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1 appease
[ə'pi:z](to calm or satisfy (a person, desire etc) usually by giving what was asked for or is needed: She appeased his curiosity by explaining the situation to him.) nuraminti, numalšinti -
2 explain away
(to get rid of (difficulties etc) by clever explaining: She could not explain away the missing money.) pagrįsti, paaiškinti -
3 explanation
[eksplə'neiʃən]1) (the act or process of explaining: Let me give a few words of explanation.) paaiškinimas2) (a statement or fact that explains: There are several possible explanations for the explosion.) paaiškinimas -
4 in passing
(while doing or talking about something else; without explaining fully what one means: He told her the story, and said in passing that he did not completely believe it.) tarp kitko -
5 in plain English
(in simple words; clearly expressed: Would you mind explaining it in plain English?) paprastais žodžiais -
6 introduction
1) (the act of introducing, or the process of being introduced: the introduction of new methods.) įvedimas, įdiegimas2) (an act of introducing one person to another: The hostess made the introductions and everyone shook hands.) supažindinimas3) (something written at the beginning of a book explaining the contents, or said at the beginning of a speech etc.) įvadas -
7 key
[ki:] 1. noun1) (an instrument or tool by which something (eg a lock or a nut) is turned: Have you the key for this door?) raktas2) (in musical instruments, one of the small parts pressed to sound the notes: piano keys.) klavišas3) (in a typewriter, calculator etc, one of the parts which one presses to cause a letter etc to be printed, displayed etc.) klavišas4) (the scale in which a piece of music is set: What key are you singing in?; the key of F.) raktas, tonacija5) (something that explains a mystery or gives an answer to a mystery, a code etc: the key to the whole problem.) raktas6) (in a map etc, a table explaining the symbols etc used in it.) legenda2. adjective(most important: key industries; He is a key man in the firm.) pagrindinis- keyboard- keyhole
- keyhole surgery
- keynote
- keyed up -
8 speak for itself/themselves
(to have an obvious meaning; not to need explaining: The facts speak for themselves.) kalbėti pačiam už save
См. также в других словарях:
Explaining — Explain Ex*plain ([e^]ks*pl[=a]n ), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Explained}([e^]ks*pl[=a]nd ); p. pr. & vb. n. {Explaining}.] [L. explandare to flatten, spread out, explain; ex out + plandare to make level or plain, planus plain: cf. OF. esplaner,… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
explaining — adjective Of something that explains. We understood better after we read his explaining letter … Wiktionary
explaining — ex·plain || ɪk spleɪn v. illustrate, elucidate, interpret, describe … English contemporary dictionary
explaining — … Useful english dictionary
self-explaining — self ex*plain ing, a. Explaining itself; capable of being understood without explanation. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
The legal profession is ever illustrating the obvious, explaining the evident, expatiating the commonplace. — The legal profession is ever illustrating the obvious, explaining the evident, expatiating the commonplace. The legal profession is ever illustrating the obvious, explaining the evident, expatiating the commonplace. Prime Minister Benjamin… … Law dictionary
self-explaining — understood by itself, requiring no interpretation … English contemporary dictionary
self-explaining — | ̷ ̷ ̷ ̷| ̷ ̷ ̷ ̷ adjective : self explanatory * * * self explanˈatory or self explainˈing adjective Obvious, understandable without explanation, self evident • • • Main Entry: ↑self … Useful english dictionary
RFC 1169 — Explaining the role of GOSIP. Cerf, V.G.; Mills, K.L. 1990 August … Acronyms
RFC 1169 — Explaining the role of GOSIP. Cerf, V.G.; Mills, K.L. 1990 August … Acronyms von A bis Z
Shiming — The Shìmíng (zh cw|c=釋名/释名|w= Shih Ming ; Explaining Names or Explanation of Names ) is a Chinese dictionary that employed phonological glosses, and is believed to date from c . 200 [CE] (Miller 1980: 424). Its 1502 definitions attempt to… … Wikipedia