Перевод: с английского на польский

с польского на английский

difficult+well

  • 1 obscure

    [əb'skjuə(r)] 1. adj
    place, author etc mało znany; point, issue niejasny; shape niewyraźny, słabo widoczny
    2. vt
    * * *
    [əb'skjuə] 1. adjective
    1) (not clear; difficult to see: an obscure corner of the library.) mroczny, niewidoczny
    2) (not well-known: an obscure author.) nieznany
    3) (difficult to understand: an obscure poem.) niejasny
    2. verb
    (to make obscure: A large tree obscured the view.) zasłonić
    - obscurity

    English-Polish dictionary > obscure

  • 2 above someone's head

    (too difficult (for someone) to understand: His lecture was well above their heads.) zbyt mądry

    English-Polish dictionary > above someone's head

  • 3 corner

    ['kɔːnə(r)] 1. n
    ( outside) róg m; ( inside) kąt m, róg m; ( in road) zakręt m, róg m; (FOOTBALL) (also: corner kick) rzut m rożny, róg m (inf); (BOXING) narożnik m
    2. vt
    ( trap) przypierać (przyprzeć perf) do muru; ( COMM) monopolizować (zmonopolizować perf)
    3. vi
    car brać zakręty

    to cut corners ( fig)iść (pójść perf) na łatwiznę

    * * *
    ['ko:nə] 1. noun
    1) (a point where two lines, walls, roads etc meet: the corners of a cube; the corner of the street.) róg
    2) (a place, usually a small quiet place: a secluded corner.) zakątek
    3) (in football, a free kick from the corner of the field: We've been awarded a corner.) rzut rożny
    2. verb
    1) (to force (a person or animal) into a place from which it is difficult to escape: The thief was cornered in an alley.) osaczać
    2) (to turn a corner: He cornered on only three wheels; This car corners very well.) brać zakręt(y)
    - cut corners
    - turn the corner

    English-Polish dictionary > corner

  • 4 retain

    [rɪ'teɪn]
    vt
    independence, souvenir, ticket zachowywać (zachować perf); heat, moisture zatrzymywać (zatrzymać perf)
    * * *
    [rə'tein]
    1) (to continue to have, use, remember etc; to keep in one's possession, memory etc: He finds it difficult to retain information; These dishes don't retain heat very well.) zachować (dla siebie), trzymać
    2) (to hold (something) back or keep (something) in its place: This wall was built to retain the water from the river in order to prevent flooding.) zatrzymać

    English-Polish dictionary > retain

См. также в других словарях:

  • well-earned — [ ,wel ɜrnd ] adjective earned or deserved because of hard work or a difficult experience: a well deserved rest/reward/break/vacation …   Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • Difficult Run — This article is about the stream and trail. For the diamond marker denoting a level of skiing difficulty on a ski run, see Skiing. Difficult Run is a 15.9 mile long (25.6 km)[1] tributary stream of the Potomac River in northern Virginia in… …   Wikipedia

  • well — well1 [ wel ] (comparative bet|ter [ betər ] ; superlative best [ best ] ) adverb *** 1. ) in a skillful or effective way: She speaks Japanese well. very/rather/fairly/quite well: He plays the piano very well for someone of his age. a ) in a… …   Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • well — well1 /wel/, adv., adj., compar. better, superl. best, interj., n. adv. 1. in a good or satisfactory manner: Business is going well. 2. thoroughly, carefully, or soundly: to shake well before using; listen well. 3. in a …   Universalium

  • well — I [[t]wɛl[/t]] adv. adj. compar. bet•ter, superl. best, 1) in a good or satisfactory manner: Our plans are going well[/ex] 2) thoroughly, carefully, or soundly: Shake well before using[/ex] 3) in a moral or proper manner: to behave well[/ex] 4)… …   From formal English to slang

  • Well-ordering theorem — The well ordering theorem (not to be confused with the well ordering axiom) states that every set can be well ordered.This is important because it makes every set susceptible to the powerful technique of transfinite induction.Georg Cantor… …   Wikipedia

  • well-earned — UK [ˌwel ˈɜː(r)nd] / US [ˌwel ˈɜrnd] adjective earned or deserved because of hard work or a difficult experience a well earned rest/reward/break/holiday …   English dictionary

  • well-earned — [ˌwel ˈɜːnd] adj earned or deserved because of hard work or a difficult experience …   Dictionary for writing and speaking English

  • Jubb Yussef (Joseph's Well) — The ruins at Jubb Yussef (“Joseph’s Well” in English, جُبّ يُوسِف in Arabic, גוב יוסף in Hebrew [http://he.wikipedia.org/wiki/%D7%92%27%D7%95%D7%91 %D7%99%D7%95%D7%A1%D7%A3] ) in the Galilee are identified with the pit in Dothan, into which the… …   Wikipedia

  • Oil well — The pumpjack, such as this one located south of Midland, Texas, is a common sight in West Texas. An oil well is a general term for any boring through the earth s surface that is designed to find and acquire petroleum oil hydrocarbons. Usually… …   Wikipedia

  • Blowout (well drilling) — A blowout is the uncontrolled release of crude oil and/or natural gas from an oil well or gas well after pressure control systems have failed.[1] Prior to the advent of pressure control equipment in the 1920s, the uncontrolled release of oil and… …   Wikipedia

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