; classical; refined. [1913 Webster] {Attic base} (Arch.), a peculiar form of …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • attic — top story under the roof of a house, 1855, shortened from attic storey (1724). The term Attic order in classical architecture meant a small, square decorative column of the type often used in a low story above a building s main facade, a feature… …   Etymology dictionary

  • Attic — At tic, n. [In sense (a) from F. attique, orig. meaning Attic. See {Attic}, a.] 1. (Arch.) (a) A low story above the main order or orders of a facade, in the classical styles; a term introduced in the 17th century. Hence: (b) A room or rooms… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • attic — [at′ik] n. [Fr attique, an attic < Attique, ATTIC, used as an architectural term] 1. a low wall or story above the cornice of a classical facade 2. the room or space just below the roof of a house; garret …   English World dictionary

  • attic — ► NOUN ▪ a space or room inside the roof of a building. ORIGIN originally a term in classical architecture: from Latin Atticus Attic …   English terms dictionary

  • Attic — 1590s, pertaining to Attica, from L. Atticus, from Gk. Attikos Athenian, of Attica, the region around Athens (see ATTICA (Cf. Attica)). Attested from 1560s as an architectural term for a type of column base …   Etymology dictionary

  • attic — [n] space under the roof of a house garret, loft, sky parlor*, top floor; concepts 440,448 …   New thesaurus

  • Attic — ► ADJECTIVE ▪ relating to Attica in Greece, or to ancient Athens …   English terms dictionary

  • Attic — [at′ik] adj. [L Atticus < Gr Attikos] 1. of Attica 2. of or characteristic of Athens, esp. ancient Athens, or its people, language, or culture; Athenian 3. classical; simple, restrained, etc.: said of a style n. the variety of Greek spoken in… …   English World dictionary

  • Attic — Die Attic Entertainment Software GmbH (engl. attic „Dachboden“) war ein deutscher Computer Spieleentwickler und Publisher der im September 1990 von Hans Jürgen Brändle, Jochen Hamma und Guido Henkel (zuvor Dragonware) in Albstadt gegründet wurde …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • attic — [18] In classical architecture, an Attic order was a pilaster, or square column (the naḿe comes from Attica, a region of ancient Greece of which Athens was the capital). This type of column was often used in a relatively low storey placed above… …   The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins

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