Перевод: с английского на греческий

с греческого на английский

bit+(verb)

  • 1 bite

    1. past tense - bit; verb
    (to seize, grasp or tear (something) with the teeth or jaws: The dog bit his leg; He was bitten by a mosquito.) δαγκώνω
    2. noun
    1) (an act of biting or the piece or place bitten: a bite from the apple; a mosquito bite.) δαγκωματιά
    2) (the nibble of a fish on the end of one's line: I've been fishing for hours without a bite.) τσίμπημα δολώματος από ψάρι
    - bite the dust

    English-Greek dictionary > bite

  • 2 embitter

    [im'bitə]
    (to make bitter and resentful: embittered by poverty and failure.) πικραίνω

    English-Greek dictionary > embitter

  • 3 filter

    ['filtə] 1. noun
    1) (a strainer or other device through which liquid, gas, smoke etc can pass, but not solid material: A filter is used to make sure that the oil is clean and does not contain any dirt; ( also adjective) filter paper.) φίλτρο
    2) (a kind of screening plate used to change or correct certain colours: If you are taking photographs in sun and snow, you should use a blue filter.) φίλτρο
    2. verb
    1) ((of liquids) to (become) clean by passing through a filter: The rain-water filtered into a tank.) φιλτράρω,-ομαι
    2) (to come bit by bit or gradually: The news filtered out.) διαρρέω

    English-Greek dictionary > filter

  • 4 hook

    [huk] 1. noun
    1) (a small piece of metal shaped like a J fixed at the end of a fishing-line used for catching fish etc: a fish-hook.) αγκίστρι
    2) (a bent piece of metal etc used for hanging coats, cups etc on, or a smaller one sewn on to a garment, for fastening it: Hang your jacket on that hook behind the door; hooks and eyes.) γάντζος
    3) (in boxing, a kind of punch with the elbow bent: a left hook.) πλάγιο χτύπημα
    2. verb
    1) (to catch (a fish etc) with a hook: He hooked a large salmon.) πιάνω με αγκίστρι
    2) (to fasten or to be fastened by a hook or hooks: He hooked the ladder on (to the branch); This bit hooks on to that bit; Could you hook my dress up down the back?) στηρίζω,θηλυκώνω,κουμπώνω
    3) (in golf, to hit (the ball) far to the left of where it should be (or to the right if one is left-handed).) (στο γκολφ)χτυπώ σε λάθος κατεύθυνση
    - by hook or by crook
    - off the hook

    English-Greek dictionary > hook

  • 5 active

    ['æktiv]
    1) (energetic or lively; able to work etc: At seventy, he's no longer very active.) δραστήριος
    2) ((busily) involved: She is an active supporter of women's rights.) ενεργός
    3) (causing an effect or effects: Yeast is an active ingredient in bread-making.) δραστικός
    4) (in force: The rule is still active.) σε ισχύ
    5) ((of volcanoes) still likely to erupt.) ενεργός (ηφαίστειο)
    6) (of the form of a verb in which the subject performs the action of the verb: The dog bit the man.) ενεργητική φωνή
    - actively
    - activity

    English-Greek dictionary > active

  • 6 bare

    [beə] 1. adjective
    1) (uncovered or naked: bare skin; bare floors.) γυμνός
    2) (empty: bare shelves.) άδειος
    3) (of trees etc, without leaves.) αποψιλωμένος
    4) (worn thin: The carpet is a bit bare.) τριμμένος, φθαρμένος
    5) (basic; essential: the bare necessities of life.) στοιχειώδης
    2. verb
    (to uncover: The dog bared its teeth in anger.) (ξε)γυμνώνω, φανερώνω
    - bareness
    - bareback
    - barefaced
    - barefooted
    - barefoot
    - bareheaded

    English-Greek dictionary > bare

  • 7 champ

    [ æmp]
    ((especially of horses) to chew noisily.) μασουλώ

    English-Greek dictionary > champ

  • 8 dim

    [dim] 1. adjective
    1) (not bright or distinct: a dim light in the distance; a dim memory.) αμυδρός
    2) ((of a person) not intelligent: She's a bit dim!) κουτός
    2. verb
    (to make or become dim: Tears dimmed her eyes; He dimmed the lights in the theatre.)
    - dimness

    English-Greek dictionary > dim

  • 9 drag

    [dræɡ] 1. past tense, past participle - dragged; verb
    1) (to pull, especially by force or roughly: She was dragged screaming from her car.) τραβώ
    2) (to pull (something) slowly (usually because heavy): He dragged the heavy table across the floor.) σέρνω
    3) (to (cause to) move along the ground: His coat was so long it dragged on the ground at the back.) σέρνομαι
    4) (to search (the bed of a lake etc) by using a net or hook: Police are dragging the canal to try to find the body.) ερευνώ το βυθό
    5) (to be slow-moving and boring: The evening dragged a bit.) τραβώ σε μάκρος
    2. noun
    1) (something which slows something down: He felt that his lack of education was a drag on his progress.) κώλυμα
    2) (an act of drawing in smoke from a cigarette etc: He took a long drag at his cigarette.) ρουφηξιά
    3) (something or someone that is dull and boring: Washing-up is a drag.) αγγαρεία
    4) (a slang word for women's clothes when worn by men.) (αργκό) γυναικείο ντύσιμο από άνδρες, ντύσιμο τραβεστί

