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built+up

  • 21 balcony

    ['bælkəni]
    plural - balconies; noun
    1) (a platform built out from the wall of a building: Many hotel rooms have balconies.) bal­con
    2) (in theatres etc, an upper floor: We sat in the balcony of the cinema; ( also adjective) balcony seats.) (la) balcon

    English-Romanian dictionary > balcony

  • 22 black box

    (a built-in machine for automatic recording of the details of a plane's flight: They found the black box two miles away from the wreckage of the crashed plane.) cutie neagră

    English-Romanian dictionary > black box

  • 23 bomber

    1) (an aeroplane built for bombing.) bombardier
    2) (a person who bombs: Bombers have caused many deaths in Northern Ireland.) persoană care pune bombe

    English-Romanian dictionary > bomber

  • 24 bonfire

    (a large fire in the open air, often built to celebrate something.) foc (în aer liber)

    English-Romanian dictionary > bonfire

  • 25 build up

    1) (to increase (the size or extent of): The traffic begins to build up around five o'clock.) a creşte
    2) (to strengthen gradually (a business, one's health, reputation etc): His father built up that grocery business from nothing.) a face/a rea­liza (treptat)

    English-Romanian dictionary > build up

  • 26 builder

    noun (a person who builds houses etc: The builder who built our house has gone bankrupt.) constructor

    English-Romanian dictionary > builder

  • 27 building

    1) (the art or business of putting up (houses etc) ( also adjective): a building contractor.) (de) construcţii
    2) (anything built: The new supermarket is a very ugly building.) clădire, imobil, construcţie

    English-Romanian dictionary > building

  • 28 bulwark

    ['bulwək]
    (a wall built as a defence, often made of earth.) meterez

    English-Romanian dictionary > bulwark

  • 29 buttress

    (a support built on to the outside of a wall.) contrafort

    English-Romanian dictionary > buttress

  • 30 campus

    ['kæmpəs]
    (college or university grounds: The new library was built in the centre of the campus.) campus

    English-Romanian dictionary > campus

  • 31 cenotaph

    (a monument to a person or people buried elsewhere, especially a monument built in memory of soldiers etc killed in war.) cenotaf, monument

    English-Romanian dictionary > cenotaph

  • 32 construction

    [-ʃən]
    1) ((a way of) constructing or putting together: The bridge is still under construction.) construcţie
    2) (something built: That construction won't last long.) construcţie

    English-Romanian dictionary > construction

  • 33 cradle

    ['kreidl] 1. noun
    1) (a child's bed especially one in which it can be rocked.) leagăn
    2) (a frame of similar shape, eg one under a ship that is being built or repaired.) cavalet
    2. verb
    (to hold or rock as if in a cradle: She cradled the child in her arms.) a legăna

    English-Romanian dictionary > cradle

  • 34 cutting

    1) (a piece of plant cut off and replanted to form another plant.) butaş
    2) (an article cut out from a newspaper etc: She collects cuttings about the Royal Family.) tăietură/ extras (dintr-un ziar)
    3) (a trench dug through a hillside etc, in which a railway, road etc is built.) tranşee

    English-Romanian dictionary > cutting

  • 35 dam

    [dæm] 1. noun
    1) (a bank or wall of earth, concrete etc to keep back water: A new dam was being built at the mouth of the valley.) baraj
    2) (the water kept back.) dig
    2. verb
    (to hold back by means of a dam: The river has been dammed up.) a în­digui

    English-Romanian dictionary > dam

  • 36 design

    1. verb
    (to invent and prepare a plan of (something) before it is built or made: A famous architect designed this building.) a pro­iecta
    2. noun
    1) (a sketch or plan produced before something is made: a design for a dress.) schiţă
    2) (style; the way in which something has been made or put together: It is very modern in design; I don't like the design of that building.) design
    3) (a pattern etc: The curtains have a flower design on them.) model
    4) (a plan formed in the mind; (an) intention: Our holidays coincided by design and not by accident.) intenţie
    - designing

    English-Romanian dictionary > design

  • 37 dike

    (an embankment built as a barrier against the sea etc.)

    English-Romanian dictionary > dike

  • 38 dyke

    (an embankment built as a barrier against the sea etc.)

    English-Romanian dictionary > dyke

  • 39 electronic

    [elək'tronik]
    1) (worked or produced by devices built or made according to the principles of electronics: an electronic calculator.) electronic
    2) (concerned or working with such machines: an electronic engineer.) electronist

    English-Romanian dictionary > electronic

  • 40 extension

    [-ʃən]
    1) (an added part: He built an extension to his house; a two-day extension to the holiday; He has telephone extensions (= telephones) in every bedroom.) anexă; prelungire
    2) ((a program by which) part of a university located somewhere else offers courses to people who are not fulltime students.) extindere
    3) (the process of extending.)
    4) (a telephone that operates on the same line as another: They have a phone in the living-room and an extension in the bedroom.)

    English-Romanian dictionary > extension

См. также в других словарях:

  • Built — Built, a. Formed; shaped; constructed; made; often used in composition and preceded by the word denoting the form; as, frigate built, clipper built, etc. [1913 Webster] Like the generality of Genoese countrywomen, strongly built. Landor. [1913… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • built-in — built′ in adj. 1) bui built so as to be an integral and permanent part of a larger construction: built in bookcases[/ex] 2) existing as a natural or characteristic part; inherent: a built in contempt for daydreamers[/ex] 3) bui a built in… …   From formal English to slang

  • Built — (b[i^]lt), n. Shape; build; form of structure; as, the built of a ship. [Obs.] Dryden. [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • built-up — adj a built up area has a lot of buildings and not many open spaces ▪ He was fined for speeding in a built up area …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • built-up — adjective a built up area has many buildings in it: This is the only built up area on 500 miles of coastline …   Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • built — pp. of BUILD (Cf. build). Meaning physically well developed is by 1940s (well built in reference to a woman is from 1871); Built in (adj.) is from 1898 …   Etymology dictionary

  • built-up — built′ up′ adj. 1) built by the fastening together of several parts or enlarged by the addition of layers: a shoe with a built up heel[/ex] 2) (of an area) filled in with houses • Etymology: 1820–30 …   From formal English to slang

  • built-in — UK US /ˌbɪltˈɪn/ adjective [before noun] (also inbuilt) ► included, made, or designed as part of something: »Most new laptops have built in Wi Fi …   Financial and business terms

  • built-in — adj forming a part of something that cannot be separated from it →↑inbuilt ▪ a built in microphone …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • built-in — adjective forming part of something, and not separate from it: a word processor with a built in spellchecker …   Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • built-in — [adj] included congenital, constitutional, deep seated, essential, implicit, inborn, inbred, in built, incorporated, indwelling, ingrained, inherent, innate, inseparable, integral, part and parcel*; concept 549 Ant. added, extra, not included …   New thesaurus

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