-
1 fold
I 1. fould verb1) (to double over (material, paper etc): She folded the paper in half.) brette, legge sammen, folde, false2) (to lay one on top of another: She folded her hands in her lap.) legge (hendene) oppå hverandre, folde (hendene) i bønn3) (to bring in (wings) close to the body: The bird folded its wings.) slå (vingene) sammen2. noun1) (a doubling of one layer of material, paper etc over another: Her dress hung in folds.) brett, fold2) (a mark made especially on paper etc by doing this; a crease: There was a fold in the page.) brett, fold•- folded- folder
- folding II fould noun(a place surrounded by a fence or wall, in which sheep are kept: a sheep fold.) kve, innhegningbrette--------fold--------folde--------lukke--------slutte--------stengeIsubst. \/fəʊld\/1) kve, innhegning2) flokk3) ( overført) flokk, menighetreturn to the fold ( også overført) være tilbake i flokken, komme hjem til sine egneIIsubst. \/fəʊld\/1) fold, lag, rynke2) brettekant3) (papir)brett4) ( om dal) sving, buktning, krok5) ( i fjell) senkning6) foldet gjenstand, foldedør7) ( geologi) fold8) ( teknikk) falsIIIverb \/fəʊld\/sette i kveIVverb \/fəʊld\/1) brette (sammen), folde (sammen)2) slå sammen, klappe sammen3) kunne brettes, kunne foldes4) kunne klappes sammen, kunne slås sammen5) pakke inn, innhylle, svøpe6) ta (i armene)7) (hverdagslig, om organisasjon eller foretagende) gå dukken8) ( om teaterstykke) tas av plakaten9) ( i poker) kaste seg11) ( hverdagslig) gi seg, gi etter, sluttefold back bøye (inn)fold in(to) ( matlaging) vende inn, røre inn, blande forsiktig innfold one's arm about\/around legge armen rundt, slå armen rundtfold one's arms legge armene i korsfold one's hands folde hendenefold someone in one's arms legge armene rundt noen, ta noen i armene sinefold someone to one's heart trykke noen til sitt brystfold up klappe sammen, slå sammen( om mennesker) klappe sammen, falle sammen, bryte sammen( overført) gå dukken, stenge, slutte( hverdagslig) kunne foldes sammen, kunne legges sammen -
2 wrap
ræp 1. past tense, past participle - wrapped; verb1) (to roll or fold (round something or someone): He wrapped his handkerchief round his bleeding finger.) vikle rundt2) (to cover by folding or winding something round: She wrapped the book (up) in brown paper; She wrapped the baby up in a warm shawl.) pakke inn, svøpe om2. noun(a warm covering to put over one's shoulders.) sjal, kappe, kofte- wrapper- wrapping
- wrapped up in
- wrap upinnpakning--------vikleIsubst. \/ræp\/1) sjal2) pledd, teppe3) innpakning4) badekåpekeep under wraps ( overført) tåkelegge, holde hemmelig, tilsløretake the wraps off ( overført) løfte på sløretwraps mørklegging, tåkelegging, tilsløringIIverb \/ræp\/1) dekke2) pakke inn3) innhylle4) ( overført) tilsløre, tildekke, skjulewrap around (ishockey, hverdagslig) gå kjøkkenveienwrapped up in something fordypet i noe, oppslukt av noeintimt knyttet til, uadskillelig fra( hverdagslig) innblandet iwrap something round\/around\/about svøpe noe omkring, pakke noe rundtwrap up svøpe inn pakke inn, emballere dekke over kle seg ( hverdagslig) avgjøre(amer., slang) krasje, smadre ( slang) hold kjeft, hold munn
См. также в других словарях:
fold one's arms — ► fold one s arms bring one s arms together and cross them over one s chest. Main Entry: ↑fold … English terms dictionary
fold one's arms — bring one s arms together and cross them over one s chest. → fold … English new terms dictionary
fold one's arms — bring one s arms together and cross them over one s chest … Useful english dictionary
fold — Ⅰ. fold [1] ► VERB 1) bend (something) over on itself so that one part of it covers another. 2) (often as adj. folding) be able to be folded into a flatter shape. 3) use (a soft or flexible material) to cover or wrap something in. 4)… … English terms dictionary
fold — fold1 foldable, adj. /fohld/, v.t. 1. to bend (cloth, paper, etc.) over upon itself. 2. to bring into a compact form by bending and laying parts together (often fol. by up): to fold up a map; to fold one s legs under oneself. 3. to bring (the… … Universalium
fold — I. /foʊld / (say fohld) verb (t) 1. to double or bend (cloth, paper, etc.) over upon itself. 2. to bring together (the arms, hands, legs, etc.) with one round another: to fold one s arms on one s chest. 3. to bring (the wings) close to the body,… …
fold — 1. v. & n. v. 1 tr. a bend or close (a flexible thing) over upon itself. b (foll. by back, over, down) bend a part of (a flexible thing) in the manner specified (fold down the flap). 2 intr. become or be able to be folded. 3 tr. (foll. by away,… … Useful english dictionary
fold — fold1 verb 1》 bend (something) over on itself so that one part of it covers another. ↘[often as adjective folding] be able to be folded into a flatter shape. ↘Geology cause (rock strata) to undergo bending or curvature. ↘Biochemistry… … English new terms dictionary
fold — fold1 [fəuld US fould] v ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(bend)¦ 2¦(smaller/neater)¦ 3¦(furniture etc)¦ 4 fold your arms 5¦(business)¦ 6¦(cover)¦ 7 fold somebody in your arms Phrasal verbs fold something<=>in ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ [: Old English; Origin … Dictionary of contemporary English
fold — 1 verb 1 BEND (T) to bend a piece of paper, cloth etc by laying or pressing one part over another: Fold the paper along the dotted line. | fold sth in two/half: The woman folded the tickets in two and tore them in half. 2 MAKE STH SMALLER/NEATER… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
fold — I [[t]foʊld[/t]] v. t. 1) to bend (cloth, paper, etc.) over upon itself 2) to bring into a compact form by bending and laying parts together: to fold up a map[/ex] 3) to bring together and intertwine or cross: He folded his arms on his chest[/ex] … From formal English to slang