-
1 foul play
(a criminal act, especially involving murder: A man has been found dead and the police suspect foul play.) forbrytelse, mordsubst.1) forbrytelse2) lureri, falskt spill -
2 foul
1. adjective1) ((especially of smell or taste) causing disgust: a foul smell.) illeluktende, stinkende2) (very unpleasant; nasty: a foul mess.) ekkel, motbydelig2. noun(an action etc which breaks the rules of a game: The other team committed a foul.) ureglementert spill, straffespark, juks3. verb1) (to break the rules of a game (against): He fouled his opponent.) bryte spillereglene2) (to make dirty, especially with faeces: Dogs often foul the pavement.) grise/skitne til•heslig--------motbydelig--------skitten--------stygg--------ubehagelig--------vulgærIsubst. \/faʊl\/1) ( sport e.l.) ikke tillatt spill, fusk, feil ball (baseball)2) ( seiling og fisking) kollisjon, sammenfiltring3) noe som er fælt, noe som er galt, noe som er ufyselig4) fotsykdom hos dyrcommit a foul ( sport) bryte en regelIIverb \/faʊl\/1) skitne til, forurense2) ( om dyr) skitne til med avføring3) vanære(s), besudle(s), bringe skam over4) tette til, tette seg, blokkere(s)5) ( sjøfart) kollidere med, komme i veien for6) ( sjøfart) floke (seg) til, sette seg fast7) ( sport) spille galt, bryte reglenefoul oneself gjøre i buksafoul one's own nest se ➢ nest, 1foul up ( hverdagslig) feile, tabbe seg ut, drite seg utIIIadj. \/faʊl\/1) ( om lukt og smak) avskyelig, fæl, ekkel2) ( om humør e.l.) dårlig, elendig3) moralsk avskyelig, skjendig4) ( sport) regelstridig, ugyldig, utenfor, gal, uærlighan kastet ballen utenfor \/ han kastet ballen galt5) (om vær, vei, sjø e.l.) vanskelig, farlig6) tilskitnet, forurenset7) tilstoppet, tilgrodd8) ( om mat) råtten9) ( om manuskript e.l.) full av feil, full av rettelserfall\/run foul of se ➢ fallfoul dealings se ➢ dealingfoul means se ➢ meansfoul papers se ➢ paperfoul weather se ➢ weatherhave a foul mouth se ➢ mouthIVadv. \/faʊl\/feil, ureglementert, på uærlig vis -
3 fair
I feə adjective1) (light-coloured; with light-coloured hair and skin: fair hair; Scandinavian people are often fair.) lys, blond; skjær2) (just; not favouring one side: a fair test.) rettferdig, rettskaffen3) ((of weather) fine; without rain: a fair afternoon.) pen; lettskyet4) (quite good; neither bad nor good: Her work is only fair.) noenlunde, middels5) (quite big, long etc: a fair size.) anselig, temmelig (stor)6) (beautiful: a fair maiden.) pen, fager, skjønn•- fairness- fairly
- fair play II feə noun1) (a collection of entertainments that travels from town to town: She won a large doll at the fair.) marked, tivoli2) (a large market held at fixed times: A fair is held here every spring.) marked, basar3) (an exhibition of goods from different countries, firms etc: a trade fair.) messe, utstillingfager--------fin--------messe--------rettferdig--------rimelig--------skjønnIsubst. \/feə\/1) marked2) ( handel) messe, varemesse3) ( også funfair) tivoli, fornøyelsespark4) utstillingIIsubst. \/feə\/( gammeldags) vakker dameIIIverb \/feə\/1) jevne, gjøre jevn, gi en jevn form2) ( om vær) bli pent, klarneIVadj. \/feə\/1) rettferdig, rettskaffen, real, fair2) ærlig, renhårig, hederlig3) ( sport) reglementert, fair4) skjellig, rimelig5) temmelig god, temmelig stor, ganske stor, anseelig, ganske god, tilfredsstillende6) hyggelig, rimelig7) ( meteorologi) lettskyetdet blir lettskyet vær i dag \/ det blir oppholdsvær i dag8) lovende, god, gunstig9) lys, blond, skjær10) smigrende, fager, vakker, som låter bra11) ren, tydelig, leselig• can you write a fair copy of this?12) ren, plettfri13) (gammeldags, poetisk) fager, skjønn, vakker14) fri, åpen, uhindret15) jevn, ren16) markeds-, messe-17) (austr., newzealandsk) fullstendig, ubestrideligall's fair in love and war i krig og kjærlighet er alt tillattfair and square åpent og ærligfair average quality (handel, forkortes f.a.q.) gjennomsnittskvalitetfair copy renskrift, renskrevet eksemplarfair dealing real behandling, ærlig opptredenfair enough det er greit, for all del, bra, greit nok, riktig nok, javel, la gå• fair enough, you can have itfor all del, du kan få den• it's a lot, fair enough, but...det er riktignok mye, men...fair impression rentrykkfair on rettferdig motfair's fair rett skal være rettfair to rettferdig motfair to middling ( hverdagslig) noenlunde, akseptabel, brukbarbe fair with somebody være ærlig mot noengive somebody a fair warning varsle noen i tide, forberede noen (på hva som skal komme)have one's fair share of something få sin rettmessige del av noeif that is a fair question om man får lov til å spørrebe in a fair way to succeed (være) på god vei til å lykkesthrough fair and foul i tykt og tynt, i gode og onde dagerto be fair for å være ærligVadv. \/feə\/1) realt, ærlig, hederlig, rettferdig, fairspille realt \/ spille ærlig spill2) tydelig, rent3) (dialekt, hverdagslig) fullstendig, aldelesfair (and square) ( hverdagslig) rett, direkte( hverdagslig) åpent (og ærlig), rett og rimelig
См. также в других словарях:
foul play — {n.} Treachery; a criminal act (such as murder). * /After they discovered the dead body, the police suspected foul play./ * / She must have met with foul play, the chief inspector said when they couldn t find the 12 year old girl who had… … Dictionary of American idioms
foul play — {n.} Treachery; a criminal act (such as murder). * /After they discovered the dead body, the police suspected foul play./ * / She must have met with foul play, the chief inspector said when they couldn t find the 12 year old girl who had… … Dictionary of American idioms
foul play — n [U] 1.) if the police think someone s death was caused by foul play, they think that person was murdered ▪ The police said they had no reason to suspect foul play . ▪ Detectives have not ruled out foul play . 2.) an action that is dishonest,… … Dictionary of contemporary English
Foul play — may refer to:*Foul play, a synonym for crime * Foul Play , a film *Foul (sports), an unfair or illegal sports act … Wikipedia
foul play — noun uncount 1. ) LEGAL violence or criminal actions that cause someone s death: The police had no reason to suspect foul play. 2. ) behavior that is not fair or honest or does not keep to accepted rules … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
foul play — If the police suspect foul play, they think a crime was committed … The small dictionary of idiomes
foul play — ► NOUN 1) unfair play in a game or sport. 2) criminal or violent activity, especially murder … English terms dictionary
foul play — n. 1. unfair play; action that breaks the rules of the game 2. treacherous action or violence; esp., murder … English World dictionary
foul play — index collusion, frame up, grievance, inequity, knavery, machination, mischief, misdoing, pettifoggery … Law dictionary
foul play — foul′ play′ n. violent mischief, esp. murder • Etymology: 1600–10 … From formal English to slang
foul play — [n] treacherous action bad deed, corruption, crime, cruel act, dirty trick, dirty work, felony, fraud, funny business, lawbreaking, murder, violence, wrong; concept 645 … New thesaurus