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21 shadow
['ʃædəu] 1. noun1) ((a patch of) shade on the ground etc caused by an object blocking the light: We are in the shadow of that building.) ίσκιος,σκιά2) ((in plural with the) darkness or partial darkness caused by lack of (direct) light: The child was afraid that wild animals were lurking in the shadows at the corner of his bedroom.) σκοτάδια3) (a dark patch or area: You look tired - there are shadows under your eyes.) μαύρος κύκλος4) (a very slight amount: There's not a shadow of doubt that he stole the money.) ίχνος2. verb1) (to hide or darken with shadow: A broad hat shadowed her face.) σκιάζω2) (to follow closely, especially as a detective, spy etc: We shadowed him for a week.) παρακολουθώ•- shadowy- shadowiness
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22 sheet
[ʃi:t]1) (a broad piece of cloth eg for a bed: She put clean sheets on all the beds.) σεντόνι2) (a large, thin, usually flat, piece: a sheet of paper/glass.) φύλλο χαρτί• -
23 sheet-lightning
noun (the kind of lightning which appears in broad flashes.) διάχυτες αστραπές -
24 shield
[ʃi:ld] 1. noun1) (a broad piece of metal, wood etc carried as a protection against weapons.) ασπίδα2) (something or someone that protects: A thick steel plate acted as a heat shield.) προστατευτικό κάλυμμα,ασπίδα3) (a trophy shaped like a shield won in a sporting competition etc: My son has won the archery shield.) αθλητικό τρόπαιο2. verb1) (to protect: The goggles shielded the motorcyclist's eyes from dust.) προστατεύω,προφυλάσσω2) (to prevent from being seen clearly: That group of trees shields the house from the road.) καλύπτω,κρύβω -
25 shoulder-blade
noun (the broad flat bone of the back of the shoulder.) ωμοπλάτη -
26 slice
1. noun1) (a thin broad piece (of something): How many slices of meat would you like?) φέτα2) (a part or share: Who got the largest slice of the profits?) μερίδιο2. verb1) (to cut into slices: He sliced the sausage/cucumber.) κόβω σε φέτες2) (to cut (as) with a sharp blade or knife: The blade slipped and sliced off the tip of his forefinger.) κόβω3) (in golf etc, to hit (a ball) in such a way that it curves away to the right (or in the case of a left-handed player, to the left).) χτυπώ λοξά (στο γκολφ)•- sliced- slicer -
27 slick
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28 spade
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29 spatula
['spætjulə, ]( American[) - u-](a kind of tool with a broad blunt blade: Spread the icing on the cake with a spatula.) σπάτουλα -
30 stripe
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31 tack
[tæk] 1. noun1) (a short nail with a broad flat head: a carpet-tack.) πινέζα, (πλατυκέφαλο) καρφάκι2) (in sewing, a large, temporary stitch used to hold material together while it is being sewn together properly.) τρύπωμα3) (in sailing, a movement diagonally against the wind: We sailed on an easterly tack.) διαδρομή διαγώνια στον άνεμο, τάκος4) (a direction or course: After they moved, their lives took a different tack.) δρόμος, κατεύθυνση2. verb1) ((with down, on etc) to fasten (with tacks): I tacked the carpet down; She tacked the material together.) στερεώνω με πινέζες: τρυπώνω, προχειροράβω2) ((of sailing-boats) to move diagonally (backwards and forwards) against the wind: The boat tacked into harbour.) διαδρομώ -
32 waterlily
plural - waterlilies; noun (a water plant with broad flat floating leaves.) νούφαρο -
33 Acre
subs.Many broad acres shall I leave you: πολυπλέθρους δὲ σοὶ γύας λείψω (Eur., Alc. 687).Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Acre
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34 Daylight
subs.He indulged in dissipation in broad daylight: P. ἐκώμαζε μεθʼ ἡμέραν (Lys. 142).Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Daylight
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35 Expansive
Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Expansive
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36 Great
adj.P. and V. μέγας.So great: P. and V. τοσοῦτος, τοσόσδε, P. τηλικοῦτος, τηλικόσδε, V. τόσος (rare P.).Abundant: P. and V. πολύς, ἄφθονος.Long: P. and V. μακρός.Broad: P. and V. εὐρύς.Important: P. ἀξιόλογος. διάφορος, P. and V. μέγιστος.Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Great
