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1 bear with
fördra, tåla, ha tålamod* * *(to be patient with (someone): Bear with me for a minute, and you'll see what I mean.) ha tålamod med -
2 tough
adj. tuff, hårdhudad--------n. hård, rå, tuff* * *1. adjective1) (strong; not easily broken, worn out etc: Plastic is a tough material.) stark, seg, härdig2) ((of food etc) difficult to chew.) seg3) ((of people) strong; able to bear hardship, illness etc: She must be tough to have survived such a serious illness.) härdig, härdad, seg, tuff4) (rough and violent: It's a tough neighbourhood.) hårdför, tuff5) (difficult to deal with or overcome: a tough problem; The competition was really tough.) svår, besvärlig, hård2. noun(a rough, violent person; a bully.) hårding, råskinn- toughen
- tough luck
- get tough with someone
- get tough with -
3 pepper
n. peppar; paprika--------v. peppra; tillsätta peppar* * *['pepə] 1. noun1) (the dried, powdered berries of a certain plant, used for seasoning food: white/black pepper; This soup has too much pepper in it.) peppar2) (the plant bearing these berries: a pepper plant.) peppar[]3) (any of several red, yellow, or green, hollow seed-containing fruits used as food: red peppers stuffed with rice.) paprika4) (any of the plants which bear these.) paprika[]2. verb1) (to put pepper in or on (some food): You don't have to pepper the soup.) peppra2) ((with with) to throw, fire etc many, usually small, objects at (someone): He peppered them with bullets.) peppra []•- peppery- peppercorn
- pepper-mill
- peppermint -
4 cold
adj. kall--------n. kyla, köld; förkylning* * *[kəuld] 1. adjective1) (low in temperature: cold water; cold meat and salad.) kall2) (lower in temperature than is comfortable: I feel cold.) kall, frusen3) (unfriendly: His manner was cold.) kylig, kall2. noun1) (the state of being cold or of feeling the coldness of one's surroundings: She has gone to live in the South of France because she cannot bear the cold in Britain; He was blue with cold.) kyla, köld2) (an illness with running nose, coughing etc: He has a bad cold; She has caught a cold; You might catch cold.) förkylning•- coldly- coldness
- cold-blooded
- cold war
- get cold feet
- give someone the cold shoulder
- give the cold shoulder
- in cold blood
См. также в других словарях:
bear with someone — bear with (someone/something) to be patient with someone or something. Just bear with me while I finish downloading this file … New idioms dictionary
bear with something — bear with (someone/something) to be patient with someone or something. Just bear with me while I finish downloading this file … New idioms dictionary
bear with — (someone/something) to be patient with someone or something. Just bear with me while I finish downloading this file … New idioms dictionary
bear with — BE PATIENT WITH, show forbearance towards, make allowances for, tolerate, put up with, endure. → bear * * * phrasal : to be indulgent, patient, or forbearing with : endure bear with the old bore for a while longer * * * bear with To make… … Useful english dictionary
bear with sb/sth phrasal — verb (T) 1 bear with me spoken used to ask someone politely to wait while you find out information, finish what you are doing etc: Bear with me a minute, and I ll check if Mr Garrard s in. 2 to be patient or continue to do something difficult or… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
bear with — phrasal verb [transitive] Word forms bear with : present tense I/you/we/they bear with he/she/it bears with present participle bearing with past tense bore with past participle borne with spoken bear with me/us used as a polite way of asking… … English dictionary
bear with — PHRASAL VERB If you ask someone to bear with you, you are asking them to be patient. [V P n] If you ll bear with me, Frank, just let me try to explain … English dictionary
bear with a sore head — If someone is behaving like a bear with a sore head, they are very irritable and bad tempered. When his team lost the match, Brad was like a bear with a sore head … English Idioms & idiomatic expressions
ˈbear ˌwith sb — phrasal verb spoken used as a polite way of asking someone to be patient while you do something Bear with me – I won t be long.[/ex] … Dictionary for writing and speaking English
like a bear with a sore head — (UK) If someone s like a bear with a sore head, they complain a lot and are unhappy about something … The small dictionary of idiomes
like a bear with a sore head — (UK) If someone s like a bear with a sore head, they complain a lot and are unhappy about something. (Dorking School Dictionary) … English Idioms & idiomatic expressions