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21 bang
1. transitive verb1) knallen (ugs.); schlagen; zuknallen (ugs.), zuschlagen [Tür, Fenster, Deckel]bang one's head on or against the ceiling — mit dem Kopf an die Decke knallen (ugs.) od. schlagen
2. intransitive verbhe banged the nail in — er haute den Nagel rein (ugs.)
1) (strike)bang [against something] — [gegen etwas] schlagen od. (ugs.) knallen
2) (make sound of blow or explosion) knallen; [Trommeln:] dröhnen3. nounbang away at something — (shoot) auf etwas (Akk.) ballern (ugs.)
1) (blow) Schlag, der2) (noise) Knall, der4. adverbthe party went off with a bang — (fig.) die Party war eine Wucht (ugs.)
2) (explosively)go bang — [Gewehr, Feuerwerkskörper:] krachen
3)bang goes something — (fig.): (something ends suddenly) aus ist es mit etwas
bang went £50 — 50 Pfund waren weg
4)bang off — (coll.): (immediately) sofort
5) (coll.): (exactly) genauyou are bang on time — du bist pünktlich auf die Minute (ugs.)
* * *[bæŋ] 1. noun1) (a sudden loud noise: The door shut with a bang.) der Knall2) (a blow or knock: a bang on the head from a falling branch.) der Schlag2. verb1) (to close with a sudden loud noise: He banged the door.) zuknallen2) (to hit or strike violently, often making a loud noise: The child banged his drum; He banged the book down angrily on the table.) schlagen, knallen3) (to make a sudden loud noise: We could hear the fireworks banging in the distance.) krachen•- academic.ru/5314/banger">banger* * *[bæŋ]I. nto go off with a \bang gun, fireworks krachend [o mit einem Knall] losgehenthere was a loud \bang on the door jemand hämmerte gegen die Türa \bang on the head ein Schlag m auf den Kopf6.II. adv1. (precisely) genau, exakt\bang in the middle of the road/of dinner mitten auf der Straße/beim Essen\bang up-to-date topaktuell, hochaktuellto go \bang [mit einem lauten Knall] explodieren; balloon [laut] knallend zerplatzen3.III. interjIV. vi Krach machen; door, shutters knallen, schlagento \bang at the door an [o gegen] die Tür hämmern [o schlagenV. vt1. (hit)to \bang the door die Tür zuschlagento \bang one's fist on the table mit der Faust auf den Tisch hauento \bang the phone down den Hörer auf die Gabel knallento \bang a woman eine Frau bumsen [o vögeln] vulg4.* * *I [bŋ]1. nthere was a bang outside — draußen hat es geknallt
to go off with a bang — mit lautem Knall losgehen; ( inf
to get more bang for the buck or more bangs for your bucks (esp US) — etwas für sein Geld geboten kriegen (inf)
2) (= violent blow) Schlag mhe gave himself a bang on the shins — er hat sich (dat) die Schienbeine angeschlagen
to have a bang with sb — mit jdm bumsen (inf)
2. adv1)to go bang — knallen; (gun also) peng machen (inf); (balloon) zerplatzen, peng machen (inf)
his answer was bang on — seine Antwort war genau richtig
is that right? – bang on — stimmt das? – haargenau
bang up to date — auf dem neuesten Stand
they came bang up against fierce opposition —
the whole bang shoot (Brit) (people) — das ganze Zeug (inf) die ganze Bande (inf)
3. interjpeng; (of hammer) klopfbang goes my chance of promotion (inf) — und tschüs mit der Beförderung (inf), und das wars dann mit der Beförderung
bang go my dreams of fame and fortune (inf) — und das wars dann mit meinen Träumen von Ruhm und Reichtum (inf)
4. vt1) (= thump) schlagen, knallen (inf)he banged his fist on the table —
I'll bang your heads together if you don't shut up! (inf) — wenn ihr nicht ruhig seid, knallts (inf)
I felt like banging their heads together (inf) — ich hätte ihnen am liebsten ein paar links und rechts geknallt (inf)
to bang one's head etc on sth — sich (dat) den Kopf etc an etw (dat) anschlagen, mit dem Kopf etc gegen etw knallen (inf)
5. vi2)IIto bang on or at sth — gegen or an etw (acc) schlagen
n(US: fringe) Pony m, Ponyfransen plbangs — Ponyfrisur f
