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со всех языков на все языки

don't+be+so+noisy

  • 101 off-hand

    فَظّ \ abrupt: (of speech or behaviour) rough and not polite. beastly: very nasty. blunt: speaking plainly without trying to be polite: a blunt refusal.. coarse: (of people and their manners) rough; rude: a coarse fellow; a coarse laugh. crude: (of manners, ideas, pieces of works, etc.) rough. gruff: rough and sometimes unfriendly in voice or manner. ill-mannered: having bad manners. impolite: not polite; rude. off-hand: careless and impolite: an off-hand reply to a serious question. rough: not gentle: a rough game. rowdy: rough and noisy (person, behaviour, etc.). rude: not polite. surly: acting in a rough unfriendly way and saying little. uncouth: lacking good manners; strange in one’s appearance: It is uncouth to push your knife into your mouth when eating. Modern young men don’t condiser it uncouth to wear their hair long. vulgar: (of a person) rude; (of speech or behaviour) displeasing; going against accepted polite standards; (of objects) showing a lack of good judgement about what is suitable or beautiful. \ See Also غريب (غَريب)، سوقي (سُوقيّ)، جاف (جافّ)، خشن (خَشِن)، سَيِّئ الأدب

    Arabic-English glossary > off-hand

  • 102 rough

    فَظّ \ abrupt: (of speech or behaviour) rough and not polite. beastly: very nasty. blunt: speaking plainly without trying to be polite: a blunt refusal.. coarse: (of people and their manners) rough; rude: a coarse fellow; a coarse laugh. crude: (of manners, ideas, pieces of works, etc.) rough. gruff: rough and sometimes unfriendly in voice or manner. ill-mannered: having bad manners. impolite: not polite; rude. off-hand: careless and impolite: an off-hand reply to a serious question. rough: not gentle: a rough game. rowdy: rough and noisy (person, behaviour, etc.). rude: not polite. surly: acting in a rough unfriendly way and saying little. uncouth: lacking good manners; strange in one’s appearance: It is uncouth to push your knife into your mouth when eating. Modern young men don’t condiser it uncouth to wear their hair long. vulgar: (of a person) rude; (of speech or behaviour) displeasing; going against accepted polite standards; (of objects) showing a lack of good judgement about what is suitable or beautiful. \ See Also غريب (غَريب)، سوقي (سُوقيّ)، جاف (جافّ)، خشن (خَشِن)، سَيِّئ الأدب

    Arabic-English glossary > rough

  • 103 rowdy

    فَظّ \ abrupt: (of speech or behaviour) rough and not polite. beastly: very nasty. blunt: speaking plainly without trying to be polite: a blunt refusal.. coarse: (of people and their manners) rough; rude: a coarse fellow; a coarse laugh. crude: (of manners, ideas, pieces of works, etc.) rough. gruff: rough and sometimes unfriendly in voice or manner. ill-mannered: having bad manners. impolite: not polite; rude. off-hand: careless and impolite: an off-hand reply to a serious question. rough: not gentle: a rough game. rowdy: rough and noisy (person, behaviour, etc.). rude: not polite. surly: acting in a rough unfriendly way and saying little. uncouth: lacking good manners; strange in one’s appearance: It is uncouth to push your knife into your mouth when eating. Modern young men don’t condiser it uncouth to wear their hair long. vulgar: (of a person) rude; (of speech or behaviour) displeasing; going against accepted polite standards; (of objects) showing a lack of good judgement about what is suitable or beautiful. \ See Also غريب (غَريب)، سوقي (سُوقيّ)، جاف (جافّ)، خشن (خَشِن)، سَيِّئ الأدب

