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everything

  • 1 everything

    pronoun (all things: Have you everything you want?) καθετί,όλα

    English-Greek dictionary > everything

  • 2 Everything

    subs.
    P. and V. πᾶν, πάντα.
    Euboea, now that Attica was cut off, was everything to them: P. Εὔβοια αὐτοῖς ἀποκεκλῃμένης τῆς Ἀττικῆς πάντα ἦν (Thuc. 8, 95; of. also Dem. 240).

    Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Everything

  • 3 everything

    όλα

    English-Greek new dictionary > everything

  • 4 after all

    1) ((used when giving a reason for doing something etc) taking everything into consideration: I won't invite him. After all, I don't really know him.) στο κάτω-κάτω
    2) (in spite of everything that has/had happened, been said etc: It turns out he went by plane after all.) τελικά

    English-Greek dictionary > after all

  • 5 do

    [du:] 1. 3rd person singular present tense - does; verb
    1) (used with a more important verb in questions and negative statements: Do you smoke?) εκδήλωση
    2) (used with a more important verb for emphasis; ; [ðo sit down])
    3) (used to avoid repeating a verb which comes immediately before: I thought she wouldn't come, but she did.)
    4) (used with a more important verb after seldom, rarely and little: Little did he know what was in store for him.)
    5) (to carry out or perform: What shall I do?; That was a terrible thing to do.) κάνω
    6) (to manage to finish or complete: When you've done that, you can start on this; We did a hundred kilometres in an hour.) ολοκληρώνω
    7) (to perform an activity concerning something: to do the washing; to do the garden / the windows.) ασχολούμαι με
    8) (to be enough or suitable for a purpose: Will this piece of fish do two of us?; That'll do nicely; Do you want me to look for a blue one or will a pink one do?; Will next Saturday do for our next meeting?) είμαι κατάλληλος/ εξυπηρετώ/ κάνω/ αρκώ
    9) (to work at or study: She's doing sums; He's at university doing science.) ασχολούμαι με
    10) (to manage or prosper: How's your wife doing?; My son is doing well at school.) τα πηγαίνω
    11) (to put in order or arrange: She's doing her hair.) τακτοποιώ
    12) (to act or behave: Why don't you do as we do?) συμπεριφέρομαι
    13) (to give or show: The whole town gathered to do him honour.) αποδίδω
    14) (to cause: What damage did the storm do?; It won't do him any harm.) προξενώ
    15) (to see everything and visit everything in: They tried to do London in four days.) καλύπτω
    2. noun
    (an affair or a festivity, especially a party: The school is having a do for Christmas.)
    - doings
    - done
    - do-it-yourself
    - to-do
    - I
    - he could be doing with / could do with
    - do away with
    - do for
    - done for
    - done in
    - do out
    - do out of
    - do's and don'ts
    - do without
    - to do with
    - what are you doing with

    English-Greek dictionary > do

  • 6 fit out

    (to provide with everything necessary (clothes, equipment etc): The shop fitted them out with everything they needed for their journey.) εφοδιάζω,εξοπλίζω

    English-Greek dictionary > fit out

  • 7 overall

    1. ['əuvəro:l] noun
    (a garment worn over ordinary clothes to protect them from dirt etc: She wears an overall when cleaning the house.) ποδιά,μπλούζα,φόρμα
    2. adjective
    (complete, including everything: What is the overall cost of the scheme?) (συν)ολικός
    3. [ouvər'o:l] adverb
    ((also over all) complete, including everything: What will the scheme cost overall?) συνολικά

    English-Greek dictionary > overall

  • 8 all in

    (with everything included: Is that the price all in?) με όλα μέσα, συμπεριλαμβανομένων όλων

    English-Greek dictionary > all in

  • 9 all in all

    (considering everything: We haven't done badly, all in all.) σε γενικές γραμμές

    English-Greek dictionary > all in all

  • 10 altogether

    [o:ltə'ɡeðə]
    1) (completely: I'm not altogether satisfied.) εντελώς
    2) (on the whole and considering everything: I'm wet, I'm tired and I'm cold. Altogether I'm not feeling very cheerful.) γενικά

    English-Greek dictionary > altogether

  • 11 amok

    [ə'mok]
    run amok / amuck to rush about madly, attacking everybody and everything: The prisoner ran amok and killed two prison officers.)

