-
1 honour
['onə] 1. noun1) (respect for truth, honesty etc: a man of honour.) garbingumas2) ((the keeping or increasing of) a person's, country's etc good reputation: We must fight for the honour of our country.) garbė3) (fame; glory: He won honour on the field of battle.) garbė, šlovė4) (respect: This ceremony is being held in honour of those who died in the war.) pagarba5) (something which a person feels to be a reason for pride etc: It is a great honour to be asked to address this meeting.) garbė6) (a title, degree etc given to a person as a mark of respect for his services, work, ability etc: He has received many honours for his research into cancer.) apdovanojimas7) ((with capital: with His, Your etc) a title of respect used when talking to or about judges, mayors etc: My client wishes to plead guilty, Your Honour.) Prakilnybė2. verb1) (to show great respect to (a person, thing etc): We should honour the Queen.) gerbti2) (to do, say etc something which is a reason for pride, satisfaction etc to: Will you honour us with your presence at the meeting?) suteikti garbę, pagerbti3) (to give (someone) a title, degree etc as a mark of respect for his ability etc: He was honoured for his work with the mentally handicapped.) apdovanoti4) (to fulfil (a promise etc): We'll honour our agreement.) išpildyti, įvykdyti•- honorary- honourable
- honours
- in honour bound
- honour bound
- on one's honour
- word of honour
См. также в других словарях:
give — [c]/gɪv / (say giv) verb (gave, given, giving) –verb (t) 1. to deliver freely; bestow; hand over: to give someone a present. 2. to deliver to another in exchange for something; pay. 3. to pass over to: give me that book, please. 4. to grant… …
satisfaction — sat|is|fac|tion W3S3 [ˌsætısˈfækʃən] n 1.) [U and C] a feeling of happiness or pleasure because you have achieved something or got what you wanted ≠ ↑dissatisfaction ▪ She got great satisfaction from helping people to learn. ▪ a task which… … Dictionary of contemporary English
satisfaction */*/ — UK [ˌsætɪsˈfækʃ(ə)n] / US noun Word forms satisfaction : singular satisfaction plural satisfactions 1) a) [uncountable] the feeling of pleasure that you get when you achieve or obtain something that you want satisfaction from: I get a lot of… … English dictionary
do someone reason — (obsolete) 1. To give someone the satisfaction of a duel 2. To drink without shirking • • • Main Entry: ↑reason … Useful english dictionary
Two-factor theory — For Schachter s two factor theory of emotion, see Two factor theory of emotion. The (also known as Herzberg s motivation hygiene theory and Dual Factor Theory) states that there are certain factors in the workplace that cause job satisfaction,… … Wikipedia
discharge — (1) The action of releasing a lien or the document in which the creditor relinquishes a lien. Also known as a satisfaction, a release, a reconveyance, or an extinguishment. However, release tends to be used in connection with both real and… … Financial and business terms
compensate — com·pen·sate / käm pən ˌsāt, ˌpen / vt sat·ed, sat·ing: to make an appropriate and usu. counterbalancing payment to compensate the victims for their injuries adequately compensated for her work com·pen·sa·to·ry /kəm pen sə ˌtōr ē/ adj … Law dictionary
revenge — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) n. &v. See retaliation. II (Roget s IV) n. 1. [The act of returning an injury] Syn. vengeance, requital, reprisal, getting even, measure for measure, an eye for an eye, blow for blow, tit for tat,… … English dictionary for students
run for one's money — {n. phr.} 1. A good fight; a hard struggle. Usually used with give or get . * /Our team didn t win the game, but they gave the other team a run for their money./ 2. Satisfaction; interest; excitement. Usually used with give or get . * /People… … Dictionary of American idioms
run for one's money — {n. phr.} 1. A good fight; a hard struggle. Usually used with give or get . * /Our team didn t win the game, but they gave the other team a run for their money./ 2. Satisfaction; interest; excitement. Usually used with give or get . * /People… … Dictionary of American idioms
hit — [c]/hɪt / (say hit) verb (hit, hitting) –verb (t) 1. to deal a blow or stroke; bring forcibly into collision. 2. to come against with an impact or collision, as a missile, a flying fragment, a falling body, or the like does. 3. to reach with a… …