* * *bang1 [bæŋ]A s1. heftiger oder knallender Schlag:he gave the ball a bang er drosch den Ball weg2. Bums m umg, Krach m, Knall m:3. umga) Paukenschlag m, Sensation f:b) Schwung m, Elan mc) US (Nerven)Kitzel m, Spaß m:get a bang out of sth an einer Sache mächtig Spaß haben4. sl Schuss m (Heroin etc)5. vulg Nummer f (Geschlechtsverkehr):have a bang eine Nummer machen oder schiebenB v/t1. dröhnend schlagen, knallen mit, krachen lassen, eine Tür etc zuschlagen, zuknallen, einen Ball etc dreschen:bang one’s fist on the table mit der Faust auf den Tisch schlagen;he banged his thumb with the hammer er haute sich mit dem Hammer auf den Daumen;bang one’s head against a brick wall fig mit dem Kopf gegen die Wand rennen:bang off losknallen mit einem Gewehr etc, ein Musikstück (auf dem Klavier) herunterhämmern (beide umg);bang out umg einen Artikel etc (schnell) herunterschreiben, hinwerfen;bang the drum for sb (sth) fig für jemanden (etwas) die Trommel rühren;b) Br sl einbuchten3. umg obs vermöbeln umg, verprügelnC v/i1. knallen:a) krachenb) zuschlagen (Tür etc)c) ballern umg, schießen:bang away drauflosknallen umg ( → C 2);b) fig umg zufällig treffen;bang away at sich klemmen hinter (akk)D advgo bang explodieren2. umg bums umg, auf einmal:bang went the money bums war das Geld weg;bang in the eye peng ins Auge;bang in the middle of mitten in (akk)3. umg (ganz) genau:bang on time auf die Sekunde pünktlichE int peng!, bum(s)!bang2 [bæŋ]A s meist pl Pony m, Ponyfrisur fB v/t1. das Haar an der Stirn kurz abschneiden2. den Schwanz stutzen* * *1. transitive verb1) knallen (ugs.); schlagen; zuknallen (ugs.), zuschlagen [Tür, Fenster, Deckel]2. intransitive verbbang one's head on or against the ceiling — mit dem Kopf an die Decke knallen (ugs.) od. schlagen
1) (strike)bang [against something] — [gegen etwas] schlagen od. (ugs.) knallen
2) (make sound of blow or explosion) knallen; [Trommeln:] dröhnen3. nounbang away at something — (shoot) auf etwas (Akk.) ballern (ugs.)
1) (blow) Schlag, der2) (noise) Knall, der4. adverbthe party went off with a bang — (fig.) die Party war eine Wucht (ugs.)
1) (with impact) mit voller Wuchtgo bang — [Gewehr, Feuerwerkskörper:] krachen
3)bang goes something — (fig.): (something ends suddenly) aus ist es mit etwas
bang went £50 — 50 Pfund waren weg
4)bang off — (coll.): (immediately) sofort
5) (coll.): (exactly) genau* * *n.Knall -e m.Schlag -¨e m. v.knallen v.schlagen v.(§ p.,pp.: schlug, geschlagen) -
22 entrega
Del verbo entregar: ( conjugate entregar) \ \
entrega es: \ \3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) presente indicativo2ª persona singular (tú) imperativoMultiple Entries: entrega entregar
entrega sustantivo femenino 1 (de pedido, paquete, carta) delivery; ( de premio) presentation; la entrega de los documentos the handing over of the documents; el plazo para la entrega de solicitudes the deadline for handing in o (frml) submitting applications; servicio de entrega a domicilio delivery service 2 ( de revista) issue 3 ( dedicación) dedication, devotion; ( abandono) surrender
entregar ( conjugate entregar) verbo transitivo 1 ( llevar) ‹pedido/paquete/carta› to deliver 2◊ me entregó un cuestionario she gave me o handed me a questionnaire;no quiso entregármelo he refused to hand it over to me entregale algo a algn to present sb with sth ‹solicitud/impreso› to hand in, submit (frml) 3 ‹poder/control› to hand over ‹ rehén› to hand over entregarse verbo pronominal 1 ( dedicarse) entregase a algo/algn to devote oneself to sth/sb 2 entregase a algo/algn ‹al enemigo/a la policía› to give oneself up o surrender to sth/sbb) ( abandonarse):
entrega sustantivo femenino
1 (de un pedido) delivery (de un premio) presentation
2 (fascículo) issue
3 (dedicación) devotion
entregar verbo transitivo
1 (poner en poder de) to hand over
2 (unos papeles, trabajo, etc) to give in, hand in
3 Com to deliver ' entrega' also found in these entries: Spanish: facturación - reembolso - reparto - plazo - pronto English: allow - application - dedication - delivery - installment - instalment - presentation - surrender - cash - dead - deposit - down - first - give - home -
23 entregar
Multiple Entries: entregar entregar algo
entregar ( conjugate entregar) verbo transitivo 1 ( llevar) ‹pedido/paquete/carta› to deliver 2◊ me entregó un cuestionario she gave me o handed me a questionnaire;no quiso entregármelo he refused to hand it over to me entregarle algo a algn to present sb with sth ‹solicitud/impreso› to hand in, submit (frml) 3 ‹poder/control› to hand over ‹ rehén› to hand over entregarse verbo pronominal 1 ( dedicarse) entregarse a algo/algn to devote oneself to sth/sb 2 entregarse a algo/algn ‹al enemigo/a la policía› to give oneself up o surrender to sth/sbb) ( abandonarse):