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37 Large
adj.P. and V. μέγας.Abundant: P. and V. πολύς, ἄφθονος.Long: P. and V. μακρός.Broad: P. and V. εὐρύς.So large: P. and V. τοσοῦτος, τοσόσδε, P. τηλικοῦτος, τηλικόσδε, V. τόσος (rare P.).Indirect: P. and V. ὅσος, ὅποσος.Range at large: P. ἄφετος νέμεσθαι (Plat., Rep. 498C).Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Large
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38 Smile
v. intrans.Ar. and P. μειδιᾶν, P. ὑπογελᾶν (Plat.).Laugh: P. and V. γελᾶν.Smile at: P. and V. γελᾶν ἐπί (dat.); see laugh at.met., when fortune smiles: V. ὅταν δʼ ὁ δαίμων εὐροῇ (Æsch., Pers. 601).Smile upon, help forward: P. and V. σπεύδειν, ἐπισπεύδειν.Be friendly to: P. and V. εὐνοεῖν (dat.).——————subs.Laugh: P. and V. γέλως, ὁ, V. γέλασμα, τό.With a broad smile on his face: P. πάνυ μειδιάσας τῷ προσώπῳ (Plat., Euthy. 275E).met., favour: P. and V. εὔνοια, ἡ, εὐμένεια, ἡ, V. πρευμένεια, ἡ.Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Smile
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39 Stalwart
Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Stalwart
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40 Wide
adj.Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Wide
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См. также в других словарях:
Broad — (br[add]d), a. [Compar. {Broader} (br[add]d [ e]r); superl. {Broadest}.] [OE. brod, brad, AS. br[=a]d; akin to OS. br[=e]d, D. breed, G. breit, Icel. brei[eth]r, Sw. & Dan. bred, Goth. braids. Cf. {Breadth}.] 1. Wide; extend in breadth, or from… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Broad — may refer to:* Broad (British coin), English gold coin minted under the commonwealth with a bust of Oliver Cromwell on the obverse * Broad church, Latitudinarian churchmanship in the Church of England * Broad Front Progressive Encounter New… … Wikipedia
broad´ly — broad «brd», adjective, adverb, noun. –adj. 1. large across; wide: »Many cars can go on that broad new highway. SYNONYM(S): See syn. under wide. (Cf. ↑wide) 2. having wide range; … Useful english dictionary
broad — [brôd] adj. [ME brod < OE brad; akin to Ger breit] 1. of large extent from side to side; wide 2. having great extent or expanse; spacious [broad prairies] 3. extending all about; clear; open; full [broad daylight] 4. easy to understand; not… … English World dictionary
broad — adj Broad, wide, deep are comparable chiefly when they refer to horizontal extent. Broad and wide apply to surfaces or areas as measured from side to side {a picture two feet wide} and deep (see also DEEP) to those as measured from front to back… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
Broad — ist der Nachname von mehreren Personen: C. D. Broad (1887–1971), englischer Philosoph Chris Broad (* 1957), englischer Cricketspieler Eli Broad, Kunstmäzen Neil Broad (* 1966), britischer Tennisspieler Pery Broad (1921–1994), SS Unterscharführer… … Deutsch Wikipedia
broad — broad; broad·cast·er; broad·en; broad·ish; broad·ly; broad·moor; broad·ness; broad·way·ite; broad·band; broad·scale; … English syllables
broad — I adjective ample, amplitudinous, amplus, blanket, collective, comprehensive, covering all cases, deep, diffuse, encyclopedic, expansive, extended, extending, extensive, far flung, far reaching, far spread, full, general, generalized, generic,… … Law dictionary
broad — [adj1] wide physically ample, capacious, deep, expansive, extended, extensive, full, generous, immense, large, latitudinous, outspread, outstretched, roomy, spacious, splay, squat, thick, vast, voluminous, widespread; concepts 773,796 Ant. narrow … New thesaurus
Broad — Broad, n. 1. The broad part of anything; as, the broad of an oar. [1913 Webster] 2. The spread of a river into a sheet of water; a flooded fen. [Local, Eng.] Southey. [1913 Webster] 3. A lathe tool for turning down the insides and bottoms of… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
broad — ► ADJECTIVE 1) having a distance larger than usual from side to side; wide. 2) of a specified distance wide. 3) large in area or scope. 4) without detail; general. 5) (of a hint) clear and unambiguous. 6) (of a regional accent) very noticeable… … English terms dictionary