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1 kontang-kanting
dangle. -
2 kontal-kantil
dangle, swing to and fro. 2 flap. -
3 menganting
dangle, sway. 2 swing. -
4 menguntai
dangle, hang down. 2 string s.t. -
5 menguntil
dangle, hang down. -
6 meruntuh
dangle, hang loosely. -
7 bersenggayut
swing o.s. while hanging from the arms, dangle. -
8 berumbai
fringed. 2 swing, dangle. -
9 gelanting
ber-gelantung hang down, dangle, steady o.s. by holding onto s.t. above. -
10 gelantung
ber-gelantung hang down, dangle, steady o.s. by holding onto s.t. above. -
11 gelimbir
hang loosely, hang in folds. meng-gelimbir dangle, be pendulous. gelimbir-an sagging. -
12 geyong-geyong
k.r(Java) dangle. -
13 jela
ber-k.r(jela-jela) dangle, swing to and fro k.r(of rope, etc.). dangling. -
14 julai
slender end of stem of a creeping plant, runner of a creeping plant. men-julai-kan dangle s.t. -
15 juntai
ber-, men-, ter- dangle. -
16 jurai
bunch. 2 row, sequence. ber-, ter-, men- dangle, hang down k.r(of hair, tassels, etc.). ber-jurai-an hang down k.r(in large numbers). -
17 mengumbai-umbaikan
swing, dangle s.t. -
18 runtai
me-runtai dangle, hang loosely. se-runtai bunch, cluster. -
19 until
1. dangle, hang down. 2. see UNTAL. -
20 kulai
droop; dangleterkulai: drooping; dangling
См. также в других словарях:
Dangle — Dan gle (d[a^][ng] g l), v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Dangled}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Dangling}.] [Akin to Dan. dangle, dial. Sw. dangla, Dan. dingle, Sw. dingla, Icel. dingla; perh. from E. ding.] To hang loosely, or with a swinging or jerking motion. [1913… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Dangle — may refer to: a Dangle (espionage) is an agent of one intelligence agency or group who pretends to be interested in defecting or turning to another intelligence agency or group. In ice hockey, a dangle is a variety of moves where a player dekes… … Wikipedia
Dangle — Dan gle, v. t. To cause to dangle; to swing, as something suspended loosely; as, to dangle the feet. [1913 Webster] And the bridegroom stood dangling his bonnet and plume. Sir W. Scott. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
dangle — [daŋ′gəl] vi. dangled, dangling [< Scand, as in Dan dangle, Ice dingla, to dangle] 1. to hang loosely so as to swing back and forth [a long tail dangled from the kite] 2. to be a hanger on; follow (after) 3. to lack clear syntactic connection… … English World dictionary
dangle — 1590s, probably from Scandinavian (Cf. Dan. dangle, Swed. dangla to swing about, Norw. dangla), perhaps via N.Fris. dangeln. Related: Dangled; dangling … Etymology dictionary
dangle — suspend, *hang, sling Analogous words: oscillate, sway, pendulate, fluctuate (see SWING): *swing, wave … New Dictionary of Synonyms
dangle — [v] suspend brandish, depend, droop, entice, flap, flaunt, flourish, hang, hang down, lure, sling, sway, swing, tantalize, tempt, trail, wave; concepts 153,190 … New thesaurus
dangle — ► VERB 1) hang so as to swing freely. 2) offer (an incentive) to someone. DERIVATIVES dangler noun dangly adjective. ORIGIN symbolic of something loose and hanging … English terms dictionary
dangle — v. 1) (d; intr.) to dangle from (his keys dangled from a chain) 2) (d; tr.) to dangle before, in front of (to dangle bait in front of smb.) * * * [ dæŋgl] in front of (to dangle bait in front of smb.) (d; tr.) to dangle before (d; intr.) to… … Combinatory dictionary
dangle — UK [ˈdæŋɡ(ə)l] / US verb Word forms dangle : present tense I/you/we/they dangle he/she/it dangles present participle dangling past tense dangled past participle dangled 1) [intransitive/transitive] if you dangle something, or if it dangles, it… … English dictionary
dangle — I. verb (dangled; dangling) Etymology: probably of Scandinavian origin; akin to Danish dangle to dangle Date: 1565 intransitive verb 1. to hang loosely and usually so as to be able to swing freely 2. to be a hanger on or a dependent 3. to occur… … New Collegiate Dictionary