entregar verbo transitivo
1 (poner en poder de) to hand over
2 (unos papeles, trabajo, etc) to give in, hand in
3 Com to deliver ' entregar' also found in these entries: Spanish: original - dar - desprender - pasar - presentar English: accord - commit - deliver - drop off - give in - hand - hand in - hand over - pass over - present - surrender - turn in - undelivered - give - put - serve - trade - turn -
24 to give someone up
to give someone upacabar, terminar um relacionamento amoroso. to give up 1 abandonar, parar de. he gave up smoking / ele parou de fumar. 2 entregar-se (para polícia). he gave himself up / ele entregou-se, apresentou-se. 3 desistir. to give way 1 retirar-se, recuar. 2 quebrar, ceder. 3 dar passagem. 4 ceder o lugar. to give way to 1 submeter-se a. 2 dar prioridade a. -
25 pat
[pæt] 1. noun1) (a light, gentle blow or touch, usually with the palm of the hand and showing affection: She gave the child a pat on the head.) lahen udarec2) ((of butter) a small piece; a lump.) kepica2. verb(to strike gently with the palm of the hand, usually as a sign of affection: He patted the horse's neck.) potrepljati3. adverb((often off pat) memorized, prepared and ready to be said: He had the answer (off) pat.) pripravljen* * *I [pæt]nountrepljanje; lahen udarec, tlesk; kepica (masla)II [pæt]1.transitive verbtrepljati; tleskati, tleskniti; trkati;2.intransitive verbploskati, trkati (on na)to pat on the back — pohvaliti, potrepljati po hrbtuIII [pæt]adjectivepripravljen, pripraven, pravšen, primerenIV [pæt]adverbravno prav, o pravem trenutkuto stand pat — biti neomajen, vztrajati pri svojem mnenju -
26 knock
1. transitive verb2) (make by striking) schlagenknock a hole in something — ein Loch in etwas (Akk.) schlagen
3) (drive by striking) schlagenknock somebody's brains out — jemandem den Schädel einschlagen
I'd like to knock their heads together — (lit.) ich könnte ihre Köpfe gegeneinander schlagen; (fig.): (reprove them) ich möchte ihnen mal gehörig die Leviten lesen
4)knock somebody on the head — jemandem eins über od. auf den Schädel geben
knock something on the head — (fig.): (put an end to) einer Sache (Dat.) ein Ende setzen
2. intransitive verbdon't knock it — halt dich zurück
2) (seek admittance) klopfen (at an + Akk.)3. noun1) (rap) Klopfen, dasthere was a knock on or at the door — es klopfte an der Tür
Phrasal Verbs:- academic.ru/41097/knock_about">knock about- knock up* * *[nok] 1. verb1) (to make a sharp noise by hitting or tapping, especially on a door etc to attract attention: Just then, someone knocked at the door.) klopfen2) (to cause to move, especially to fall, by hitting (often accidentally): She knocked a vase on to the floor while she was dusting.) herunterstoßen3) (to put into a certain state or position by hitting: He knocked the other man senseless.) schlagen4) ((often with against, on) to strike against or bump into: She knocked against the table and spilt his cup of coffee; I knocked my head on the car door.) stoßen2. noun1) (an act of knocking or striking: She gave two knocks on the door; He had a nasty bruise from a knock he had received playing football.) der Schlag2) (the sound made by a knock, especially on a door etc: Suddenly they heard a loud knock.) das Klopfen•- knocker- knock-kneed
- knock about/around
- knock back
- knock down
- knock off
- knock out
- knock over
- knock up
- get knocked up* * *[nɒk, AM nɑ:k]I. nto give a \knock [at [or on] the door] an der Tür klopfenthere was a \knock on the door es hat [an der Tür] geklopftcan you give me a \knock in the morning? könntest du morgen früh an meiner Tür klopfen?she heard a \knock sie hat es klopfen hörenhe received a nasty \knock on the head er bekam einen bösen Schlag auf den Kopfto be able to withstand \knocks stoßsicher seinthe table has had a few \knocks der Tisch hat schon ein paar Schrammen abbekommento be able to take a lot of \knocks viel einstecken könnenthe school of hard \knocks eine harte Schuleshe has learned everything in the school of hard \knocks sie ist [im Leben] durch eine harte Schule gegangenII. vi1. (strike noisily) klopfena rope \knocked against the side of the ship ein Seil schlug gegen die Schiffswandto \knock at the door/on the window an die Tür/ans Fenster klopfensb's knees are \knocking jdm schlottern die Knie fam2. (collide with) stoßen▪ to \knock into/against sth gegen etw stoßen, etw rammen▪ to \knock into sb mit jdm zusammenstoßento be \knocking on 40/50/60 auf die 40/50/60 zugehen5.