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1 decrepit
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2 decrepit
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3 decrepit
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4 crock
[krok]1) (an earthenware pot or jar.) cruche2) (an old and decrepit person or thing: That car's an old crock.) guimbarde -
5 altersschwach
'altərsʃvaxadjsénile, décrépitaltersschwachạ ltersschwach1 Person, Tier diminué(e) [par l'âge] -
6 run-down
См. также в других словарях:
decrepit — Worn out by illness, age, or hard work. A person may be decrepit without being old. Hall v State, 16 Tex App 6 … Ballentine's law dictionary
decrepit — /dakrepat/ This term designates a person who is disabled, incapable, or incompetent, either from physical or mental weakness or defects, whether produced by age or other causes, to such an extent as to render the individual comparatively helpless … Black's law dictionary
decrepit — /dakrepat/ This term designates a person who is disabled, incapable, or incompetent, either from physical or mental weakness or defects, whether produced by age or other causes, to such an extent as to render the individual comparatively helpless … Black's law dictionary
old crock — Decrepit thing (usu. very old car). Decrepit person … A concise dictionary of English slang
crocked — adj. drunk, intoxicated (Slang); decrepit, broken down krÉ’k n. clay jar; someone or something that is old and decrepit (person, horse, etc.); lie, nonsense v. break, damage, injure; make dirty … English contemporary dictionary
Carcamano — is a derogatory ethnic name given, in Southern Brazil, to the descendants of the non Iberian European immigrants who arrived to Brazil in the late XIX Century and in the early XX Century. This name was originally given to the Italian Brazilians… … Wikipedia
crock — English has two words crock. The one meaning ‘earthenware pot’ [OE] is now almost never heard on its own, except perhaps in the phrase ‘crock of gold’, but it is familiar from its derivative crockery [18]. Its immediate antecedents appear to be… … The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins
crock — krÉ’k n. clay jar; someone or something that is old and decrepit (person, horse, etc.); lie, nonsense v. break, damage, injure; make dirty … English contemporary dictionary
crocking — krÉ’k n. clay jar; someone or something that is old and decrepit (person, horse, etc.); lie, nonsense v. break, damage, injure; make dirty … English contemporary dictionary
crocks — krÉ’k n. clay jar; someone or something that is old and decrepit (person, horse, etc.); lie, nonsense v. break, damage, injure; make dirty … English contemporary dictionary
crock — English has two words crock. The one meaning ‘earthenware pot’ [OE] is now almost never heard on its own, except perhaps in the phrase ‘crock of gold’, but it is familiar from its derivative crockery [18]. Its immediate antecedents appear to be… … Word origins