    English-Greek dictionary > amok

  • 12 blame

    [bleim] 1. verb
    1) (to consider someone or something responsible for something bad: I blame the wet road for the accident.) αποδίδω την ευθύνη, μέμφομαι
    2) (to find fault with (a person): I don't blame you for wanting to leave.) ψέγω
    2. noun
    (the responsibility (for something bad): He takes the blame for everything that goes wrong.) ευθύνη

    English-Greek dictionary > blame

  • 13 blur

    [blə:] 1. noun
    (something not clearly seen: Everything is just a blur when I take my spectacles off.) θολούρα
    2. verb
    (to make or become unclear: The rain blurred my vision.) θολώνω

    English-Greek dictionary > blur

  • 14 charge

    1. verb
    1) (to ask as the price (for something): They charge 50 cents for a pint of milk, but they don't charge for delivery.) χρεώνω
    2) (to make a note of (a sum of money) as being owed: Charge the bill to my account.) χρεώνω
    3) ((with with) to accuse (of something illegal): He was charged with theft.) κατηγορώ
    4) (to attack by moving quickly (towards): We charged (towards) the enemy on horseback.) επιτίθεμαι
    5) (to rush: The children charged down the hill.) ορμώ
    6) (to make or become filled with electricity: Please charge my car battery.) φορτίζω
    7) (to make (a person) responsible for (a task etc): He was charged with seeing that everything went well.) γεμίζω
    2. noun
    1) (a price or fee: What is the charge for a telephone call?) χρέωση, τιμή
    2) (something with which a person is accused: He faces three charges of murder.) κατηγορία
    3) (an attack made by moving quickly: the charge of the Light Brigade.) έφοδος
    4) (the electricity in something: a positive or negative charge.) φορτίο
    5) (someone one takes care of: These children are my charges.) άτομο υπό την επίβλεψη (κάποιου)
    6) (a quantity of gunpowder: Put the charge in place and light the fuse.) γόμωση
    - in charge of
    - in someone's charge
    - take charge

    English-Greek dictionary > charge

  • 15 commune

    ['komju:n]
    (a group of people living together and sharing everything they own.) κοινόβιο

    English-Greek dictionary > commune

  • 16 crack

    [kræk] 1. verb
    1) (to (cause to) break partly without falling to pieces: The window cracked down the middle.) ραγίζω
    2) (to break (open): He cracked the peanuts between his finger and thumb.) σπάω
    3) (to make a sudden sharp sound of breaking: The twig cracked as I stepped on it.) κάνω κρακ
    4) (to make (a joke): He's always cracking jokes.) λέω (αστείο)
    5) (to open (a safe) by illegal means.) ανοίγω (χρηματοκιβώτιο) με διάρρηξη
    6) (to solve (a code).) σπάω (κώδικα)
    7) (to give in to torture or similar pressures: The spy finally cracked under their questioning and told them everything he knew.) υποχωρώ, `σπάω`
    2. noun
    1) (a split or break: There's a crack in this cup.) ράγισμα
    2) (a narrow opening: The door opened a crack.) χαραμάδα
    3) (a sudden sharp sound: the crack of whip.) κρότος
    4) (a blow: a crack on the jaw.) χτύπημα
    5) (a joke: He made a crack about my big feet.) αστείο
    6) (a very addictive drug: He died of too much crack with alcohol) κρακ, ναρκωτική ουσία
    3. adjective
    (expert: a crack racing-driver.) πρώτης τάξεως
    - crackdown
    - cracker
    - crackers
    - crack a book
    - crack down on
    - crack down
    - get cracking
    - have a crack at
    - have a crack