▶ to \knock on wood AM, AUS dreimal auf Holz klopfenIII. vt1. (hit)he \knocked my arm er stieß gegen meinen ArmI \knocked my knee at the door ich habe mir mein Knie an der Tür angestoßenshe \knocked the glass off the table sie stieß gegen das Glas und es fiel vom Tisch2. (blow)the blow \knocked him flat der Schlag haute ihn umto \knock sb to the ground jdn zu Boden werfento \knock sb on the head jdm an den Kopf schlagento \knock sb's self-esteem jds Selbstbewusstsein anschlagen [o einen Knacks geben3. (drive, demolish)▪ to \knock sth out of sb jdm etw austreibensomeone should \knock some of the arrogance out of him jemand sollte ihn von seinem hohen Ross herunterholento \knock some [or a bit of] sense into sb jdn zur Vernunft bringento \knock the bottom out of sth etw zusammenbrechen lassento \knock a hole into the wall ein Loch in die Wand schlagento \knock a nail into the wall einen Nagel in die Wand schlagenthey \knocked two rooms into one sie haben die Wand zwischen zwei Zimmern eingerissen▪ to \knock sb/sth jdn/etw schlechtmachendon't \knock it till you've tried it mach es nicht schon runter, bevor du es überhaupt ausprobiert hast fam5.okay, son, go and \knock 'em dead! also los, Junge, geh und zeig's ihnen! fam▶ to \knock sth on the head BRIT, AUS (stop sth) etw dat ein Ende bereiten [o fam abblasen]; (complete sth) etw zu Ende bringenby midnight we were all tired and \knocked it on the head um Mitternacht waren wir alle total müde und haben Schluss gemacht▶ to \knock an plan/idea on the head BRIT, AUS einen Plan/Gedanken verwerfen▶ to \knock [the] spots off sb/sth BRIT jdn/etw in den Schatten stellen [o fam in die Tasche stecken]; SPORT jdn/etw um Längen schlagenIV. interj“\knock \knock” „klopf, klopf“* * *[nɒk]1. nto get a knock — einen Stoß/Schlag abbekommen
the car took a few knocks — mit dem Auto hat es ein paar Mal gebumst (inf)
2) (= noise) Klopfen nt no pl, Pochen nt no pl (liter); (in engine) Klopfen nt no pl, Klopfgeräusch ntto take a knock (self-confidence, pride etc) — erschüttert werden; (reputation) geschädigt werden; (person)
the company took a bit of a knock as a result of the tax changes — die Steuerreform hat der Firma einen Schlag versetzt
2. vt1) (= hit, strike) stoßen; (with hand, tool, racket etc) schlagen; one's knee, head etc anschlagen, anstoßen (on an +dat); (= nudge, jolt) stoßen gegen; (= collide with car, driver) rammento knock one's head/elbow etc — sich (dat) den Kopf/Ellbogen etc anschlagen or anstoßen
he knocked his foot against the table — er stieß mit dem Fuß gegen den Tisch
to knock sb on the head —
that knocked his idea on the head ( Brit inf ) — damit konnte er sich die Idee aus dem Kopf schlagen (inf)
I decided to knock it on the head ( Brit inf ) — ich beschloss, der Sache (dat) ein Ende zu machen
the plan wasn't working so we knocked it on the head ( Brit inf ) — der Plan klappte nicht, also ließen wir ihn fallen
to knock sb unconscious — jdn bewusstlos werden lassen; (person) jdn bewusstlos schlagen
to knock sb dead (fig inf) — jdn umhauen (inf)
we knocked the two rooms into one — wir verbanden die beiden Zimmer indem wir die Verbindungswand abrissen
to knock sb/sth out of the way — jdn/etw beiseitestoßen
he knocked it as he went past — er ist beim Vorbeigehen dagegengestoßen; (deliberately) er hat ihm/ihr etc beim Vorbeigehen einen Stoß versetzt or gegeben
watch you don't knock your glass off the table — pass auf, dass du dein Glas nicht vom Tisch stößt
he was knocked sideways by it (fig inf) — es haute ihn um (inf)
confidence in the legal system has been knocked sideways (inf) — das Vertrauen in das Rechtssystem hat schwer gelitten
if you haven't tried it, don't knock it — verurteile es doch nicht, wenn du es noch nie versucht hast
3. vito knock at or on the door — an die Tür klopfen, anklopfen
opportunity was or came knocking at his door —
he is knocking on the door of the England team — er wird als Anwärter für die englische Nationalmannschaft gehandelt
2) (= bump, collide) stoßen (into, against gegen)3)4. interjknock knock! — klopf, klopf
