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1 делать с неохотой
General subject: drag your feet -
2 нога
ж.1) ( ступня) foot; ( нижняя конечность до ступни или целиком) legположи́ть но́гу на́ ногу — cross one's legs
сбить кого́-л с ног — knock smb down; knock smb off his feet
наступи́ть кому́-л на́ ногу — tread / step on smb's foot
2) ( лапа животного) leg; (научн. тж.) limb; (ступня млекопитающих тж.) paw; (ступня др. животных) foot3) (опора, стойка) leg••нога́ми вперёд (о покойнике) — feet first
взять но́ги в ру́ки (и пойти́ куда́-л) прост. — get one's butt in gear (and go to a place)
быть без (за́дних) ног (от усталости) разг. — be dead beat; be dead on one's feet
быть на коро́ткой ноге́ с кем-л разг. — be on close / intimate terms with smb
быть / лежа́ть у чьих-л ног — be at smb's feet
в нога́х крова́ти — at the foot of the bed
в нога́х пра́вды нет — give your feet a rest
вали́ть с ног кого́-л (о ветре и т.п.) — knock smb off smb's feet
вверх нога́ми — head over heels
встать с ле́вой ноги́ разг. — get out of bed on the wrong side
где (никогда́) не ступа́ла нога́ челове́ка — where man has never set foot
деревя́нная нога́ — wooden leg, stump, peg leg
е́ле волочи́ть но́ги разг. — be hardly able to drag one's legs along
идти́ в но́гу (с тв.) — keep step / pace (with); (перен. тж.) keep abreast [ə'brest] (with)
идти́ в но́гу с жи́знью / ве́ком — keep up / abreast with the times
идти́ не в но́гу — get out of step
к ноге́! воен. — order arms!
как моя́ [его́] ле́вая нога́ захо́чет — whatever I please [he pleases]
на широ́кую но́гу — in a grand style, in a big way
не чу́вствовать / чу́ять под собо́й ног — 1) ( при быстром беге) be running as fast as one's legs would carry one 2) ( от усталости) be dead on one's feet 3) разг. ( от радости) be beside oneself with joy, be walking on air
ни ного́й (куда-л или к кому-л) — never cross the threshold (of smb's place); not set foot (somewhere)
одна́ нога́ здесь, друга́я там — be back before smb knows it; be back in a flash [in no time]
подня́ть всех на́ ноги — raise a general alarm
положи́ть (вн.) к чьим-л нога́м — lay (d) at smb's feet
поста́вить на́ ноги кого́-л — set smb on his feet; (перен. тж.) give smb a start in life
приде́лать но́ги (к дт.) — pinch, steal, walk off (with)
протяну́ть но́ги разг. — turn up one's toes
с головы́ до ног — from head to foot; from top to toe
сде́лать но́ги прост. — take to one's heels; show a clean pair of heels брит. уст.; clear off, cut out sl
со всех ног разг. — as fast as one can, as fast as one's legs will carry one
стать на́ ноги (перен.) — become independent
стоя́ть одно́й ного́й в моги́ле — have one foot in the grave
чтобы́ ноги́ твое́й здесь не́ было! — never set foot in here again!
См. также в других словарях:
drag your feet — drag your feet/heels/ phrase to do something very slowly because you do not really want to do it Thesaurus: to do something slowlysynonym Main entry: drag * * * drag your feet (also drag your heels) … Useful english dictionary
drag your feet — ► to be very slow in doing sth, for example taking a decision: »Reformers claim that the FSA is dragging its feet on banking reform. Main Entry: ↑foot … Financial and business terms
drag your feet — drag (your) feet/heels to deal with something slowly because you do not really want to do it. He was asked why the government had dragged its feet on the question of a single European currency. (often + on) We don t want to look as if we re… … New idioms dictionary
drag your feet — If someone is dragging their feet, they are taking too long to do or finish something, usually because they don t want to do it … The small dictionary of idiomes
drag your feet — drag (your/its) feet to do something slowly because you do not want to do it. He knows he should make a decision, but he s dragging his feet … New idioms dictionary
drag your feet — If someone is dragging their feet, they are taking too long to do or finish something, usually because they don t want to do it. (Dorking School Dictionary) … English Idioms & idiomatic expressions
drag your feet — work too slow, prevent progress They re dragging their feet. Tell them to work faster … English idioms
Drag your feet — If someone is dragging their feet, they are taking too long to do or finish something, usually because they don t want to do it … Dictionary of English idioms
drag your feet (to) — Delay, deliberately complete a task slowly … American business jargon
drag your heels — drag your feet/heels/ phrase to do something very slowly because you do not really want to do it Thesaurus: to do something slowlysynonym Main entry: drag * * * drag your heels see ↑drag … Useful english dictionary
drag your heels — drag (your) feet/heels to deal with something slowly because you do not really want to do it. He was asked why the government had dragged its feet on the question of a single European currency. (often + on) We don t want to look as if we re… … New idioms dictionary