-
21 a
[ə(n)]indef. article(a is used before words beginning with a consonant eg a boy, or consonant sound eg a union; an is used before words beginning with a vowel eg an owl, or vowel sound eg an honour.)1) (one: There is a boy in the garden.)2) (any; every: An owl can see in the dark.) bet kuris, kiekvienas3) (for each; per: We earn $6 an hour.) už, per -
22 all
[o:l] 1. adjective, pronoun1) (the whole (of): He ate all the cake; He has spent all of his money.) visas2) (every one (of a group) when taken together: They were all present; All men are equal.) visi2. adverb1) (entirely: all alone; dressed all in white.) visiškai2) ((with the) much; even: Your low pay is all the more reason to find a new job; I feel all the better for a shower.) tuo (labiau, geriau)•- all-out
- all-round
- all-rounder
- all-terrain vehicle
- all along
- all at once
- all in
- all in all
- all over
- all right
- in all -
23 all through
1) (from beginning to end of: The baby cried all through the night.) per visą2) (in every part of: Road conditions are bad all through the country.) visur -
24 all-round
1) (including or applying to every part, person, thing etc: an all-round pay rise.) visiškas2) (good at all parts of a subject etc: an all-round sportsman.) -
25 alternate
1. ['o:ltəneit] verb(to use, do etc by turns, repeatedly, one after the other: John alternates between teaching and studying; He tried to alternate red and yellow tulips along the path as he planted them.) kaitalioti(s)2. [o:l'tə:nət] adjective1) (coming, happening etc in turns, one after the other: The water came in alternate bursts of hot and cold.) besikaitaliojantis2) (every second (day, week etc): My friend and I take the children to school on alternate days.) kas antras•- alternation -
26 an
[ə(n)]indef. article(a is used before words beginning with a consonant eg a boy, or consonant sound eg a union; an is used before words beginning with a vowel eg an owl, or vowel sound eg an honour.)1) (one: There is a boy in the garden.)2) (any; every: An owl can see in the dark.) bet kuris, kiekvienas3) (for each; per: We earn $6 an hour.) už, per -
27 any
['eni] 1. pronoun, adjective1) (one, some, no matter which: `Which dress shall I wear?' `Wear any (dress)'; `Which dresses shall I pack?' `Pack any (dresses)'.) bet kuris2) ((in questions and negative sentences etc) one, some: John has been to some interesting places but I've never been to any; Have you been to any interesting places?; We have hardly any coffee left.) koks nors, joks2. adjective(every: Any schoolboy could tell you the answer.) bet kuris, kiekvienas3. adverb(at all; (even) by a small amount: Is this book any better than the last one?; His writing hasn't improved any.) bent kiek- anybody- anyone
- anyhow
- anything
- anyway
- anywhere
- at any rate
- in any case -
28 approach
[ə'prəu ] 1. verb(to come near (to): The car approached (the traffic lights) at top speed; Christmas is approaching.) prisiartinti, priartėti2. noun1) (the act of coming near: The boys ran off at the approach of a policeman.) artinimasis2) (a road, path etc leading to a place: All the approaches to the village were blocked by fallen rock.) prieiga3) (an attempt to obtain or attract a person's help, interest etc: They have made an approach to the government for help; That fellow makes approaches to (= he tries to become friendly with) every woman he meets.) bandymas kreiptis/užkalbinti•- approaching -
29 aspect
['æspekt]1) (a part of something to be thought about: We must consider every aspect of the problem.) aspektas, pusė2) (a side of a building etc or the direction it faces in.) pusė3) (look or appearance: His face had a frightening aspect.) išraiška -
30 at a jog-trot
(at a gentle running pace: Every morning he goes down the road at a jog-trot.) ristele -
31 at work
(working: He's writing a novel and he likes to be at work (on it) by eight o'clock every morning.) darbe, dirbantis -
32 baby-sit
verb (to remain in a house to look after a child while its parents are out: She baby-sits for her friends every Saturday.) prižiūrėti vaikus -
33 babyish
adjective (like a baby; not mature: a babyish child that cries every day at school.) kūdikiškas -
34 bad