* * *A s1. a) Schlag m, Stoß m:he can take a knock or two er kann einen Puff vertragen umgb) fig (Tief)Schlag m:2. Klopfen n, Pochen n:give a double knock zweimal klopfen;open to sb’s knock auf jemandes Klopfen öffnen3. AUTO Klopfen n4. meist pl umg Kritik fB v/t1. schlagen, stoßen:knock to the ground zu Boden schlagen;a) bewusstlos schlagen,b) totschlagen;knock one’s head against sich den Kopf anschlagen an (dat);knock one’s head against a brick wall fig mit dem Kopf gegen die Wand rennen;knock sb into the middle of next week umg jemanden fertigmachen;knock some sense into sb jemandem den Kopf zurechtsetzen;he’s knocked £5 off the bill (for us) umg er hat (uns) 5 Pfund von der Rechnung nachgelassen; → cold A 12, head Bes Redew2. schlagen, klopfen:knock into shape in Form bringen3. umg heruntermachen umg, schlechtmachen, kritisieren4. umgb) jemanden schockenC v/i1. schlagen, pochen, klopfen:“please knock before entering” „bitte (an)klopfen“2. schlagen, prallen, stoßen ( alle:against, into gegen;on auf akk)4. TECHa) rattern, rütteln (Maschine)b) klopfen (Motor, Brennstoff)* * *1. transitive verb2) (make by striking) schlagenknock a hole in something — ein Loch in etwas (Akk.) schlagen
3) (drive by striking) schlagenI'd like to knock their heads together — (lit.) ich könnte ihre Köpfe gegeneinander schlagen; (fig.): (reprove them) ich möchte ihnen mal gehörig die Leviten lesen
4)knock somebody on the head — jemandem eins über od. auf den Schädel geben
2. intransitive verbknock something on the head — (fig.): (put an end to) einer Sache (Dat.) ein Ende setzen
2) (seek admittance) klopfen (at an + Akk.)3. noun1) (rap) Klopfen, dasthere was a knock on or at the door — es klopfte an der Tür
Phrasal Verbs:- knock up* * *n.Klopfen -reien n.Schlag -¨e m.Stoß ¨-e m. (at) v.klopfen (an) v.schlagen v.(§ p.,pp.: schlug, geschlagen)stoßen v.(§ p.,pp.: stieß, gestossen) -
27 give oneself over to
предаваться чему-либо, отдаваться целикомI gave myself over to dreams for a few minutes.
He gave himself over to grief.
Англо-русский словарь идиом и фразовых глаголов > give oneself over to
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28 give oneself away
расколоться, выдать себя чем-либо: — The thief gave himself away by spending this money, stupid log.— Этот вор выдал себя тем, что стал тратить деньги, вот придурок,— ухмыляясь, говорит комиссар, хоть в этом заслуга не его, а бдительного бухгалтера, позвонившего в полицию: он узнал банкноты по номерам.—Джон! Директор вызывает тебя на ковер за то, что ты ругнулся на последнем футбольном матче! —прыская от смеха, говорит Мик своему другу. Но тот лишь усмехается в ответ: — You again gave yourself away by giggling.— Ты опять выдан себя хихиканьем.English-Russian slang from the book M. Goldenkova "Caution, hot dog" > give oneself away
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29 give up
фраз. гл.1) оставить, отказаться; бросить (что-л.)She could not give up her canaries. — Она не могла оставить своих канареек.
I did want a holiday abroad, but we've had to give up the idea. — Я действительно хотел провести отпуск за границей, но нам пришлось отказаться от этой идеи.
It's hard to give up the drinking habit without help. — Без посторонней помощи трудно бросить пить.
Syn:2) сдаться, отказаться от дальнейших попытокDon't give up without even trying. — Не сдавайся, даже не попробовав.
3) отказаться (от кого-л.), поставить крест (на ком-л.)He is given up by the doctors. — Врачи от него отказались.
4) сдать, уступить (что-л. кому-л.)He gave himself up unhesitatingly to the guidance of (Pope) Innocent. — Он без колебаний отдал себя под покровительство (папы) Иннокентия.
We had to give up the castle to the enemy. — Нам пришлось сдать крепость неприятелю.
5) ( give up to) посвятить, предаться (чему-л.)The forenoons were given up to business. — Время до полудня было посвящено делам.
6) раскрывать, обнародовать, выдаватьWe do not give up the names of our contributors. — Мы не раскрываем имена наших спонсоров.
Syn:7) бросить (кого-л.)The woman gave up her lover to save her marriage. — Женщина порвала с любовником ради сохранения брака.
8) разг. перестать ждать (кого-л.)9) разг. перестать верить (в кого-л.), разочароваться (в ком-л.)They were alive, but they had given up on themselves and on the possibility of a future. (A. West) — Они были живы, но потеряли веру в себя и в своё будущее.
