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101 brutto
['brutto] brutto (-a)1. agg1) (persona, vestito, casa) uglyvedersela brutta — (per un attimo) to have a nasty moment, (per un periodo) to have a bad time of it
2. smil brutto è che... — the problem o unfortunate thing is that...
3. avvpicchiare qn di brutto — to give sb a bad o nasty beating
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102 dovere
[do'vere]1. vt irreg(soldi, riconoscenza) to owegli devo il mio successo — I owe my success to him, I have him to thank for my success
1) (obbligo) to have toè una persona come si deve — he is a very decent person
non avrebbe dovuto esserne informata che il giorno dopo — she was not supposed to hear about it until the following day
avrebbe dovuto farlo — he should have o ought to have done it
devo partire domani — I'm leaving tomorrow, (purtroppo) I've got to leave tomorrow
non devi zuccherarlo — (non è necessario) there's no need to add sugar
2)lo farò, dovessi morire — I'll do it if it kills me
3)deve arrivare alle 10 — he should o is due to arrive at 104)deve essere difficile farlo — it must be difficult to do3. sm(obbligo) dutyrivolgersi a chi di dovere — to apply to the appropriate authority o person
il proprio dovere di elettore — to do one's duty as a voterun dovere di qc — to make sth one's duty -
103 parola
sf [pa'rɔla]1) (facoltà) speech2) (vocabolo) word -
104 sfondare
[sfon'dare]1. vt(porta) to break down, (parete) to break down, knock down, (pavimento) to break through, (scarpe) to wear through, wear a hole in, (sedia, barca) to knock the bottom out of, (scatola) to burst, knock the bottom out of2. vi3. vip (sfondarsi) -
105 prosciutto
( ITALY)air-dried ham♦ The Italian word for ham, usually referring to the raw cured hams of Parma. Though once very difficult to obtain in the United States due to USDA and FDA regulations, fine prosciutto's from Italy and Switzerland are now being imported. These hams are called prosciutto crudo. Cooked hams are called prosciutto cotto. Prosciutto is best when sliced paper thin served with ripe figs or wrapped around grissini. -
106 tamarind
( INDIA)tree producing flat, beanlike pods which have become essential in Indian cooking; often made into a chutney as a dip for deep-fried snacks and the juice is used extensively in South Indian cooking♦ This is the fruit pod of trees originally from Africa, now common in Asia, India, and the West Indies. The taste is bittersweet with citrus overtones. The pulp is very sticky and difficult to work with. Common forms s old are syrups and bricks of the pulp. It is used extensively in dishes of these regions as well as in candy and drinks. Within the West Indies it has the following of a wonderful and romantic story
См. также в других словарях:
make life difficult (for someone) — make life/things/difficult (for someone) phrase to cause problems for someone My boss seems to enjoy making life difficult for me. Thesaurus: to cause problems for someone or somethingsynonym Main entry … Useful english dictionary
make things difficult (for someone) — make life/things/difficult (for someone) phrase to cause problems for someone My boss seems to enjoy making life difficult for me. Thesaurus: to cause problems for someone or somethingsynonym Main entry … Useful english dictionary
make life difficult (for somebody) — make life ˈdifficult (for sb) idiom to cause problems for sb • She does everything she can to make life difficult for him. Main entry: ↑lifeidiom … Useful english dictionary
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made it difficult for — caused the situation to be very hard for … English contemporary dictionary
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