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1 flop
flop 1. past tense, past participle - flopped; verb1) (to fall or sit down suddenly and heavily: She flopped into an armchair.) plaske, slenge seg ned i, ramle2) (to hang or swing about loosely: Her hair flopped over her face.) flagre, flakse3) ((of a theatrical production) to fail; to be unsuccessful: the play flopped.) gjøre fiasko, falle med et brak2. noun1) ((a) flopping movement.) plask, klask, dunk2) (a failure: The show was a complete flop.) fiasko•- floppy- floppy diskdeise--------slåIsubst. \/flɒp\/1) klasking, flaksing2) klask, dump3) ( hverdagslig) fiasko, flopp4) (amer., slang, på losjihus) seng, køyeIIverb \/flɒp\/1) henge og slenge, daske2) plaske3) plumpe, dumpe ned (i en stol)4) ( hverdagslig) gjøre fiasko, mislykkes5) (amer., slang) losjere, sove6) ( hverdagslig) flakse (med vingene)flop down dumpe ned, falle ned, slenge seg nedflop over (amer., overført) slå om, endre syn, gå over, bytte sideIIIadv. \/flɒp\/pladask, bumsIVinterj. \/flɒp\/bums, klask
См. также в других словарях:
flop — [flɒp ǁ flɑːp] verb flopped PTandPP flopping PRESPART [intransitive] if a product or an attempt to do something flops, it fails completely: • A £16 million rights issue in the company flopped yesterday with only 2.4 % of the 151 million shares on … Financial and business terms
flop´pi|ness — flop|py «FLOP ee», adjective, pi|er, pi|est, noun, plural pies. Informal. –adj. tending to flop; flopping: »a floppy hat. –n. = floppy disk. (Cf. ↑floppy disk) –flop´pi|ly … Useful english dictionary
flop´pi|ly — flop|py «FLOP ee», adjective, pi|er, pi|est, noun, plural pies. Informal. –adj. tending to flop; flopping: »a floppy hat. –n. = floppy disk. (Cf. ↑floppy disk) –flop´pi|ly … Useful english dictionary
flop|py — «FLOP ee», adjective, pi|er, pi|est, noun, plural pies. Informal. –adj. tending to flop; flopping: »a floppy hat. –n. = floppy disk. (Cf. ↑floppy disk) –flop´pi|ly … Useful english dictionary
flop — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ big, resounding, spectacular ▪ The show was the biggest flop in TV history. ▪ complete, total ▪ expensive … Collocations dictionary
flop|house — «FLOP HOWS», noun. U.S. a cheap, rundown hotel or rooming house for vagrant and homeless persons, usually in a very poor section of a city … Useful english dictionary
flop|o|ver — «FLOP OH vuhr», noun. U.S. 1. Informal. a turning over; turnover. 2. a television image that appears as a series of frames running down the screen, due to faulty reception … Useful english dictionary
flop|per — «FLOP uhr», noun. one that flops … Useful english dictionary
flop — (v.) c.1600, probably a variant of FLAP (Cf. flap) with a duller, heavier sound. Sense of fall or drop heavily is 1836, that of collapse, fail is 1919; though the figurative noun sense of a failure is recorded from 1893. Related: Flopped;… … Etymology dictionary
flop — ► VERB (flopped, flopping) 1) hang or swing loosely. 2) sit or lie down heavily and clumsily. 3) informal fail totally. ► NOUN 1) a heavy and clumsy fall. 2) informal a total failure … English terms dictionary
flop sweat — noun Date: 1953 nervous sweat (as of a performer) caused especially by the fear of failing … New Collegiate Dictionary