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30 clout
I n sl1)2) AmE3) AmEThe US had to exercise its diplomatic clout — Соединенным Штатам пришлось прибегнуть к дипломатическому нажиму
II vt slUse your clout as a customer and complain to the store manager — Ты как потребитель можешь оказать давление, пожаловавшись заведующему магазином
If I'd acted that way when I was his age, my old man would have clouted the hell out of me — Если бы я вел себя так в его годы, мой предок вышиб бы из меня душу
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31 shot
I n1) infml2) infmlHe was looking at one of the quickie Polaroid shots I'd had photographer take of the dead man's face — Он рассматривал один из моментальных снимков лица убитого, которые мне сделал фотограф на своем Полароиде
3) infmlAnother shot will be attempted at Cape Canaveral next week — Еще один запуск будет предпринят с Мыса Канаверал на следующей неделе
4) infmlHave a shot at this problem — А ну посмотрим, как ты решишь эту задачу
I don't think I can do it but I'll take a shot at it anyway — Не думаю, что у меня получится, но я все же попробую
5) infmlHere, have a shot of this stuff — На, выпей вот этого
I never take a shot while driving — Когда я за рулем, я никогда не пью
He stopped at every bar on the strip for a quick shot — Он останавливался у каждого придорожного бара, чтобы выпить
6) infmlIt's a five to one shot that she'll find out — Ставлю пять к одному, что она узнает об этом
7) AmE infmlKnown? Hell, he's a shot — Знают ли его? Еще бы, он большая шишка
8) slShe escaped when police allowed her to search for a pusher for a shot to calm her jittery nerves — Она исчезла, когда полиция отпустила ее на поиски торговца наркотиками, чтобы она могла уколоться и успокоить свои расшалившиеся нервы
Just one shot of this stuff and you're hooked for life — Стоит тебе лишь раз уколоться этой гадостью, и ты останешься наркоманом на всю жизнь
II adj AmEA shot of skag put the poor guy straight for a while — Доза героина привела в чувство этого бедолагу
1) infmlSay, I'm shot — Я скоро кончусь
2) infmlHere's your pen back. It's shot anyway — Вот твоя ручка, но она все равно не пишет
3) slShe was totally shot — Она была в "хламе"
I'll quit before I'm shot — Я, пожалуй, тормозну, пока еще не накирялся
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32 bang
1. n сильный удар2. n внезапный шум, взрыв, выстрелbang down — захлопнуть, с шумом закрыть; внезапно опустить
3. n радио трески4. n звукоподр. бах!, бац!bang! and the tyre exploded — бах! — и шина лопнула
5. n разг. стремительность; напор; энергия6. n полигр. разг. восклицательный знак7. n амер. сл. удовольствие, наслаждение; приятное возбуждение8. n амер. сл. впрыскивание наркотика9. n амер. сл. половое сношение10. adv разг. как раз, прямоbang on time — как раз вовремя, точно в назначенный час
11. adv разг. вдруг, внезапно12. adv разг. эмоц. -усил. здорово, очень13. adv разг. громко, шумно14. v ударить, стукнуть15. v удариться, стукнуться16. v хлопатьI heard a window bang in the basement — я слышал, как в подвале хлопало раскрытое окно
17. v захлопнуть18. v захлопнуться19. v грохотать20. v разг. бить, колотить, тузить21. v сл. побивать, превосходить22. v сл. впрыскивать себе наркотики; быть наркоманом23. v груб. трахнуть24. n обыкн. pl чёлка25. v подстригать волосы чёлкой26. v коротко стричь хвост лошади или собакеСинонимический ряд:1. blow (noun) bash; bastinado; bat; belt; biff; blow; bop; clout; lick; pound; slosh; smack; sock; swat; thwack; whack; whop2. burst (noun) blast; boom; burst; roar; thunder3. crash (noun) crash; slam; wham4. report (noun) bark; blast; boom; burst; clap; crack; crash; explosion; pop; report; slam; thunder; whack; wham5. smash (noun) bell ringer; hit; smash; succes fou; ten-strike; wow6. thrill (noun) boot; excitement; kick; thrill; wallop7. vigor (noun) drive; getup; get-up-and-go; go; pep; punch; push; snap; starch; vigor; vitality8. boom (verb) blast; boom; roar; thunder9. damage (verb) damage; dent; smash10. strike (verb) batter; beat; burst; clap; crash; pound; slam; slap; strike; whack11. just (other) accurately; exactly; just; precisely; right; sharp; spang; square; squarelyАнтонимический ряд:protect; repair -
33 prey on one's mind
мучить, терзать His crime preyed on his mind until he gave himself up to the police. ≈ Его преступление не давало ему покоя, пока он не сдался полиции. Syn: torment, tortureБольшой англо-русский и русско-английский словарь > prey on one's mind
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34 give oneself up to
1) Общая лексика: предаваться (чему-либо), уйти с головой во что-то2) Переносный смысл: предаться (John came inside from the damn cold and gave himself up to the warm room pleasure. - Джон вошел в дом из треклятой уличной холодрыги и с удовольствием отдался теплу.), наслаждаться3) Современное выражение: предаваться чему-либо, уходить во что-то с головой -
35 43
Одна из кличек президента США Джорджа Буша (подробнее см. список кличек ниже)Dubya — From the Texan pronunciation of 'W', this originated as a family nickname to distinguish him from his father43 or Bush 43, Bush the Younger, Bush II, and Bush fils — All used to distinguish George W. Bush from George H.W. BushBushie — Also used to refer to wife LauraThe Shrub or simply Shrub — Coined by Molly Ivins. Bush Junior is notably smaller than his father, and a little bush is a shrub.Temporary — Bush's nickname in Skull and Bones, never altered by BushKing George (II) — Based on comparisons to George III of the United Kingdom, who is often known to Americans simply as "King George" for his association with the American Revolution. The "II" may refer either to Bush's being a successor (though not directly) to a father with the same name (the "first George") or to a misconception that George III was the first English