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gizzard

  • 1 gizzard

    [gízəd]
    noun
    mlin (ptičji želodec); colloquially grlo, želodec
    to fret one's gizzard — beliti si glavo, jeziti se
    to stick in one's gizzard — biti komu neprijeten, ležati komu v želodcu

    English-Slovenian dictionary > gizzard

  • 2 fret

    [fret]
    past tense, past participle - fretted; verb
    (to worry or show anxiety or discontentment: She was always fretting about something or other.) biti v skrbeh
    * * *
    I [fret]
    1.
    transitive verb
    odrgniti, ostružiti, obrabiti; figuratively razjedati; vznemiriti, razjeziti; archaic poetically glodati, žvečiti, razjedati; jariti (vodo);
    2.
    intransitive verb
    razburjati, mučiti se, besneti, gristi se
    to fret into s.th.z vnemo se česa lotiti
    figuratively to fret awayrazjedati
    to fret and fume — besneti, rohneti
    II [fret]
    noun
    razburjenost, vznemirjenost; skrb, zaskrbljenost, nezadovoljstvo
    to put s.o. in a fret — razjeziti, razdražiti koga
    to be on the fret — biti razdražen, jezen, besneti
    III [fret]
    noun
    pravokoten vzorec; rezbarija; music rebro (na kitari, mandolini)
    IV [fret]
    transitive verb
    izrezljati, cizelirati

    English-Slovenian dictionary > fret

См. также в других словарях:

  • Gizzard — Giz zard, n. [F. g[ e]sier, L. gigeria, pl., the cooked entrails of poultry. Cf. {Gigerium}.] [1913 Webster] 1. (Anat.) The second, or true, muscular stomach of birds, in which the food is crushed and ground, after being softened in the glandular …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • gizzard — stomach of a bird, late 14c., from O.Fr. gisier (Mod.Fr. gésier) entrails, giblets (of a bird), probably from V.L. *gicerium, dissimilated from L. gigeria (neut. pl.) cooked entrails of a fowl, a delicacy in ancient Rome, from PIE *yekwr liver… …   Etymology dictionary

  • gizzard — ► NOUN 1) a muscular, thick walled part of a bird s stomach for grinding food, typically with grit. 2) a muscular stomach of some fish, insects, molluscs, and other invertebrates. ORIGIN Old French, from Latin gigeria cooked entrails of fowl …   English terms dictionary

  • gizzard — [giz′ərd] n. [ME giser (+ unhistoric d) < OFr gisier < L gigeria, pl., cooked entrails of poultry < ? an Iran base > Pers džigar, liver] 1. the second stomach of a bird: it has thick muscular walls and a tough lining for grinding food …   English World dictionary

  • Gizzard — The gizzard, also referred to as the ventriculus, gastric mill, and gigerium, is an organ in the digestive tract found in birds, reptiles, earthworms, some fish, and other creatures. This specialized stomach constructed of thick, muscular walls… …   Wikipedia

  • gizzard — /giz euhrd/, n. Zool. 1. Also called ventriculus. a thick walled, muscular pouch in the lower stomach of many birds and reptiles that grinds food, often with the aid of ingested stones or grit. 2. Also called gastric mill. a similar structure in… …   Universalium

  • gizzard — UK [ˈɡɪzə(r)d] / US [ˈɡɪzərd] noun [countable] Word forms gizzard : singular gizzard plural gizzards the stomach of a chicken or other bird …   English dictionary

  • gizzard —  1. Stomach.  2. fret one s gizzard Worry.  3. stick in one s gizzard Annoy one …   A concise dictionary of English slang

  • gizzard — noun Etymology: alteration of Middle English giser gizzard, liver, from Anglo French gesir, giser, from Latin gigeria (plural) giblets Date: 1565 1. a. the muscular enlargement of the alimentary canal of birds that has usually thick muscular… …   New Collegiate Dictionary

  • gizzard — n. [OF. gezier, gizzard] 1. A grinding chamber of various invertebrates. 2. (ANNELIDA: Oligochaeta) A muscular area of the digestive system between intestine and crop. 3. (ARTHROPODA) For Insecta and Crustacea, see proventriculus. 4. (BRYOZOA:… …   Dictionary of invertebrate zoology

  • gizzard — [14] Latin gigeria denoted the ‘cooked entrails of poultry’, something of a delicacy in ancient Rome (the word may have been borrowed from Persian jigar). This produced a Vulgar Latin *gicerium, which passed into Old French as giser. English… …   The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins

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