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121 have nothing to do with
1) (to avoid completely: After he came out of prison, many of his friends would have nothing to do with him.) nebūt nekam kopējam ar; nebiedroties ar2) ((also be nothing to do with) to be something that a person ought not to be interested in: This letter has/is nothing to do with you.) neattiekties uz -
122 have nothing to do with
1) (to avoid completely: After he came out of prison, many of his friends would have nothing to do with him.) neturėti nieko bendra su2) ((also be nothing to do with) to be something that a person ought not to be interested in: This letter has/is nothing to do with you.) neturėti jokio ryšio -
123 have nothing to do with
har inget att göra med* * *1) (to avoid completely: After he came out of prison, many of his friends would have nothing to do with him.) inte ha någonting med [] att göra2) ((also be nothing to do with) to be something that a person ought not to be interested in: This letter has/is nothing to do with you.) inte ha någonting med [] att göra -
124 have nothing to do with
1) (to avoid completely: After he came out of prison, many of his friends would have nothing to do with him.) a evita, a nu avea de-a face cu2) ((also be nothing to do with) to be something that a person ought not to be interested in: This letter has/is nothing to do with you.) a nu avea nimic de-a face cu -
125 have nothing to do with
1) (to avoid completely: After he came out of prison, many of his friends would have nothing to do with him.) αποφεύγω2) ((also be nothing to do with) to be something that a person ought not to be interested in: This letter has/is nothing to do with you.) δεν έχω καμία σχέση -
126 have nothing to do with
1) (to avoid completely: After he came out of prison, many of his friends would have nothing to do with him.) vyhýbat se2) ((also be nothing to do with) to be something that a person ought not to be interested in: This letter has/is nothing to do with you.) netýkat se -
127 have nothing to do with
1) (to avoid completely: After he came out of prison, many of his friends would have nothing to do with him.) vyhýbať sa2) ((also be nothing to do with) to be something that a person ought not to be interested in: This letter has/is nothing to do with you.) netýkať sa -
128 have one's fling
expr infmlLet him have his fling now while he is young — Пускай погуляет, пока молодой
The new dictionary of modern spoken language > have one's fling
См. также в других словарях:
You Can Have Him — is a popular song written by Irving Berlin for the 1949 musical Miss Liberty , where it was introduced by Allyn McLerie and Mary McCarthy.Notable recordings*Ella Fitzgerald Ella Fitzgerald Sings the Irving Berlin Songbook (1958) … Wikipedia
have back — [phrasal verb] 1 have (something) back : to receive (something that is returned to you) If I lend you this book, can I have it back by next Tuesday? How I wish I could have my youth back (again)! 2 … Useful english dictionary
have — /hav/; unstressed /heuhv, euhv/; for 26 usually /haf/, v. and auxiliary v., pres. sing. 1st pers. have, 2nd have or (Archaic) hast, 3rd has or (Archaic) hath, pres. pl … Universalium
have — I [[t]həv, STRONG hæv[/t]] AUXILIARY VERB USES ♦ has, having, had (In spoken English, forms of have are often shortened, for example I have is shortened to I ve and has not is shortened to hasn t.) 1) AUX You use the forms have and has with a… … English dictionary
have — [c]/hæv / (say hav) verb (present singular 1 have, 2 have or, Archaic, hast has or, Archaic, hath, plural have …
have — [[t]hæv[/t]] unstressed [[t]həv, əv[/t]] for 26usually [[t]hæf[/t]] v. and aux. v. pres. sing. 1st and 2nd pers. have, 1) to possess; own; hold for use; contain: I have property. The work has an index[/ex] 2) to accept in some relation: He wants… … From formal English to slang
have — Verb. 1. To have sexual intercourse with. E.g. Did you have him last night or not ? 2. To get the better of. E.g. I ll have him for doing that to your sister , or Your new car has had a respray, it s all rusted underneath; I reckon you ve been… … English slang and colloquialisms
have — I. verb (had; having; has) Etymology: Middle English, from Old English habban; akin to Old High German habēn to have, and perhaps to hevan to lift more at heave Date: before 12th century transitive verb 1. a. to hold or maintain as a possession,… … New Collegiate Dictionary
have — [ weak əv, həv, strong hæv ] (3rd person singular has [ weak əz, həz, strong hæz ] ; past tense and past participle had [ weak əd, həd, strong hæd ] ) verb *** Have can be used in the following ways: as an auxiliary verb in perfect tenses of… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
Have Dreams, Will Travel — (recently changed to West Texas Lullaby) Have Dreams, Will Travel movie poster Directed by Brad Isaacs … Wikipedia
Have — (h[a^]v), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Had} (h[a^]d); p. pr. & vb. n. {Having}. Indic. present, I {have}, thou {hast}, he {has}; we, ye, they {have}.] [OE. haven, habben, AS. habben (imperf. h[ae]fde, p. p. geh[ae]fd); akin to OS. hebbian, D. hebben,… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English