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1 dentist
['dentist](a person who cares for diseases etc of the teeth, by filling or removing them etc: Our dentist is very careful; I hate going to the dentist.) dantistas -
2 cavity
['kævəti]plural - cavities; noun(a hollow place; a hole: The dentist said she had three cavities in her teeth; The thief hid the necklace in a cavity in the wall.) skylė -
3 coward
(a person who shows fear easily or is easily frightened: I am such a coward - I hate going to the dentist.) bailys- cowardly- cowardice
- cowardliness -
4 dentistry
noun (a dentist's work.) stomatologija -
5 fill
[fil] 1. verb1) (to put (something) into (until there is no room for more); to make full: to fill a cupboard with books; The news filled him with joy.) pripildyti2) (to become full: His eyes filled with tears.) prisipildyti3) (to satisfy (a condition, requirement etc): Does he fill all our requirements?) išpildyti4) (to put something in a hole (in a tooth etc) to stop it up: The dentist filled two of my teeth yesterday.) užplombuoti, užkišti2. noun(as much as fills or satisfies someone: She ate her fill.) pakankamas kiekis, kiek lenda- filled- filler
- filling
- filling-station
- fill in
- fill up -
6 headrest
noun (a sort of small cushion which supports a person's head, eg as fitted to a dentist's chair, a car seat.) galvos atramėlė -
7 insensitive
[in'sensətiv]( with to)1) (not noticing or not sympathetic towards (eg others' feelings): He was insensitive to her grief.) nejautrus2) ((with to) not feeling or not reacting to (touch, light etc): The dentist's injection numbed the nerves and made the tooth insensitive to the drill.) nejautrus• -
8 locum
['ləukəm](a person who takes the place of another (especially a doctor, dentist etc) for a time.) laikinas pavaduotojas -
9 miss
[mis] 1. verb1) (to fail to hit, catch etc: The arrow missed the target.) nepataikyti, prašauti2) (to fail to arrive in time for: He missed the 8 o'clock train.) pavėluoti į3) (to fail to take advantage of: You've missed your opportunity.) praleisti4) (to feel sad because of the absence of: You'll miss your friends when you go to live abroad.) ilgėtis5) (to notice the absence of: I didn't miss my purse till several hours after I'd dropped it.) pasigesti6) (to fail to hear or see: He missed what you said because he wasn't listening.) neužgirsti7) (to fail to go to: I'll have to miss my lesson next week, as I'm going to the dentist.) praleisti8) (to fail to meet: We missed you in the crowd.) nesutikti, prasilenkti su9) (to avoid: The thief only just missed being caught by the police.) išvengti10) ((of an engine) to misfire.) užsikirsti, neužsivesti2. noun(a failure to hit, catch etc: two hits and two misses.) nevykęs šūvis/metimas/praleidimas- missing- go missing
- miss out
- miss the boat -
10 patient
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11 rinse
[rins] 1. verb1) (to wash (clothes etc) in clean water to remove soap etc: After washing the towels, rinse them (out).) (iš)skalauti2) (to clean (a cup, one's mouth etc) by filling with clean water etc and then emptying the water out: The dentist asked me to rinse my mouth out.) praskalauti2. noun1) (the act of rinsing: Give the cup a rinse.) skalavimas2) (a liquid used for changing the colour of hair: a blue rinse.) plaukų dažai -
12 surgery
['sə:‹əri]- plural surgeries (-)1) (the practice or art of a surgeon: to specialize in surgery.) chirurgija2) (a doctor's or dentist's room in which he examines patients.) gydytojo kabinetas -
13 tooth
[tu:Ɵ]plural - teeth; noun1) (any of the hard, bone-like objects that grow in the mouth and are used for biting and chewing: He has had a tooth out at the dentist's.) dantis2) (something that looks or acts like a tooth: the teeth of a comb/saw.) dantis•- teethe- toothed
- toothless
- toothy
- toothache
- toothbrush
- toothpaste
- toothpick
- be
- get long in the tooth
- a fine-tooth comb
- a sweet tooth
- tooth and nail -
14 wince
[wins](to start or jump with pain: He winced as the dentist touched his broken tooth.) krūptelėti
См. также в других словарях:
dentist — DENTÍST, Ă, dentişti, ste, s.m. şi f., adj. (Medic) specializat în dentistică; stomatolog. – Din fr. dentiste, germ. Dentist. Trimis de cornel, 31.07.2004. Sursa: DEX 98 DENTÍST s. (med.) stomatolog. Trimis de siveco, 05.08.2004. Sursa … Dicționar Român
Dentist — Sm Zahnarzt erw. fach. (18. Jh.) Entlehnung. Entlehnt aus frz. dentiste, das zu l. dēns (dentis) Zahn gebildet ist. Ebenso nndl. dentist, ne. dentist, nschw. dentist. S. Dental und zur germanischen Verwandtschaft Zahn. ✎ DF 5 (21999), 294 296; … Etymologisches Wörterbuch der deutschen sprache
Dentist — (von lat. dens „Zahn“; Betonung auf der zweiten Silbe) war eine Berufsbezeichnung für eine in Deutschland bis 1952 neben den Zahnärzten existierende Berufsgruppe in der Zahnmedizin. 1910 umfasste die Ausbildung zum Dentisten in Deutschland… … Deutsch Wikipedia
dentist — 1759, from Fr. dentiste, from dent tooth, from L. dens (see TOOTH (Cf. tooth)) + IST (Cf. ist). Dentist figures it now in our newspapers, and may do well enough for a French puffer, but we fancy Rutter is content with being called a tooth drawer… … Etymology dictionary
Dentist — Den tist, n. [From L. dens, dentis, tooth: cf. F. dentiste. See {Tooth}.] One whose business it is to clean, extract, or repair natural teeth, and to make and insert artificial ones; a dental surgeon … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Dentist — (v. lat.), Zahnarzt … Pierer's Universal-Lexikon
Dentist — (lat.), Zahntechniker, s. Zahnarzneikunde … Meyers Großes Konversations-Lexikon
Dentíst — (frz. u. engl.), Zahnarzt … Kleines Konversations-Lexikon
Dentist — Dentist, Zahnarzt … Herders Conversations-Lexikon
dèntist — m (dèntistica ž) med. zubar, stomatolog … Veliki rječnik hrvatskoga jezika
Dentist — Dentist,der:⇨Zahnarzt … Das Wörterbuch der Synonyme