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1 bloque de hormigón
(n.) = breeze block, cinder block, concrete blockEx. This wall has been bodged together using breeze blocks at some point.Ex. Cinder blocks do suck up paint quickly but mine are light because I only used the left over paint from the walls.Ex. The market for concrete blocks is growing at a rapid rate, especially in the areas where bricks are not easily available.* * *(n.) = breeze block, cinder block, concrete blockEx: This wall has been bodged together using breeze blocks at some point.
Ex: Cinder blocks do suck up paint quickly but mine are light because I only used the left over paint from the walls.Ex: The market for concrete blocks is growing at a rapid rate, especially in the areas where bricks are not easily available. -
2 hacer una chapuza
to botch up* * *(v.) = botch, bodgeEx. But the old printers were men who got on each other's nerves and lost their tempers; who had moments of disastrous clumsiness; and who improvised and botched without hesitation whenever their tools or materials did not precisely meet the needs of the moment.Ex. This wall has been bodged together using breeze blocks at some point.* * *(v.) = botch, bodgeEx: But the old printers were men who got on each other's nerves and lost their tempers; who had moments of disastrous clumsiness; and who improvised and botched without hesitation whenever their tools or materials did not precisely meet the needs of the moment.
Ex: This wall has been bodged together using breeze blocks at some point.
См. также в других словарях:
Bodged — Bodge Bodge, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Bodged}.] To botch; to mend clumsily; to patch. [Obs. or Dial.] [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
bodged — v. mend, patch; botch … English contemporary dictionary
bodged — … Useful english dictionary
bodge — UK [bɒdʒ] / US [bɑdʒ] or bodge up UK / US verb [transitive] Word forms bodge : present tense I/you/we/they bodge he/she/it bodges present participle bodging past tense bodged past participle bodged British informal to do something badly,… … English dictionary
bodge up — bodge UK [bɒdʒ] / US [bɑdʒ] or bodge up UK / US verb [transitive] Word forms bodge : present tense I/you/we/they bodge he/she/it bodges present participle bodging past tense bodged past participle bodged British informal to do something badly,… … English dictionary
Bodge — 1. do something incorrectly but so as to make it appear right; to do something or make something in a sloppy manner: I bodged together a few examples ; 2. ruin; wreck: Now you ve really bodged it ; 3. (in the 1950s and 60s) a young man belonging… … Dictionary of Australian slang
bodge — Australian Slang 1. do something incorrectly but so as to make it appear right; to do something or make something in a sloppy manner: I bodged together a few examples ; 2. ruin; wreck: Now you ve really bodged it ; 3. (in the 1950s and 60s) a… … English dialects glossary
Bodge — Bodge, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Bodged}.] To botch; to mend clumsily; to patch. [Obs. or Dial.] [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Kludge — Part of the Miles Glacier Bridge, with a kludgy temporary fix to make the bridge usable after earthquake damage. This article is about the workaround. For the American music magazine, see Kludge (magazine). A kludge (or kluge) is a workaround, a… … Wikipedia
List of British words not widely used in the United States — Differences between American and British English American English … Wikipedia
List of episodes in Gravity's Rainbow — The following is a list of episodes in Thomas Pynchon s Gravity s Rainbow.Part 1: Beyond the ZeroEpisode 1Set in London at the home of Pirate Prentice on Monday, December 18, 1944, the episode begins with Pirate dreaming about the evacuation of… … Wikipedia