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1 pit
I 1. [pit] noun1) (a large hole in the ground: The campers dug a pit for their rubbish.) bedre2) (a place from which minerals are dug, especially a coal-mine: a chalk-pit; He works at/down the pit.) šahta; karjers; raktuves3) (a place beside a motor race track for repairing and refuelling racing cars: The leading car has gone into the pit(s).) remontbedre2. verb((with against) to set (a person or thing) against another in a fight, competition etc: He was pitted against a much stronger man.) sarīdīt (pret kādu)- pitfallII 1. [pit] noun(the hard stone of a peach, cherry etc.) (augļa) kauliņš2. verb(to remove the stone from (a peach, cherry etc).) izņemt kauliņu* * *kauliņš; bedre; karjers, šahta; iedobums; bakurēta; remontbedre; remonta punkts; vilku bedre, lamatas; parters; skatītāji parterā; arēna; izņemt kauliņu; ierakt bedrē; atstāt rētas, pārklāt ar rētām -
2 dig
[diɡ] 1. present participle - digging; verb1) (to turn up (earth) with a spade etc: to dig the garden.) rakt2) (to make (a hole) in this way: The child dug a tunnel in the sand.) []rakt3) (to poke: He dug his brother in the ribs with his elbow.) iegrūst dunku2. noun(a poke: a dig in the ribs; I knew that his remarks about women drivers were a dig at me (= a joke directed at me).) dunka; dzēlīga piezīme- digger- dig out
- dig up* * *dunka; dzēlīga piezīme; izrakumu vieta, izrakumi; īrēta istaba; iekalējs, zubrītājs; kontrabandas slēpnis; uzrakt, rakt; meklēt, rakņāties; iegrūst dunku; novērtēt, saprast; zubrīt, iekalt; satikt -
3 bait
[beit] 1. noun(food used to attract fish, animals etc which one wishes to catch, kill etc: Before he went fishing he dug up some worms for bait.) ēsma2. verb(to put bait on or in (a hook, trap etc): He baited the mousetrap with cheese.) uzlikt ēsmu* * *ēsma; kārdinājums; insekticīds, žurku inde; atpūta ceļā; dzīšana ar suņiem; uzspraust ēsmu; pievilināt, kārdināt; dzīt ar suņiem; nelikt mierā, kaitināt, vajāt; apstāties ceļā; barot -
4 burrow
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5 ditch
[di ] 1. noun(a long narrow hollow dug in the ground especially one to drain water from a field, road etc: He climbed over the fence and fell into a ditch.) grāvis2. verb(to get rid of: The stolen car had been ditched by the thieves several miles away.) pamest; atstāt* * *grāvis; tranšeja; rakt grāvi; tīrīt grāvi; atstāt, pamest; piespiedu kārtā nolaisties uz jūras -
6 mine
I pronoun(something which belongs to me: Are these pencils yours or mine? He is a friend of mine (= one of my friends).) mans, manējsII 1. noun1) (a place (usually underground) from which metals, coal, salt etc are dug: a coalmine; My father worked in the mines.) šahta, raktuves2) (a type of bomb used underwater or placed just beneath the surface of the ground: The ship has been blown up by a mine.) mīna2. verb1) (to dig (for metals etc) in a mine: Coal is mined near here.) rakt, iegūt2) (to place explosive mines in: They've mined the mouth of the river.) mīnēt3) (to blow up with mines: His ship was mined.) uzspridzināt ar mīnu•- miner- mining
- minefield* * *raktuve, šahta; krātuve, avots; slānis; mīna; mīnēta eja; izdarīt izrakumus, strādāt raktuvēs; rakt eju; mīnēt; graut; manējais, mans
См. также в других словарях:
dug — I. /dʌg / (say dug) verb past tense and past participle of dig1. II. /dʌg / (say dug) verb past tense and past participle of dig2. III. /dʌg / (say dug) …
dug- — *dug germ., Verb: nhd. dunkel sein ( Verb); ne. be (Verb) dark; Rekontruktionsbasis: ae., ahd.; Hinweis: s. *daugula ; Etymologie: idg. *dʰū̆k … Germanisches Wörterbuch
Leben (Verb.) — 1. Allens, wat liewet, dat liewet gêrn. (Waldeck.) Holl.: Al, wat leven heeft ontvangen, gaat op losse en looze gangen. (Harrebomée, II, 19.) 2. Anders lebt man bei uns, anders zu Rom. 3. Aso lang man lebt, thur (darf) män nit reden; as män… … Deutsches Sprichwörter-Lexikon
dig into — verb examine physically with or as if with a probe (Freq. 4) probe an anthill • Syn: ↑probe, ↑poke into • Derivationally related forms: ↑probe (for: ↑probe) … Useful english dictionary
dig out — verb 1. create by digging dig a hole dig out a channel • Syn: ↑dig • Derivationally related forms: ↑dig (for: ↑dig), ↑digger … Useful english dictionary
dig up — verb 1. find by digging in the ground (Freq. 2) I dug up an old box in the garden • Syn: ↑excavate, ↑turn up • Derivationally related forms: ↑excavation (for: ↑exca … Useful english dictionary
dig in — verb Date: 1827 transitive verb 1. to cover or incorporate by burying < dig in compost > 2. to establish in a dug defensive position < the platoon was well dug in > intransiti … New Collegiate Dictionary
turn up — verb 1. appear or become visible; make a showing (Freq. 8) She turned up at the funeral I hope the list key is going to surface again • Syn: ↑come on, ↑come out, ↑surface, ↑show up … Useful english dictionary
dig — verb (digs, digging; past and past participle dug) 1》 break up and move earth with a tool or with hands, paws, etc. ↘make (a hole) by digging. ↘extract from the ground by digging. ↘(dig in) (of a soldier) protect oneself by making a… … English new terms dictionary
dig in — verb 1. occupy a trench or secured area (Freq. 2) The troops dug in for the night • Syn: ↑entrench • Derivationally related forms: ↑entrenchment (for: ↑entrench) … Useful english dictionary
make good — verb act as promised (Freq. 1) make good on promises • Hypernyms: ↑observe, ↑keep • Verb Frames: Somebody s something * * * phrasal : to make valid or complete … Useful english dictionary