king with that name, thus making Bush the "second."Uncurious George or Incurious George or Spurious George — Comparing him with the monkey character Curious GeorgeAWOL Bush — Often rendered as aWol Bush: referring to an alleged period of unauthorized leave of absence by Bush during his Vietnam War service in the Texas National GuardThe Decider and The Decider-In-Chief — Bush said "I'm the decider" in remarks about Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld on April 18, 2006The Commander Guy — Bush gave himself this nickname on May 2, 2007, saying "My position is clear — I'm the commander guy."Resident BushThe Leaker-in-Chief — In April, 2006, former White House official Lewis Libby claimed that President Bush had authorized him to leak from an intelligence document about Weapons of Mass Destruction in IraqThe Velcro President — A contrast to the "Teflon" nicknames given to Reagan and Clinton; most scandals appear to "stick" to Bush.Англо-русский универсальный дополнительный практический переводческий словарь И. Мостицкого > 43
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36 aAWOL Bush
Одна из кличек президента США Джорджа Буша (подробнее см. список кличек ниже)Dubya — From the Texan pronunciation of 'W', this originated as a family nickname to distinguish him from his father43 or Bush 43, Bush the Younger, Bush II, and Bush fils — All used to distinguish George W. Bush from George H.W. BushBushie — Also used to refer to wife LauraThe Shrub or simply Shrub — Coined by Molly Ivins. Bush Junior is notably smaller than his father, and a little bush is a shrub.Temporary — Bush's nickname in Skull and Bones, never altered by BushKing George (II) — Based on comparisons to George III of the United Kingdom, who is often known to Americans simply as "King George" for his association with the American Revolution. The "II" may refer either to Bush's being a successor (though not directly) to a father with the same name (the "first George") or to a misconception that George III was the first English king with that name, thus making Bush the "second."Uncurious George or Incurious George or Spurious George — Comparing him with the monkey character Curious GeorgeAWOL Bush — Often rendered as aWol Bush: referring to an alleged period of unauthorized leave of absence by Bush during his Vietnam War service in the Texas National GuardThe Decider and The Decider-In-Chief — Bush said "I'm the decider" in remarks about Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld on April 18, 2006The Commander Guy — Bush gave himself this nickname on May 2, 2007, saying "My position is clear — I'm the commander guy."Resident BushThe Leaker-in-Chief — In April, 2006, former White House official Lewis Libby claimed that President Bush had authorized him to leak from an intelligence document about Weapons of Mass Destruction in IraqThe Velcro President — A contrast to the "Teflon" nicknames given to Reagan and Clinton; most scandals appear to "stick" to Bush.Англо-русский универсальный дополнительный практический переводческий словарь И. Мостицкого > aAWOL Bush
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37 AWOL Bush
Одна из кличек президента США Джорджа Буша (подробнее см. список кличек ниже)Dubya — From the Texan pronunciation of 'W', this originated as a family nickname to distinguish him from his father43 or Bush 43, Bush the Younger, Bush II, and Bush fils — All used to distinguish George W. Bush from George H.W. BushBushie — Also used to refer to wife LauraThe Shrub or simply Shrub — Coined by Molly Ivins. Bush Junior is notably smaller than his father, and a little bush is a shrub.Temporary — Bush's nickname in Skull and Bones, never altered by BushKing George (II) — Based on comparisons to George III of the United Kingdom, who is often known to Americans simply as "King George" for his association with the American Revolution. The "II" may refer either to Bush's being a successor (though not directly) to a father with the same name (the "first George") or to a misconception that George III was the first English king with that name, thus making Bush the "second."Uncurious George or Incurious George or Spurious George — Comparing him with the monkey character Curious GeorgeAWOL Bush — Often rendered as aWol Bush: referring to an alleged period of unauthorized leave of absence by Bush during his Vietnam War service in the Texas National GuardThe Decider and The Decider-In-Chief — Bush said "I'm the decider" in remarks about Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld on April 18, 2006The Commander Guy — Bush gave himself this nickname on May 2, 2007, saying "My position is clear — I'm the commander guy."Resident BushThe Leaker-in-Chief — In April, 2006, former White House official Lewis Libby claimed that President Bush had authorized him to leak from an intelligence document about Weapons of Mass Destruction in IraqThe Velcro President — A contrast to the "Teflon" nicknames given to Reagan and Clinton; most scandals appear to "stick" to Bush.Англо-русский универсальный дополнительный практический переводческий словарь И. Мостицкого > AWOL Bush
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38 Bush 43