    Arabic-English glossary > rowdy

  • 104 rude

    فَظّ \ abrupt: (of speech or behaviour) rough and not polite. beastly: very nasty. blunt: speaking plainly without trying to be polite: a blunt refusal.. coarse: (of people and their manners) rough; rude: a coarse fellow; a coarse laugh. crude: (of manners, ideas, pieces of works, etc.) rough. gruff: rough and sometimes unfriendly in voice or manner. ill-mannered: having bad manners. impolite: not polite; rude. off-hand: careless and impolite: an off-hand reply to a serious question. rough: not gentle: a rough game. rowdy: rough and noisy (person, behaviour, etc.). rude: not polite. surly: acting in a rough unfriendly way and saying little. uncouth: lacking good manners; strange in one’s appearance: It is uncouth to push your knife into your mouth when eating. Modern young men don’t condiser it uncouth to wear their hair long. vulgar: (of a person) rude; (of speech or behaviour) displeasing; going against accepted polite standards; (of objects) showing a lack of good judgement about what is suitable or beautiful. \ See Also غريب (غَريب)، سوقي (سُوقيّ)، جاف (جافّ)، خشن (خَشِن)، سَيِّئ الأدب

    Arabic-English glossary > rude

  • 105 surly

    فَظّ \ abrupt: (of speech or behaviour) rough and not polite. beastly: very nasty. blunt: speaking plainly without trying to be polite: a blunt refusal.. coarse: (of people and their manners) rough; rude: a coarse fellow; a coarse laugh. crude: (of manners, ideas, pieces of works, etc.) rough. gruff: rough and sometimes unfriendly in voice or manner. ill-mannered: having bad manners. impolite: not polite; rude. off-hand: careless and impolite: an off-hand reply to a serious question. rough: not gentle: a rough game. rowdy: rough and noisy (person, behaviour, etc.). rude: not polite. surly: acting in a rough unfriendly way and saying little. uncouth: lacking good manners; strange in one’s appearance: It is uncouth to push your knife into your mouth when eating. Modern young men don’t condiser it uncouth to wear their hair long. vulgar: (of a person) rude; (of speech or behaviour) displeasing; going against accepted polite standards; (of objects) showing a lack of good judgement about what is suitable or beautiful. \ See Also غريب (غَريب)، سوقي (سُوقيّ)، جاف (جافّ)، خشن (خَشِن)، سَيِّئ الأدب

    Arabic-English glossary > surly

  • 106 uncouth

    فَظّ \ abrupt: (of speech or behaviour) rough and not polite. beastly: very nasty. blunt: speaking plainly without trying to be polite: a blunt refusal.. coarse: (of people and their manners) rough; rude: a coarse fellow; a coarse laugh. crude: (of manners, ideas, pieces of works, etc.) rough. gruff: rough and sometimes unfriendly in voice or manner. ill-mannered: having bad manners. impolite: not polite; rude. off-hand: careless and impolite: an off-hand reply to a serious question. rough: not gentle: a rough game. rowdy: rough and noisy (person, behaviour, etc.). rude: not polite. surly: acting in a rough unfriendly way and saying little. uncouth: lacking good manners; strange in one’s appearance: It is uncouth to push your knife into your mouth when eating. Modern young men don’t condiser it uncouth to wear their hair long. vulgar: (of a person) rude; (of speech or behaviour) displeasing; going against accepted polite standards; (of objects) showing a lack of good judgement about what is suitable or beautiful. \ See Also غريب (غَريب)، سوقي (سُوقيّ)، جاف (جافّ)، خشن (خَشِن)، سَيِّئ الأدب

    Arabic-English glossary > uncouth

  • 107 vulgar

    فَظّ \ abrupt: (of speech or behaviour) rough and not polite. beastly: very nasty. blunt: speaking plainly without trying to be polite: a blunt refusal.. coarse: (of people and their manners) rough; rude: a coarse fellow; a coarse laugh. crude: (of manners, ideas, pieces of works, etc.) rough. gruff: rough and sometimes unfriendly in voice or manner. ill-mannered: having bad manners. impolite: not polite; rude. off-hand: careless and impolite: an off-hand reply to a serious question. rough: not gentle: a rough game. rowdy: rough and noisy (person, behaviour, etc.). rude: not polite. surly: acting in a rough unfriendly way and saying little. uncouth: lacking good manners; strange in one’s appearance: It is uncouth to push your knife into your mouth when eating. Modern young men don’t condiser it uncouth to wear their hair long. vulgar: (of a person) rude; (of speech or behaviour) displeasing; going against accepted polite standards; (of objects) showing a lack of good judgement about what is suitable or beautiful. \ See Also غريب (غَريب)، سوقي (سُوقيّ)، جاف (جافّ)، خشن (خَشِن)، سَيِّئ الأدب

