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1 Köder
* * *der Köderbait* * *Kö|der ['køːdɐ]m -s, -bait; (fig auch) lure* * *der1) (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.) bait2) (anything intended to lead someone or something into a trap: The policewoman acted as a decoy when the police were trying to catch the murderer.) decoy* * *Kö·der<-s, ->[ˈkø:dɐ]m bait; (Lockvogel) lureeinen \Köder auslegen to put down baiteinen \Köder anbeißen to take the bait* * *der; Köders, Köder: bait; (fig.) bait; lureeinen/mehrere Köder auslegen — put out bait/a number of baits
* * *auf den Köder anbeißen fig swallow the bait* * *der; Köders, Köder: bait; (fig.) bait; lureeinen/mehrere Köder auslegen — put out bait/a number of baits
* * *bait n.lure n. -
2 Köderfisch
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3 Angel
f; -, -n fishing rod (Am. auch pole); ( einen Fisch) an der Angel haben have (a fish) hooked; auch be able to reel (a fish) in; an die Angel gehen Fisch: swallow the bait; fig. Person: fall for ( oder swallow) the line; fall for the hook, line and sinker—f; -, -n1. von Tür: hinge; (etw.) aus den Angeln heben lift (s.th.) out of its hinges, unhinge (s.th.); fig. revolutionize (s.th.) (completely); Tür* * *die Angel(Fischfang) fishing rod; fishing pole; rod;(Türscharnier) hinge* * *Ạn|gel ['aŋl]f -, -n1) (= Türangel, Fensterangel) hingeetw aus den Angeln heben (lit) — to lift sth off its hinges; (fig) to revolutionize sth completely
2) (= Fischfanggerät) (fishing) rod and line (Brit), fishing pole (US); (zum Schwimmenlernen) swimming harnessjdm an die Angel gehen (fig) — to fall for or swallow sb's line
* * *An·gel<-, -n>[ˈaŋl̩]f2. (Türangel) hinge3.▶ etw aus den \Angeln heben (fam) to revolutionize sth completely; (etw umkrempeln) to turn sth upside down* * *die; Angel, Angeln1) fishing rod; rod and line2) (TürAngel, FensterAngel usw.) hingeetwas aus den Angeln heben — lift something off its hinges; (fig.) turn something upside down
* * *Angel1 f; -, -n fishing rod (US auch pole);an die Angel gehen Fisch: swallow the bait; fig Person: fall for ( oder swallow) the line; fall for the hook, line and sinkerAngel2 f; -, -n1. von Tür: hinge;(etwas) aus den Angeln heben lift (sth) out of its hinges, unhinge (sth); fig revolutionize (sth) (completely); → Tür* * *die; Angel, Angeln1) fishing rod; rod and line2) (TürAngel, FensterAngel usw.) hingeetwas aus den Angeln heben — lift something off its hinges; (fig.) turn something upside down
* * *-n f.fishing pole (US) n.fishing rod (UK) n. -
4 anbeißen
(unreg., trennb., hat -ge-)II v/i bite; auch fig. take the bait; du siehst ja zum Anbeißen aus umg. you look good enough to eat* * *to swallow the bait; to bite; to bite into* * *ạn|bei|ßen sep1. vi(Fisch) to bite; (fig) to take the bait2. vtApfel etc to bite into* * *(the nibble of a fish on the end of one's line: I've been fishing for hours without a bite.) bite* * *an|bei·ßenI. vi1. (den Köder beißen) to take [or nibble at] the baitII. vt▪ etw \anbeißen to take a bite of [or bite into] sth* * *1.unregelmäßiges transitives Verb bite into; take a bite of2.er hat die Banane nur angebissen — he only took one bite of the banana
unregelmäßiges intransitives Verb (auch fig. ugs.) bitebei ihr hat noch keiner angebissen — (fig. ugs.) she hasn't managed to hook anybody yet
* * *anbeißen (irr, trennb, hat -ge-)A. v/t bite into;ein angebissenes Brot a half-eaten piece of breadB. v/i bite; auch fig take the bait;du siehst ja zum Anbeißen aus umg you look good enough to eat* * *1.unregelmäßiges transitives Verb bite into; take a bite of2.unregelmäßiges intransitives Verb (auch fig. ugs.) bitebei ihr hat noch keiner angebissen — (fig. ugs.) she hasn't managed to hook anybody yet
* * *v.to bite into expr. -
5 ködern
