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1 пивная
1) General subject: ale-house, alehouse, bar, barrel shop, beer hall, beerhouse, boozer, brasserie, change house, dramshop, drinking house, drinking saloon, drinking-house, free house, gin palace, gin shop, gin-palace, gin-shop, house, porter-house, pot shop, pot-shop, pothouse, public house, saloon, tap, tap-room, taphouse, taproom, tippling house, dram-shop2) Colloquial: mug-house, pub (сокр. от public house), public3) American: beer parlour, doggery, gas-house, porterhouse4) Obsolete: red lattice5) History: tippling-house6) British English: hostelry8) Architecture: pot-house9) Scottish language: change-house10) Jargon: grog-mill, guzzery, guzzle shop, guzzlery, washer, barrel house, near., tiddly-wink11) Advertising: Tom and Jerry shop12) Makarov: beer-hall, drinking-saloon, tap-house13) Taboo: piss-factory -
2 попойка
1) General subject: a very convivial party, bean-feast, beano, bender, blinder, boose, booze, bouse, buster, carousal, carouse, compotation, conviviality, debauch, drunk, fuddle, guzzle, hellbender, jag, knees up, potation, punch, puncher, randan, razzle dazzle, razzle-dazzle, revelries, revelry, rouse, spree, toot, wet night, whoopee, binge, partying2) Colloquial: racket, stand the racket3) Obsolete: wassail4) British English: piss-up5) Australian slang: boozeroo6) Jargon: booze-up, heat, hurrah, knees-up, tear, twister, whiz, whizz, whooper-up(per), blow-out, hell-bender hellbender, whiz-bang7) Simple: beanfeast
См. также в других словарях:
boozeroo — /buzəˈru/ (say boohzuh rooh) noun NZ Colloquial 1. a drinking spree. 2. a public house …
boozeroo — … Useful english dictionary
booze — by 1768, to drink a lot (v.), variant of M.E. bouse (c.1300), from M.Du. busen to drink heavily, related to M.H.G. bus (intrans.) to swell, inflate, of unknown origin. The noun is recorded by 1821, perhaps 1714; reinforced by name of Philadelphia … Etymology dictionary
-eroo — Colloquial a suffix forming nouns referring to specified activities or actions, as in boozeroo, switcheroo. {originally US, from the 1930s; popularised by US newspaper columnist Walter Winchell; origin uncertain, possibly mimicking such words as… …