    English-Greek dictionary > crack

  • 17 dense

    [dens]
    1) (thick and close: We made our way through dense forest; The fog was so dense that we could not see anything.) πυκνός
    2) (very stupid: He's so dense I have to tell him everything twice.) αργόστροφος
    - density

    English-Greek dictionary > dense

  • 18 deposit

    [di'pozit] 1. verb
    1) (to put or set down: She deposited her shopping-basket in the kitchen.) αφήνω,ακουμπώ
    2) (to put in for safe keeping: He deposited the money in the bank.) καταθέτω
    2. noun
    1) (an act of putting money in a bank etc: She made several large deposits at the bank during that month.) κατάθεση
    2) (an act of paying money as a guarantee that money which is or will be owed will be paid: We have put down a deposit on a house in the country.) προκαταβολή
    3) (the money put into a bank or paid as a guarantee in this way: We decided we could not afford to go on holiday and managed to get back the deposit which we had paid.) προκαταβολή
    4) (a quantity of solid matter that has settled at the bottom of a liquid, or is left behind by a liquid: The flood-water left a yellow deposit over everything.) ίζημα,κατακάθι
    5) (a layer (of coal, iron etc) occurring naturally in rock: rich deposits of iron ore.) κοίτασμα

    English-Greek dictionary > deposit

  • 19 disagree

    [disə'ɡri:]
    1) ((sometimes with with) to hold different opinions etc (from someone else): We disagree about everything; I disagree with you on that point.) διαφωνώ
    2) (to quarrel: We never meet without disagreeing.) καβγαδίζω
    3) ((with with) (of food) to be unsuitable (to someone) and cause pain: Onions disagree with me.) πειράζω
    - disagreeably
    - disagreement

    English-Greek dictionary > disagree

  • 20 down the drain

    (wasted: We had to scrap everything and start again - six months' work down the drain!) χαράμι,στο βρόντο

    English-Greek dictionary > down the drain

См. также в других словарях:

  • Everything — is the concept of all that exists.cite web title = everything url = http://www.merriam webster.com/dictionary/everything publisher = Merriam Webster Online Dictionary accessdate = 2008 06 17] Every entity, physical body, and abstract object is… …   Wikipedia

  • Everything — Ev er*y*thing , n. Whatever pertains to the subject under consideration; all things. [1913 Webster] More wise, more learned, more just, more everything. Pope. [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • everything is OK — everything is fine, everything is all right …   English contemporary dictionary

  • everything — ► PRONOUN 1) all things, or all the things of a group or class. 2) the most important thing or aspect: money isn t everything. 3) the current situation; life in general …   English terms dictionary

  • everything — [ev′rē thiŋ΄] pron. 1. every thing; all things; all 2. all things pertinent to a specified matter 3. the most important thing [money is everything to him] …   English World dictionary

  • everything — index entirety, sum (total), totality, whole Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …   Law dictionary

  • everything — late 14c., from EVERY (Cf. every) + THING (Cf. thing) …   Etymology dictionary

  • everything — [n] entirety aggregate, all, all in all, all that, all things, business, complex, each thing, every little thing*, fixins’*, lock stock and barrel*, lot, many things, sum, the works*, total, universe, whole, whole ball of wax*, whole caboodle*,… …   New thesaurus

  • everything — [[t]e̱vrɪθɪŋ[/t]] ♦ 1) PRON INDEF: oft PRON else You use everything to refer to all the objects, actions, activities, or facts in a particular situation. He d gone to Seattle long after everything else in his life had changed... Early in the… …   English dictionary

  • everything — ev|ery|thing W1S1 [ˈevriθıŋ] pron 1.) each thing or all things ▪ Everything was covered in a thick layer of dust. ▪ I decided to tell her everything. ▪ Apart from the bus arriving late, everything else seemed to be going according to plan. 2.)… …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • everything — eve|ry|thing [ evri,θıŋ ] pronoun *** When everything is a subject, it is used with a singular verb. 1. ) all the things, activities, etc. that are involved in a situation: The earthquake destroyed everything within a 25 mile radius. Everything s …   Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

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