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1 furrow
1. noun1) (a line cut into the earth by a plough: The farmer planted potatoes in the furrows.) (plog)får2) (a line in the skin of the face; a wrinkle: The furrows in her forehead made her look older.) dyp rynke, fure2. verb(to make furrows in: Her face was furrowed with worry.) fure, rynke, bli furet, pløye- furrowedfold--------fure--------rynkeIsubst. \/ˈfʌrəʊ\/1) (plog)fure2) ( i ansiktet) fure, rynke3) fure, renne, sporIIverb \/ˈfʌrəʊ\/1) pløye, fure2) fure, rynke3) bli furet, bli rynket4) pløye med plog -
2 plough
1. noun(a type of farm tool pulled through the top layer of the soil to turn it over.) plog2. verb1) (to turn over (the earth) with such a tool: The farmer was ploughing (in) a field.) pløye2) (to travel with difficulty, force a way etc: The ship ploughed through the rough sea; I've all this work to plough through.) pløye/slite seg gjennom3) (to crash: The lorry ploughed into the back of a bus.) brase inn ipløyeIsubst. \/plaʊ\/ eller plow1) plog2) pløyd mark3) (tømrerfag, også plough plane) nothøvel4) ( bokbinding) bokbinderhøvel5) (slang, universitet) strykPlough Monday forklaring: mandagen etter trettendedag julput one's hand to the plough (overført, bibelsk, Luk 6,62) legge hånden på plogen, gå i gang med en oppgaveIIverb \/plaʊ\/ eller plow1) pløye, note (tømrerfag), fure, lage furer2) la seg pløye3) ( slang) stryke (til eksamen)be ploughed ( slang) strykeplough a lonely furrow (britisk, litterært) arbeide alene, gå sin egen veiplough back ( om gress e.l.) pløye ned i jorden for å gjøre den mer næringsrik (handel, om fortjeneste) føre tilbake til firmaet, reinvestere i firmaetplough one's way bane seg vei, pløye seg frem, brøyte seg fremplough the sand slite forgjevesplough through ( overført) pløye (seg) gjennom
См. также в других словарях:
furrow — (n.) O.E. furh furrow, trench, from P.Gmc. *furkh (Cf. O.Fris. furch furrow; M.Du. vore, Du. voor; Ger. Furche furrow; O.N. for furrow, drainage ditch ), from PIE *perk (Cf. L. porca ridge between two furrows, O.I … Etymology dictionary
Furrow — Fur row, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Furrowed}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Furrowing}.] [From {Furrow}, n.; cf. AS. fyrian.] 1. To cut a furrow in; to make furrows in; to plow; as, to furrow the ground or sea. Shak. [1913 Webster] 2. To mark with channels or with … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
furrow — [fʉr′ō] n. [ME forwe < OE furh, akin to Ger furche (OHG furuh) < IE base * perk , to dig up, furrow > * porkos, L porca, furrow, porcus, pig (lit., digger)] 1. a narrow groove made in the ground by a plow 2. anything resembling this, as… … English World dictionary
Furrow — Fur row, n. [OE. forow, forgh, furgh, AS. furh; akin to D. voor, OHG. furuh, G. furche, Dan. fure, Sw. f?ra, Icel. for drain, L. porca ridge between two furrows.] 1. A trench in the earth made by, or as by, a plow. [1913 Webster] 2. Any trench,… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
furrow — ► NOUN 1) a long, narrow trench made in the ground by a plough. 2) a rut or groove. 3) a deep wrinkle on a person s face. ► VERB 1) make a furrow in. 2) mark or be marked with furrows. ORIGIN Old English … English terms dictionary
furrow — index split Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
furrow — [n] ditch channel, corrugation, crease, crinkle, crow’s foot*, dike, fluting, fold, groove, gutter, hollow, line, plica, rabbet, ridge, rimple, rivel, ruck, rut, seam, trench, wrinkle; concept 513 … New thesaurus
Furrow — (Roget s Thesaurus) < N PARAG:Furrow >N GRP: N 1 Sgm: N 1 furrow furrow groove rut sulcus scratch streak striae crack score incision slit Sgm: N 1 chamfer chamfer fluting … English dictionary for students
furrow — [[t]fʌ̱roʊ, AM fɜ͟ːr [/t]] furrows, furrowing, furrowed 1) N COUNT A furrow is a long, thin line in the earth which a farmer makes in order to plant seeds or to allow water to flow along. 2) N COUNT A furrow is a deep, fairly wide line in the… … English dictionary
furrow — I UK [ˈfʌrəʊ] / US [ˈfɜroʊ] noun [countable] Word forms furrow : singular furrow plural furrows 1) a line that a farmer digs in the soil with a plough where a crop will be planted 2) a) a deep line on the surface of something b) a deep line in… … English dictionary
furrow — 1. noun a) A trench cut in the soil, as when plowed in order to plant a crop. Dont walk across that deep furrow in the field. b) A deep wrinkle in the skin of the face, especially on someones forehead. When she was tired, a deep furrow appeared… … Wiktionary