[bæd]comparative - worse; adjective1) (not good; not efficient: He is a bad driver; His eyesight is bad; They are bad at tennis (= they play tennis badly).) blogas2) (wicked; immoral: a bad man; He has done some bad things.) blogas, nedoras3) (unpleasant: bad news.) blogas, nemalonus4) (rotten: This meat is bad.) blogas, sugedęs5) (causing harm or injury: Smoking is bad for your health.) kenksmingas6) ((of a part of the body) painful, or in a weak state: She has a bad heart; I have a bad head (= headache) today.) nesveikas, skaudantis, silpnas7) (unwell: I am feeling quite bad today.) nesveikas, sergantis8) (serious or severe: a bad accident; a bad mistake.) didelis, rimtas9) ((of a debt) not likely to be paid: The firm loses money every year from bad debts.) beviltiškas•- badly- badness
- badly off
- feel bad about something
- feel bad
- go from bad to worse
- not bad
- too bad -
35 bank
I 1. [bæŋk] noun1) (a mound or ridge (of earth etc): The child climbed the bank to pick flowers.) šlaitas2) (the ground at the edge of a river, lake etc: The river overflowed its banks.) krantas3) (a raised area of sand under the sea: a sand-bank.) sekluma2. verb1) ((often with up) to form into a bank or banks: The earth was banked up against the wall of the house.) supilti2) (to tilt (an aircraft etc) while turning: The plane banked steeply.) pakrypti į viršųII 1. [bæŋk] noun1) (a place where money is lent or exchanged, or put for safety and/or to acquire interest: He has plenty of money in the bank; I must go to the bank today.) bankas2) (a place for storing other valuable material: A blood bank.) bankas2. verb(to put into a bank: He banks his wages every week.) įdėti į banką- banker- bank book
- banker's card
- bank holiday
- bank-note
- bank on III [bæŋk] noun(a collection of rows (of instruments etc): The modern pilot has banks of instruments.) virtinė, rinkinys, komplektas -
36 bathe
-
37 bi-monthly
adjective, adverb1) ((happening) once in every two months.) vykstantis kas du mėnesiai2) ((happening) twice a month.) vykstantis du kartus per mėnesį -
38 bi-weekly
adjective, adverb1) ((happening etc) once every two weeks.) einantis/vykstantis kas dvi savaitės2) ((happening etc) twice each week.) einantis/vykstantis du kartus per savaitę -
39 blockade
[-'keid]noun (something which blocks every approach to a place by land or sea.) blokada -
40 booked up
(having every ticket sold: The theatre is booked up for the season.) visi bilietai parduoti
См. также в других словарях:
every — 1. differences between each and every. Both words denote all the people or things in a group, and both normally govern a singular verb (for some exceptions see each). But each is a pronoun (as in I ll take three of each) as well as an adjective… … Modern English usage
Every — Ev er*y, a. & a. pron. [OE. everich, everilk; AS. [=ae]fre ever + [ae]lc each. See {Ever}, {each}.] 1. All the parts which compose a whole collection or aggregate number, considered in their individuality, all taken separately one by one, out of… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
every — ► DETERMINER 1) used to refer to all the individual members of a set without exception. 2) used to indicate something happening at specified intervals: every thirty minutes. 3) all possible; the utmost: every effort was made. ● every bit as Cf.… … English terms dictionary
every — [ev′rē] adj. [ME everiche < OE æfre ælc, lit., ever each] 1. each, individually and separately; each, and including all [every man among you] 2. the fullest possible; all that there could be [given every chance to do the job] 3. each group or… … English World dictionary
every — early 13c., contraction of O.E. æfre ælc each of a group, lit. ever each (Chaucer s everich), from EACH (Cf. each) with EVER (Cf. ever) added for emphasis, as the word is still felt to need emphasis (Mod.Eng. every last ..., every single ..., etc … Etymology dictionary
every — index collective Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
every — each, *all … New Dictionary of Synonyms
every — [adj] each, all each one, whole, without exception; concept 531 Ant. none … New thesaurus
every */*/*/ — UK [ˈevrɪ] / US determiner Summary: Every is generally used before a singular countable noun. The only exceptions are at Sense 2, where every can be used in phrases like every three hours , and at Sense 3. A noun subject that follows every is… … English dictionary
every — ev|ery W1S1 [ˈevri] determiner [always followed by a singular C noun] [: Old English; Origin: Afre Alc ever each ] 1.) used to refer to all the people or things in a particular group or all the parts of something ▪ We looked carefully at every… … Dictionary of contemporary English
every — [[t]e̱vri[/t]] ♦ 1) DET: DET sing n You use every to indicate that you are referring to all the members of a group or all the parts of something and not only some of them. Every village has a green, a church, a pub and a manor house... Record… … English dictionary