    English-Greek dictionary > drag

  • 10 gamble

    ['ɡæmbl] 1. verb
    (to risk losing money on the result of a horse-race etc.) παίζω τυχερά παιχνίδια / ποντάρω
    2. noun
    ((something which involves) a risk: The whole business was a bit of a gamble.) ρίσκο
    - gambling
    - take a gamble

    English-Greek dictionary > gamble

  • 11 grind

    1. past tense, past participle - ground; verb
    1) (to crush into powder or small pieces: This machine grinds coffee.) αλέθω
    2) (to rub together, usually producing an unpleasant noise: He grinds his teeth.) τρίζω
    3) (to rub into or against something else: He ground his heel into the earth.) τρίβω
    2. noun
    (boring hard work: Learning vocabulary is a bit of a grind.) άχαρη δουλειά
    - grinding
    - grindstone
    - grind down
    - grind up
    - keep someone's nose to the grindstone
    - keep one's nose to the grindstone

    English-Greek dictionary > grind

  • 12 gum

    I noun
    ((usually in plural) the firm flesh in which the teeth grow.) ούλο
    II 1. noun
    1) (a sticky juice got from some trees and plants.) κόμμι, γόμμα
    2) (a glue: We can stick these pictures into the book with gum.) κόλλα
    3) (a type of sweet: a fruit gum.) καραμέλα
    4) (chewing-gum: He chews gum when he is working.) μαστίχα, τσίχλα
    2. verb
    (to glue with gum: I'll gum this bit on to the other one.) κολλώ
    - gumminess

    English-Greek dictionary > gum

  • 13 hassle

    ['hæsl] 1. noun
    1) (trouble or fuss: It's such a hassle to get to work on time: Travelling with children is such a hassle.) μπελάς
    2) (a fight or argument: I got into a bit of a hassle with a couple of thugs.) καβγάς
    2. verb
    1) (to argue or fight: It seemed pointless to hassle over such a small matter.) καβγαδίζω
    2) (to annoy (a person): I don't like people hassling me.) ενοχλώ

    English-Greek dictionary > hassle

  • 14 jam

    [‹æm] I noun
    (a thick sticky substance made of fruit etc preserved by being boiled with sugar: raspberry jam; ( also adjective) a jam sandwich.) μαρμελάδα
    II 1. past tense, past participle - jammed; verb
    1) (to crowd full: The gateway was jammed with angry people.) συνωστίζω, στριμώχνω
    2) (to squeeze, press or wedge tightly or firmly: He jammed his foot in the doorway.) μαγκώνω, σφηνώνω
    3) (to stick and (cause to) be unable to move: The door / steering-wheel has jammed.) κολλώ, παθαίνω βλάβη
    4) ((of a radio station) to cause interference with (another radio station's broadcast) by sending out signals on a similar wavelength.) παρεμβάλλω παράσιτα σε
    2. noun
    1) (a crowding together of vehicles, people etc so that movement is difficult or impossible: traffic-jams.) κυκλοφοριακή συμφόρηση, μποτιλιάρισμα
    2) (a difficult situation: I'm in a bit of a jam - I haven't got enough money to pay for this meal.) δύσκολη θέση, μπλέξιμο

    English-Greek dictionary > jam

  • 15 labour

    ['leibə] 1. noun
    1) (hard work: The building of the cathedral involved considerable labour over two centuries; People engaged in manual labour are often badly paid.) σκληρή εργασία
    2) (workmen on a job: The firm is having difficulty hiring labour.) εργατικό δυναμικό, εργάτες
    3) ((in a pregnant woman etc) the process of childbirth: She was in labour for several hours before the baby was born.) τοκετός, πόνοι γέννας
    4) (used (with capital) as a name for the Socialist party in the United Kingdom.) το Εργατικό Κόμμα
    2. verb
    1) (to be employed to do hard and unskilled work: He spends the summer labouring on a building site.) εργάζομαι σκληρά, αγκομαχώ
    2) (to move or work etc slowly or with difficulty: They laboured through the deep undergrowth in the jungle; the car engine labours a bit on steep hills.) δυσκολεύομαι, πασχίζω
    - laboriously
    - laboriousness
    - labourer
    - labour court
    - labour dispute
    - labour-saving

    English-Greek dictionary > labour

  • 16 orbit

    ['o:bit] 1. noun
    (the path in which something moves around a planet, star etc, eg the path of the Earth round the Sun or of a spacecraft round the Earth: The spaceship is in orbit round the moon.) τροχιά
    2. verb
    (to go round in space: The spacecraft orbits the Earth every 24 hours.) κινούμαι σε τροχιά

