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101 Frail
kaduka. -
102 frail
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103 frail job
n AmE sl -
104 frail casting
Большой англо-русский и русско-английский словарь > frail casting
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105 frail constitution
хрупкое телосложениеБольшой англо-русский и русско-английский словарь > frail constitution
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106 frail casting
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107 frail casting
Техника: хрупкая отливка -
108 frail eel
Негритянский жаргон: красивая девочка, красивая девушка -
109 frail elderly
Медицина: ослабленные пожилые -
110 frail elderly people
Социальное обеспечение: немощные пожилые люди -
111 frail hope
СМИ: слабая надежда -
112 frail job
1) Американизм: гулящая бабёнка, распутная бабёнка3) Табуированная лексика: совокупление с женщиной -
113 frail patient
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114 frail sex
Общая лексика: слабый пол -
115 frail, fragile
Общая лексика: утлый -
116 frail constitution
хрупкое телосложениеАнгло-русский большой универсальный переводческий словарь > frail constitution
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117 frail hopes
תקוות קלושות* * *◙ תושולק תווקת◄ -
118 frail economy
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119 frail; frangible
(mec) casant; fragil; nestabil -
120 frail hopes
brose hoop, zwakke hoop
См. также в других словарях:
frail — [freıl] adj [Date: 1300 1400; : Old French; Origin: fraile, from Latin fragilis, from frangere to break ] 1.) someone who is frail is weak and thin because they are old or ill ▪ frail elderly people ▪ her frail health frail body/physique… … Dictionary of contemporary English
frail — frail, a. [Compar. {frailer} (fr[=a]l [ e]r); superl. {frailest}.] [OE. frele, freile, OF. fraile, frele, F. fr[^e]le, fr. L. fragilis. See {Fragile}.] 1. Easily broken; fragile; not firm or durable; liable to fail and perish; easily destroyed;… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
frail — [ freıl ] adjective * 1. ) physically weak and not very healthy: He is frail, but still manages to walk with a cane. 2. ) not strong and therefore likely to be damaged or destroyed: a garden with a frail wooden fence around it attempts to rebuild … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
frail — frail·ly; frail·ness; frail·ty; frail; … English syllables
frail — (fr[=a]l), n. [OE. fraiel, fraile, OF. fraiel, freel, frael, fr. LL. fraellum.] A basket made of rushes, used chiefly for containing figs and raisins. [1913 Webster] 2. The quantity of raisins about thirty two, fifty six, or seventy five pounds,… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
frail — (adj.) mid 14c., morally weak, from O.Fr. fraile weak, frail, sickly, infirm (Mod.Fr. frêle), from L. fragilis easily broken (see FRAGILITY (Cf. fragility)). Sense of liable to break is first recorded in English late 14c. The U.S. slang noun… … Etymology dictionary
frail|ty — «FRAYL tee», noun, plural ties. 1. the condition of being frail; weakness: »a sick person s physical frailty. The works of man inherit…their author s frailty and return to dust (William Cowper). 2. moral weakness; liability to yield to temptation … Useful english dictionary
frail — index imperfect, insecure, insubstantial, nonsubstantial (not sturdy), powerless Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
frail — fragile, *weak, feeble, infirm, decrepit Analogous words: slight, slender, tenuous, *thin, slim: puny, *petty: flimsy, sleazy (see LIMP): *powerless, impotent Antonyms: robust Contrasted words: * … New Dictionary of Synonyms
frail — [adj] breakable, weak brittle, dainty, decrepit, delicate, feeble, fishy, flimsy, fracturable, fragile, frangible, infirm, insubstantial, puny, sad, shatterable, shattery, sickly, slender, slight, slim, tender, tenuous, thin, unsound,… … New thesaurus
frail — ► ADJECTIVE 1) weak and delicate. 2) easily damaged or broken. DERIVATIVES frailly adverb frailness noun. ORIGIN Old French fraile, from Latin fragilis fragile … English terms dictionary