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1 habit
'hæbit1) (something which a person does usually or regularly: the habit of going for a walk before bed; an irritating habit of interrupting.) (sed)vane, tilbøyelighet2) (a tendency to do the same things that one has always done: I did it out of habit.) (sed)vane3) (clothes: a monk's habit.) habitt, ordensdrakt•- habitual- habitually
- from force of habit
- get someone into
- get into
- out of the habit ofdrakt--------vaneIsubst. \/ˈhæbɪt\/1) vane, tilbøyelighet, tendens, sedvane2) ( botanikk eller zoologi) (karakteristisk) voksemåte3) ordensdrakt, munkedrakt, nonnedrakt4) ( gammeldags) (kles)drakt, habitt5) ( hverdagslig) misbruk (av narkotika), rusmiddelavhengighet6) (gammeldags, også habit of body) kroppsbygning, konstitusjon, habitusbe in the habit of ha for vane å, pleieby habit av gammel vane, vanemessigcreature of habit vanemenneske, vanedyran entrenched habit en inngrodd vanefall into a habit eller get into a habit få noe for vane, legge seg til en vaneforce of habit se ➢ force, 1from (sheer) force of habit av gammel vaneget out of the habit of eller break oneself of the habit of venne seg av med å, sluttematter of habit vanesakIIverb \/ˈhæbɪt\/1) (i)kle seg2) ( gammeldags) bebo
См. также в других словарях:
sheer force — index main force Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
force — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun 1 physical strength, power or violence ADJECTIVE ▪ considerable, great, terrible, tremendous ▪ full, maximum ▪ brute … Collocations dictionary
sheer — 01. The rock climber was able to go up a [sheer] wall of rock using only the most basic equipment. 02. Drinking and driving is [sheer] stupidity, and it puts others needlessly at risk. 03. The woman was wearing a [sheer] black nightgown with… … Grammatical examples in English
force — force1 [ fɔrs ] noun *** ▸ 1 physical strength ▸ 2 group of police, etc. ▸ 3 influence ▸ 4 scientific effect ▸ 5 military ▸ + PHRASES 1. ) uncount physical strength or violence: They accused the police of using excessive force during the arrest.… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
force */*/*/ — I UK [fɔː(r)s] / US [fɔrs] noun Word forms force : singular force plural forces 1) a) [uncountable] physical strength, or violence They accused the police of using excessive force during the arrest. by force: The army took control of the region… … English dictionary
sheer power — index main force Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
Sheer draught — Draught Draught, n. [The same as draft, the spelling with gh indicating an older pronunciation. See {Draft}, n., {Draw}.] 1. The act of drawing or pulling; as: (a) The act of moving loads by drawing, as by beasts of burden, and the like. [1913… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
force — force1 W1S3 [fo:s US fo:rs] n ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(military)¦ 2¦(military action)¦ 3¦(violence)¦ 4¦(physical power)¦ 5¦(natural power)¦ 6¦(organized group)¦ 7¦(strong influence)¦ 8¦(powerful effect)¦ 9 join/combine forces (with somebody/something) … Dictionary of contemporary English
force — 1 noun 1 MILITARY a) (C) a group of people who have been trained to fight in a war: forces loyal to President Aquino | a highly efficient fighting force b) the forces the army, navy, and air force: Both her sons are in the forces. c) (U) military … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
Force — Recorded as Force, Fores, Forss, Farce and Forcer, this is an English medieval surname. It is however of French origins, probably being introduced into England after the Norman Invasion of 1066. It is occupational and describes a sheep shearer or … Surnames reference
sheer — adj. Sheer is used with these nouns: ↑abundance, ↑accident, ↑agony, ↑amazement, ↑annoyance, ↑arrogance, ↑beauty, ↑bliss, ↑boredom, ↑bravado, ↑breadth, ↑ … Collocations dictionary