-
1 bucket along
-
2 bucket
1. nounEimer, der2. intransitive verbkick the bucket — (fig. sl.) ins Gras beißen (salopp)
* * *(a container for holding water, milk etc: We carried water in buckets to the burning house.) der Eimer* * *buck·et[ˈbʌkɪt]I. nchampagne \bucket Sektkübel ma \bucket of water ein Eimer m Wasser▪ \buckets pl Unmengen plin \buckets eimerweisethe rain came down in \buckets es goss wie aus Kübeln4.▪ to \bucket down wie aus Eimern gießen2. (career) rasento \bucket [or go \bucketing] along the road die Straße entlangrasento \bucket [or go \bucketing] down the hill den Hügel hinunterrasen* * *['bʌkɪt]1. n(also of dredger, grain elevator) Eimer m; (of excavator, water wheel) Schaufel fa bucket of water — ein Eimer m Wasser
it's coming down in buckets ( US inf ) — es gießt or schüttet wie aus or mit Kübeln (inf)
See:→ kick, drop2. vi (Brit inf)it's bucketing!, the rain is bucketing (down)! — es gießt or schüttet wie aus or mit Kübeln (inf)
* * *bucket [ˈbʌkıt]A s1. Eimer m, Kübel m:weep buckets umg wie ein Schlosshund heulen2. TECHa) Schaufel f (eines Schaufelrades)b) Förderkübel m, Eimer m (eines Baggers)c) Flügelrad n3. → academic.ru/9381/bucketful">bucketfulB v/t1. schöpfen:bucket out ausschöpfenC v/i1. it’s bucketing (down), the rain’s bucketing (down) Br umg es gießt (wie) mit oder (wie) aus oder in Kübeln* * *1. nounEimer, dera bucket of water — ein Eimer [voll] Wasser
2. intransitive verbkick the bucket — (fig. sl.) ins Gras beißen (salopp)
the rain or it is bucketing down — es gießt wie aus Kübeln (ugs.)
* * *n.Schaufel -n f. -
3 bucket
buck·et [ʼbʌkɪt] nchampagne \bucket Sektkübel m;a \bucket of water ein Eimer m Wasserin \buckets eimerweise;the rain came down in \buckets es goss wie aus KübelnPHRASES:to \bucket down wie aus Eimern gießen2) ( career) rasen;
См. также в других словарях:
bucket along — verb move fast He rushed down the hall to receive his guests The cars raced down the street • Syn: ↑rush, ↑hotfoot, ↑hasten, ↑hie, ↑speed, ↑race, ↑pelt a … Useful english dictionary
bucket brigade — n. a line of persons passing buckets of water along in trying to put out a fire … English World dictionary
Bucket Brigade Device — A Bucket Brigade is an analogue delay line, developed in 1969 by F. Sangster and K. Teer of the Philips Research Labs. It consists of a series of capacitances C0 to Cn. The stored analogue signal is moved along the line of capacitors one step at… … Wikipedia
Bucket-brigade device — A bucket brigade or bucket brigade device (BBD) is a discrete time analogue delay line,[1] developed in 1969 by F. Sangster and K. Teer of the Philips Research Labs. It consists of a series of capacitance sections C0 to Cn. The stored analogue… … Wikipedia
bucket — I. n 1. a pejorative or humorous term for a car or boat 2. British the mouth. In this sense the word is typically heard in working class speech in such phrases as shut your bucket! or stick this in your bucket! , recorded in the mid 1990s. 3.… … Contemporary slang
bucket — n. & v. n. 1 a a roughly cylindrical open container, esp. of metal, with a handle, used for carrying, drawing, or holding water etc. b the amount contained in this (need three buckets to fill the bath). 2 (in pl.) large quantities of liquid, esp … Useful english dictionary
bucket shop — /ˈbʌkət ʃɒp/ (say bukuht shop) noun 1. a firm of share or commodity brokers whose business is speculative and conducted along questionable lines. 2. a business which offers services at a discount such as a travel agent which sells cheap airline… …
bucket brigade — noun a) A primitive firefighting technique, in which a long line of people pass buckets of water hand to hand from the nearest water source to the site of a fire, in an attempt to douse it. b) By extension, any process in which something is… … Wiktionary
bucket-handle fracture — a tear in the semilunar cartilage, along the middle portion, leaving a loop of cartilage lying in the intercondylar notch … Medical dictionary
bucket brigade — buck′et brigade n. a line of persons formed to extinguish a fire by passing along buckets of water • Etymology: 1910–15 … From formal English to slang
belt along — verb move fast He rushed down the hall to receive his guests The cars raced down the street • Syn: ↑rush, ↑hotfoot, ↑hasten, ↑hie, ↑speed, ↑race, ↑pelt a … Useful english dictionary