    Arabic-English glossary > vulgar

  • 108 blame

    لاَمَ \ blame: to say that sb. or sth. was the cause of some trouble: He blamed the other driver for the accident, to say that sb. is wrong You refused to eat it? I don’t blame you.. rebuke: to scold in a correct manner. reproach: to blame angrily or sadly. scold: to find fault and talk severely to (sb.): Mothers scold their children for being noisy.

    Arabic-English glossary > blame

  • 109 rebuke

    لاَمَ \ blame: to say that sb. or sth. was the cause of some trouble: He blamed the other driver for the accident, to say that sb. is wrong You refused to eat it? I don’t blame you.. rebuke: to scold in a correct manner. reproach: to blame angrily or sadly. scold: to find fault and talk severely to (sb.): Mothers scold their children for being noisy.

    Arabic-English glossary > rebuke

  • 110 reproach

    لاَمَ \ blame: to say that sb. or sth. was the cause of some trouble: He blamed the other driver for the accident, to say that sb. is wrong You refused to eat it? I don’t blame you.. rebuke: to scold in a correct manner. reproach: to blame angrily or sadly. scold: to find fault and talk severely to (sb.): Mothers scold their children for being noisy.

    Arabic-English glossary > reproach

  • 111 scold

    لاَمَ \ blame: to say that sb. or sth. was the cause of some trouble: He blamed the other driver for the accident, to say that sb. is wrong You refused to eat it? I don’t blame you.. rebuke: to scold in a correct manner. reproach: to blame angrily or sadly. scold: to find fault and talk severely to (sb.): Mothers scold their children for being noisy.

    Arabic-English glossary > scold

См. также в других словарях:

  • Noisy-Le-Roi — Pays …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Noisy-le-roi — Pays …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Noisy-Sur-Oise — Pays   …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Noisy-sur-oise — Pays   …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Don Merton — (left) with Dave Barker on Hauturu (Little Barrier Island) Born 22 February 1939(1939 02 22) Auckland, New Zealand …   Wikipedia

  • Don McIver — (born 1965) is a performance poet[1] who first started performing his work in Denver, Colorado in the late 1980s before moving to Albuquerque, New Mexico. He spent some time writing fiction, essays, and articles, before returning to poetry in… …   Wikipedia

  • Noisy-le-Roi — Pour les articles homonymes, voir Noisy. 48° 50′ 49″ N 2° 03′ 39″ E …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Noisy-sur-Oise — Pour les articles homonymes, voir Noisy. 49° 08′ 17″ N 2° 19′ 47″ E …   Wikipédia en Français

  • noisy\ paper — That nasty shiny toilet paper that crackles when you touch it. This toilet only has noisy paper. [Are we in Europe? For those who don t know it, European visitors to the United States have been known to load their suitcases with American toilet… …   Dictionary of american slang

  • noisy\ paper — That nasty shiny toilet paper that crackles when you touch it. This toilet only has noisy paper. [Are we in Europe? For those who don t know it, European visitors to the United States have been known to load their suitcases with American toilet… …   Dictionary of american slang

  • noisy —   Hana kuli, kulikuli, wā, wawā, āwā, ahu wawā.   Also: ho ohalulu, kakani, ko ele, ho ohauwawā, ikuwā. Rare: ea, kowowowo.    ♦ Don t be noisy, kulikuli …   English-Hawaiian dictionary

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