v/t bait; fig. lure, entice* * *to lure; to decoy; to bait; to attract* * *kö|dern ['køːdɐn]vt (lit)to lure; (fig) to tempt, to enticeer will dich mit diesen Versprechungen nur kö́dern — these promises of his are only a bait (to lure you)
jdn zu kö́dern versuchen — to woo sb
jdn für etw kö́dern — to rope sb into sth (inf)
sich von jdm/etw nicht kö́dern lassen — not to be tempted by sb/sth
* * *kö·dern[ˈkø:dɐn]vt1. (verlocken)2. (anlocken)▪ Fische \ködern to lure fish* * *transitives Verb luresich von jemandem/etwas nicht ködern lassen — (fig. ugs.) not be tempted by somebody's offer/by something
* * ** * *transitives Verb luresich von jemandem/etwas nicht ködern lassen — (fig. ugs.) not be tempted by somebody's offer/by something
* * *v.to decoy v.to lure v. -
6 beißen
to bite* * *bei|ßen ['baisn] pret bi\#ss [bɪs] ptp gebi\#ssen [gə'bɪsn]1. vtito bite; (= brennen Geschmack, Geruch, Schmerzen) to sting; (= kauen) to chewin den Apfel béíßen — to bite into the apple, to take a bite out of the apple
ich kann dieses Brot nicht béíßen — this bread is too hard for me
der Hund hat mich or mir ins Bein gebissen — the dog has bitten my leg or me in the leg
der Rauch/Wind beißt in den Augen/mich in die Augen (inf) — the smoke/wind makes one's/my eyes sting
er wird dich schon nicht béíßen (fig) — he won't eat or bite you
zu béíßen haben (fig) — to have sth to chew over (Brit) or on
See:→ Gras2. vr(Farben) to clashauf die Zunge/Lippen béíßen — to bite one's tongue/lips
béíßen — to kick oneself (inf)
* * *(to sting: Iodine nips when it is put on a cut.) nip* * *bei·ßen< biss, gebissen>[ˈbaisn̩]I. vter wird dich schon nicht \beißen! (fig) he won't bite youdas Brot ist so hart, dass man es kaum mehr \beißen kann! this bread is so hard that you can hardly bite into itetwas/nichts zu \beißen haben (fam) to have something/nothing to eat, to get one's teeth around hum famII. viin einen Apfel \beißen to bite into [or take a bite out of] an apple; (schnappen)▪ nach jdm/etw \beißen to bite [or snap] at sb/sth2. (brennend sein)in den Augen \beißen to make one's eyes sting [or water3. (anbeißen) to rise to the baitdie Fische wollen heute nicht \beißen the fish aren't biting today4.III. vr1. (mit den Zähnen)2. (unverträglich sein)* * *1.unregelmäßiges transitives, intransitives Verb1) bite; (kauen) chewin etwas (Akk.) beißen — bite into something
ich habe mich od. mir auf die Zunge/in die Lippe gebissen — I've bitten my tongue/lip
der Hund hat mir od. mich ins Bein gebissen — the dog bit me in the leg
nichts/nicht viel zu beißen haben — (fig.) have nothing/not have much to eat
2) (ätzen) sting2.in die od. in den Augen beißen — sting one's eyes; make one's eyes sting
* * *beißen; beißt, biss, hat gebissenA. v/t auch Insekt: bite;jemanden ins Bein/in den Finger beißen bite sb’s leg/finger;ein Loch in etwas beißen bite a hole into sth, take a bite out of sth;das kann man ja kaum beißen! it’s as hard as rock, you can hardly get your teeth into it;nichts zu beißen haben umg not have a bite to eat;B. v/i1. auch Insekt und Fisch: bite;in etwas beißen bite (into) sth;sie biss fest in den Apfel she bit hard into the apple;auf etwas beißen bite on sth;nach jemandem/etwas beißen snap at sb/sth; Tier:wild um sich beißen snap wildly;an der Frage werden wir noch zu beißen haben umg that question will give us something to chew on;an dem Test hatte ich (schwer) zu beißen umg I struggled (hard) with the test; → Apfel, Granit, GrasC. v/r1. bite o.s.;2. fig Farben, Töne etc: clash* * *1.unregelmäßiges transitives, intransitives Verb1) bite; (kauen) chewin etwas (Akk.) beißen — bite into something
ich habe mich od. mir auf die Zunge/in die Lippe gebissen — I've bitten my tongue/lip
der Hund hat mir od. mich ins Bein gebissen — the dog bit me in the leg
nichts/nicht viel zu beißen haben — (fig.) have nothing/not have much to eat
2) (ätzen) sting2.in die od. in den Augen beißen — sting one's eyes; make one's eyes sting
* * *-ereien n.bite n. -
