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21 cloud
1.1) (a mass of tiny drops of water floating in the sky: white clouds in a blue sky; The hills were hidden in cloud.) debesis2) (a great number or quantity of anything small moving together: a cloud of flies.) spiečius3) (something causing fear, depression etc: a cloud of sadness.) šešėlis2. verb1) ((often with over) to become cloudy: The sky clouded over and it began to rain.) apsiniaukti2) (to (cause to) become blurred or not clear: Her eyes were clouded with tears.) aptem(dy)ti3) (to (cause to) become gloomy or troubled: His face clouded at the unhappy news.) paniurti, apniukti•- cloudy
- cloudburst
- under a cloud -
22 fan
I 1. [fæn] noun1) (a flat instrument held in the hand and waved to direct a current of air across the face in hot weather: Ladies used to carry fans to keep themselves cool.) vėduoklė2) (a mechanical instrument causing a current of air: He has had a fan fitted in the kitchen for extracting smells.) ventiliatorius2. verb1) (to cool (as if) with a fan: She sat in the corner, fanning herself.) vėduoti2) (to increase or strengthen (a fire) by directing air towards it with a fan etc: They fanned the fire until it burst into flames.) įpūstiII [fæn] noun(an enthusiastic admirer of a sport, hobby or well-known person: I'm a great fan of his; football fans; ( also adjective) fan mail/letters (= letters etc sent by admirers).) entuziastas, sirgalius -
23 freckle
-
24 mop
[mop] 1. noun1) (a pad of sponge, or a bunch of pieces of coarse string or yarn etc, fixed on a handle, for washing floors, dishes etc.) šluostas, plaušinė šluota2) (a thick mass of hair: a mop of dark hair.) kuodas, kuokštas3) (an act of mopping: He gave the floor a quick mop.) šluostymas2. verb1) (to rub or wipe with a mop: She mopped the kitchen floor.) (iš)šluostyti2) (to wipe or clean (eg a face covered with sweat): He mopped his brow.) (nusi)valyti•- mop up -
25 shadow
['ʃædəu] 1. noun1) ((a patch of) shade on the ground etc caused by an object blocking the light: We are in the shadow of that building.) šešėlis2) ((in plural with the) darkness or partial darkness caused by lack of (direct) light: The child was afraid that wild animals were lurking in the shadows at the corner of his bedroom.) tamsa3) (a dark patch or area: You look tired - there are shadows under your eyes.) šešėlis4) (a very slight amount: There's not a shadow of doubt that he stole the money.) truputis2. verb1) (to hide or darken with shadow: A broad hat shadowed her face.) (pri)dengti2) (to follow closely, especially as a detective, spy etc: We shadowed him for a week.) sekti•- shadowy- shadowiness
- worn to a shadow -
26 smooth
[smu:ð] 1. adjective1) (having an even surface; not rough: Her skin is as smooth as satin.) švelnus, glotnus2) (without lumps: Mix the ingredients to a smooth paste.) lygus3) ((of movement) without breaks, stops or jolts: Did you have a smooth flight from New York?) ramus, sklandus4) (without problems or difficulties: a smooth journey; His progress towards promotion was smooth and rapid.) sėkmingas, sklandus5) ((too) agreeable and pleasant in manner etc: I don't trust those smooth salesmen.) meilikaujantis, perdėm mandagus2. verb1) ((often with down, out etc) to make (something) smooth or flat: She tried to smooth the creases out.) išlyginti2) ((with into or over): to rub (a liquid substance etc) gently over (a surface): Smooth the moisturizing cream into/over your face and neck.) įtrinti•- smoothen- smoothly
- smoothness -
27 sponge
1. noun1) (a type of sea animal, or its soft skeleton, which has many holes and is able to suck up and hold water.) pintis2) (a piece of such a skeleton or a substitute, used for washing the body etc.) kempinė3) (a sponge pudding or cake: We had jam sponge for dessert.) biskvitas4) (an act of wiping etc with a sponge: Give the table a quick sponge over, will you?) šluostymas/valymas kempine/drėgnu rankšluosčiu ir pan.2. verb1) (to wipe or clean with a sponge: She sponged the child's face.) šluostyti/plauti kempine/drėgnu rankšluosčiu ir pan.2) (to get a living, money etc (from someone else): He's been sponging off/on us for years.) melžti, būti išlaikytiniu•- sponger- spongy
- spongily
- sponginess
- sponge cake
- sponge pudding -
28 stare
-
29 wistful
['wistful](thoughtful and rather sad, (as if) longing for something with little hope: The dog looked into the butcher's window with a wistful expression on his face.) ilgesingas- wistfulness -
30 ashen
adjective ((of someone's face etc) very pale with shock etc.) papilkėjęs, išblyškęs -
31 baboon
(a kind of large monkey with a dog-like face.) babuinas -
32 brazen it out
(to face a situation with impudent boldness: She knew her deception had been discovered but decided to brazen it out.) begėdiškai neigti -
33 cherub
-
34 compact
I 1. [kəm'pækt] adjective(fitted neatly together in a small space: Our new house is very compact.) kompaktiškas2. ['kompækt] noun(a small container for women's face-powder: a powder-compact with a mirror.) pudrinėII ['kompækt](an agreement: The management and trade union leaders finally signed a compact.) sutartis -
35 contort
[kən'to:t](to twist or turn violently: His face was contorted with pain.) iškraipyti, perkreipti- contortionist -
36 cream