    English-Greek dictionary > orbit

  • 17 rail

    [reil] 1. noun
    1) (a (usually horizontal) bar of metal, wood etc used in fences etc, or for hanging things on: Don't lean over the rail; a curtain-rail; a towel-rail.) κάγκελο, κιγκλίδωμα: βέργα, κρεμάστρα
    2) ((usually in plural) a long bar of steel which forms the track on which trains etc run.) σιδηροτροχιά, γραμμές/ράγες τρένου
    2. verb
    ((usually with in or off) to surround with a rail or rails: We'll rail that bit of ground off to stop people walking on it.) κλείνω με κιγκλίδωμα
    - railroad
    - railway
    - by rail

    English-Greek dictionary > rail

  • 18 rebel

    1. ['rebl] noun
    1) (a person who opposes or fights against people in authority, eg a government: The rebels killed many soldiers; ( also adjective) rebel troops.) επαναστάτης, αντάρτης
    2) (a person who does not accept the rules of normal behaviour etc: My son is a bit of a rebel.) επαναστάτης
    2. [rə'bel] verb
    (to fight (against people in authority): The people rebelled against the dictator; Teenagers often rebel against their parents' way of life.) επαναστατώ, εξεγείρομαι
    - rebellious
    - rebelliously
    - rebelliousness

    English-Greek dictionary > rebel

  • 19 scar

    1. noun
    (the mark that is left by a wound or sore: a scar on the arm where the dog bit him.) σημάδι,ουλή
    2. verb
    (to mark with a scar: He recovered from the accident but his face was badly scarred.) σημαδεύω

    English-Greek dictionary > scar

  • 20 wobble

    ['wobl] 1. verb
    (to rock unsteadily from side to side: The bicycle wobbled and the child fell off.) ταλαντεύομαι, κουνιέμαι, παίζω
    2. noun
    (a slight rocking, unsteady movement: This wheel has a bit of a wobble.) αστάθεια, κούνημα
    - wobbliness

    English-Greek dictionary > wobble

См. также в других словарях:

  • bit — noun (esp. BrE) 1 a bit small amount ADJECTIVE ▪ little, teensy (informal), wee (esp. BrE) ▪ He helped me a little bit in the afternoon. PHRASES ▪ …   Collocations dictionary

  • bit — I. /bɪt / (say bit) noun 1. the metal mouthpiece of a bridle, with the adjacent parts to which the reins are fastened. 2. anything that curbs or restrains. 3. Machinery the cutting or penetrating part of various tools: a. the cutting portion of… …  

  • bit´ter|ness — bit|ter1 «BIHT uhr», adjective, adverb, noun, verb. –adj. 1. having a sharp, harsh, unpleasant taste: »Brussels sprouts are often bitter. SYNONYM(S): acrid. 2. Figurative. causing pain or grief; hard to admit or bear: »a bitter defeat. Failure is …   Useful english dictionary

  • bit´ter|ly — bit|ter1 «BIHT uhr», adjective, adverb, noun, verb. –adj. 1. having a sharp, harsh, unpleasant taste: »Brussels sprouts are often bitter. SYNONYM(S): acrid. 2. Figurative. causing pain or grief; hard to admit or bear: »a bitter defeat. Failure is …   Useful english dictionary

  • bit|ter — bit|ter1 «BIHT uhr», adjective, adverb, noun, verb. –adj. 1. having a sharp, harsh, unpleasant taste: »Brussels sprouts are often bitter. SYNONYM(S): acrid. 2. Figurative. causing pain or grief; hard to admit or bear: »a bitter defeat. Failure is …   Useful english dictionary

  • bit|ten — «BIHT uhn», verb. a past participle of bite: »Finish the apple, now that you have bitten into it. Usage See bite for usage note. (Cf. ↑bite) …   Useful english dictionary

  • bit by a barn mouse — verb tipsy …   Wiktionary

  • bit — There are three distinct nouns bit in English, but the two most ancient ones are probably both related ultimately to the verb bite. Bit as in ‘drill bit’ [OE] originally meant simply ‘bite’ or ‘biting’. The Old English word, bite, came from… …   The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins

  • bit — There are three distinct nouns bit in English, but the two most ancient ones are probably both related ultimately to the verb bite. Bit as in ‘drill bit’ [OE] originally meant simply ‘bite’ or ‘biting’. The Old English word, bite, came from… …   Word origins

  • bit — bit1 W1S1 [bıt] adv, pron ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(only slightly)¦ 2¦(amount)¦ 3¦(quite a lot)¦ 4¦(time/distance)¦ 5 a bit of a something 6 not a bit/not one bit 7 every bit as important/bad/good etc 8 bit by bit 9 a/one bit at a time …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • bit — bit1 noun 1》 a small piece, quantity, or extent of something. 2》 informal a set of actions or ideas associated with a specific activity: she did her theatrical bit. 3》 informal a girl or young woman. 4》 N. Amer. informal a unit of 12 1/2 cents… …   English new terms dictionary

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