7 beißen
bei·ßen <biss, gebissen> [ʼbaisn̩]vtsich \beißen to bite each other [or one another];er wird dich schon nicht \beißen! ( fig) he won't bite you;das Brot ist so hart, dass man es kaum mehr \beißen kann! this bread is so hard that you can hardly bite into it;etwas/nichts zu \beißen haben ( fam) to have something/nothing to eat, to get one's teeth around ( hum) ( fam)vi1) ( mit den Zähnen zupacken) to bite;in einen Apfel \beißen to bite into [or take a bite out of] an apple2) ( schnappen)3) ( brennend sein)in den Augen \beißen to make one's eyes sting [or water];4) (an\beißen) to rise to the bait;die Fische wollen heute nicht \beißen the fish aren't biting todayWENDUNGEN:vr1) ( mit den Zähnen)2) ( unverträglich sein)sich [mit etw] \beißen to clash [with sth] -
8 Mit Speck fängt man Mäuse.
Good bait catches fine fish. -
9 Nägel mit Köpfen machen
См. также в других словарях:
bait — [bāt] vt. [ME baiten < ON beita < Gmc * baitian, caus. of * bitan: for base see BITE] 1. a) to set attacking dogs against [people formerly baited chained bears for sport] b) to attack as such dogs do 2. to torment or harass with unprovoked … English World dictionary
bait — 1 noun (singular, uncountable) 1 food used to attract fish, animals, or birds so that you can catch them: Worms make excellent fish bait. | take the bait (=eat it and be caught) 2 something used to make someone do something, buy something etc:… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
bait — baiter, n. /bayt/, n. 1. food, or some substitute, used as a lure in fishing, trapping, etc. 2. a poisoned lure used in exterminating pests. 3. an allurement; enticement: Employees were lured with the bait of annual bonuses. 4. an object for… … Universalium
bait — [[t]beɪt[/t]] n. 1) food, or some substitute, used as a lure in fishing, trapping, etc 2) a poisoned lure used in exterminating pests 3) an allurement; enticement 4) spo to prepare (a hook or trap) with bait 5) to lure, as with bait 6) to set… … From formal English to slang
bait — [13] Etymologically, the verb bait means ‘cause to bite’. It comes from Old Norse beita, a causative version of bita ‘bite’ (related to English bite). This took two semantic paths in English. In its aggressive mode, it meant literally ‘set dogs… … The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins
bait — [13] Etymologically, the verb bait means ‘cause to bite’. It comes from Old Norse beita, a causative version of bita ‘bite’ (related to English bite). This took two semantic paths in English. In its aggressive mode, it meant literally ‘set dogs… … Word origins
fish fly — 1) a large, soft bodied insect found near streams with aquatic larvae called hellgramites used as fish bait (Corydalidae, Megaloptera) 2) the rove beetle (Staphylinus villosus) which swarmed in older fish processing sheds. Also called fish beetle … Dictionary of ichthyology
fish-fly — 1) a large, soft bodied insect found near streams with aquatic larvae called hellgramites used as fish bait (Corydalidae, Megaloptera) 2) the rove beetle (Staphylinus villosus) which swarmed in older fish processing sheds. Also called fish beetle … Dictionary of ichthyology
bait bug — noun : a small crustacean of the genus Emerita found burrowing in sandy beaches and used for fish bait … Useful english dictionary
Bait fish — are small fish caught for use as bait to attract large predatory fish, particularly game fish. Species used are typically those that are common and breed rapidly, making them easy to catch and in regular supply. Examples of marine bait fish are… … Wikipedia
Bait (luring substance) — Bait is any substance used to attract prey, e.g. in a mousetrap.FishingThe term is especially used with regard to catching fish. Traditionally, nightcrawlers, insects, and smaller fish have been used for this purpose. Fishermen have also begun… … Wikipedia