[kri:m] 1. noun1) (the yellowish-white oily substance that forms on the top of milk, and from which butter and cheese are made.) grietinėlė, grietinė2) (any of many substances made of, or similar to, cream: ice-cream; face-cream.) kremas3) (the best part; the top people: the cream of the medical profession.) grietinėlė4) (( also adjective) (of) a yellowish-white colour: cream paint.) kreminė spalva2. verb1) (to make into a cream-like mixture: Cream the eggs, butter and sugar together.) išmaišyti, išsukti2) (to take the cream off: She creamed the milk.) nugriebti grietinę nuo3) ((with off) to select (the best): The best pupils will be creamed off for special training.) atrinkti•- creamy- creaminess
- cream of tartar -
37 distort
[di'sto:t]1) (to make or become twisted out of shape: Her face was distorted with pain; Metal distorts under stress.) iškreipti, iškraipyti2) (to make (sound) indistinct and unnatural: Her voice sounded distorted on the telephone.) iškraipyti, deformuoti• -
38 firing-squad
noun (a group of soldiers with guns, to execute a prisoner: He must face the firing-squad.) sušaudymo komanda -
39 fly
I plural - fliesnou)1) (a type of small winged insect.) musë2) (a fish hook made to look like a fly so that a fish will take it in its mouth: Which fly should I use to catch a trout?) muselë3) ((often in plural) a piece of material with buttons or a zip, especially at the front of trousers.) prarëþas, praskiepas•II past tense - flew; verb1) (to (make something) go through the air on wings etc or in an aeroplane: The pilot flew (the plane) across the sea.) skristi, skraidinti2) (to run away (from): He flew (the country).) (pa)bėgti, palikti3) ((of time) to pass quickly: The days flew past.) skrieti, lėkti•- flyer- flier
- flying saucer
- flying visit
- frequent flyer/flier
- flyleaf
- flyover
- fly in the face of
- fly into
- fly off the handle
- get off to a flying start
- let fly
- send someone/something flying
- send flying -
40 mobile
1) (able to move: The van supplying country districts with library books is called a mobile library; The old lady is no longer mobile - she has to stay in bed all day.) kilnojamas, paslankus2) (able to move or be moved quickly or easily: Most of the furniture is very light and mobile.) mobilus3) ((of someone's features or face) changing easily in expression.) kintamas, nepastovus•- mobility- mobilize
- mobilise
- mobilization
- mobilisation
- mobile phone
См. также в других словарях:
face to face with — (someone/something) with someone or something in front of you. As I was going into the restaurant, I came face to face with my teacher, who was just leaving. Suddenly, I was face to face with a panther … New idioms dictionary
face to face with — (something) having to deal with something unpleasant. Carol came face to face with the problem of getting proper care for her mother … New idioms dictionary
face to face with someone — face to face with (someone/something) with someone or something in front of you. As I was going into the restaurant, I came face to face with my teacher, who was just leaving. Suddenly, I was face to face with a panther … New idioms dictionary
face to face with something — face to face with (someone/something) with someone or something in front of you. As I was going into the restaurant, I came face to face with my teacher, who was just leaving. Suddenly, I was face to face with a panther … New idioms dictionary
face to face with something — face to face with (something) having to deal with something unpleasant. Carol came face to face with the problem of getting proper care for her mother … New idioms dictionary
face to face (with somebody) — ˌface to ˈface (with sb) idiom close to and looking at sb • The two have never met face to face before. • The room fell silent as she came face to face with the man who had tried to kill her. Main entry: ↑faceidiom … Useful english dictionary
face to face with something — ˌface to ˈface with sth idiom in a situation where you have to accept that sth is true and deal with it • She was at an early age brought face to face with the horrors of war. Main entry: ↑faceidiom … Useful english dictionary
bring someone face to face with something — bring (someone) face to face with (something) come face to face with (something) to see or experience a problem for the first time. They were brought face to face with the fact that their son was a drug addict when he took an overdose … New idioms dictionary
bring someone face to face with — bring (someone) face to face with (something) come face to face with (something) to see or experience a problem for the first time. They were brought face to face with the fact that their son was a drug addict when he took an overdose … New idioms dictionary
bring face to face with something — bring (someone) face to face with (something) come face to face with (something) to see or experience a problem for the first time. They were brought face to face with the fact that their son was a drug addict when he took an overdose … New idioms dictionary
bring face to face with — bring (someone) face to face with (something) come face to face with (something) to see or experience a problem for the first time. They were brought face to face with the fact that their son was a drug addict when he took an overdose … New idioms dictionary