Одна из кличек президента США Джорджа Буша (подробнее см. список кличек ниже)Dubya — From the Texan pronunciation of 'W', this originated as a family nickname to distinguish him from his father43 or Bush 43, Bush the Younger, Bush II, and Bush fils — All used to distinguish George W. Bush from George H.W. BushBushie — Also used to refer to wife LauraThe Shrub or simply Shrub — Coined by Molly Ivins. Bush Junior is notably smaller than his father, and a little bush is a shrub.Temporary — Bush's nickname in Skull and Bones, never altered by BushKing George (II) — Based on comparisons to George III of the United Kingdom, who is often known to Americans simply as "King George" for his association with the American Revolution. The "II" may refer either to Bush's being a successor (though not directly) to a father with the same name (the "first George") or to a misconception that George III was the first English king with that name, thus making Bush the "second."Uncurious George or Incurious George or Spurious George — Comparing him with the monkey character Curious GeorgeAWOL Bush — Often rendered as aWol Bush: referring to an alleged period of unauthorized leave of absence by Bush during his Vietnam War service in the Texas National GuardThe Decider and The Decider-In-Chief — Bush said "I'm the decider" in remarks about Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld on April 18, 2006The Commander Guy — Bush gave himself this nickname on May 2, 2007, saying "My position is clear — I'm the commander guy."Resident BushThe Leaker-in-Chief — In April, 2006, former White House official Lewis Libby claimed that President Bush had authorized him to leak from an intelligence document about Weapons of Mass Destruction in IraqThe Velcro President — A contrast to the "Teflon" nicknames given to Reagan and Clinton; most scandals appear to "stick" to Bush.Англо-русский универсальный дополнительный практический переводческий словарь И. Мостицкого > Bush 43
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39 Bush fils
Одна из кличек президента США Джорджа Буша (подробнее см. список кличек ниже)Dubya — From the Texan pronunciation of 'W', this originated as a family nickname to distinguish him from his father43 or Bush 43, Bush the Younger, Bush II, and Bush fils — All used to distinguish George W. Bush from George H.W. BushBushie — Also used to refer to wife LauraThe Shrub or simply Shrub — Coined by Molly Ivins. Bush Junior is notably smaller than his father, and a little bush is a shrub.Temporary — Bush's nickname in Skull and Bones, never altered by BushKing George (II) — Based on comparisons to George III of the United Kingdom, who is often known to Americans simply as "King George" for his association with the American Revolution. The "II" may refer either to Bush's being a successor (though not directly) to a father with the same name (the "first George") or to a misconception that George III was the first English king with that name, thus making Bush the "second."Uncurious George or Incurious George or Spurious George — Comparing him with the monkey character Curious GeorgeAWOL Bush — Often rendered as aWol Bush: referring to an alleged period of unauthorized leave of absence by Bush during his Vietnam War service in the Texas National GuardThe Decider and The Decider-In-Chief — Bush said "I'm the decider" in remarks about Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld on April 18, 2006The Commander Guy — Bush gave himself this nickname on May 2, 2007, saying "My position is clear — I'm the commander guy."Resident BushThe Leaker-in-Chief — In April, 2006, former White House official Lewis Libby claimed that President Bush had authorized him to leak from an intelligence document about Weapons of Mass Destruction in IraqThe Velcro President — A contrast to the "Teflon" nicknames given to Reagan and Clinton; most scandals appear to "stick" to Bush.Англо-русский универсальный дополнительный практический переводческий словарь И. Мостицкого > Bush fils
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40 Bush II
Одна из кличек президента США Джорджа Буша (подробнее см. список кличек ниже)Dubya — From the Texan pronunciation of 'W', this originated as a family nickname to distinguish him from his father43 or Bush 43, Bush the Younger, Bush II, and Bush fils — All used to distinguish George W. Bush from George H.W. BushBushie — Also used to refer to wife LauraThe Shrub or simply Shrub — Coined by Molly Ivins. Bush Junior is notably smaller than his father, and a little bush is a shrub.Temporary — Bush's nickname in Skull and Bones, never altered by BushKing George (II) — Based on comparisons to George III of the United Kingdom, who is often known to Americans simply as "King George" for his association with the American Revolution. The "II" may refer either to Bush's being a successor (though not directly) to a father with the same name (the "first George") or to a misconception that George III was the first English king with that name, thus making Bush the "second."Uncurious George or Incurious George or Spurious George — Comparing him with the monkey character Curious GeorgeAWOL Bush — Often rendered as aWol Bush: referring to an alleged period of unauthorized leave of absence by Bush during his Vietnam War service in the Texas National GuardThe Decider and The Decider-In-Chief — Bush said "I'm the decider" in remarks about Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld on April 18, 2006The Commander Guy — Bush gave himself this nickname on May 2, 2007, saying "My position is clear — I'm the commander guy."Resident BushThe Leaker-in-Chief — In April, 2006, former White House official Lewis Libby claimed that President Bush had authorized him to leak from an intelligence document about Weapons of Mass Destruction in IraqThe Velcro President — A contrast to the "Teflon" nicknames given to Reagan and Clinton; most scandals appear to "stick" to Bush.Англо-русский универсальный дополнительный практический переводческий словарь И. Мостицкого > Bush II
См. также в других словарях:
Himself — Him*self , pron. 1. An emphasized form of the third person masculine pronoun; used as a subject usually with he; as, he himself will bear the blame; used alone in the predicate, either in the nominative or objective case; as, it is himself who… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
By himself — Himself Him*self , pron. 1. An emphasized form of the third person masculine pronoun; used as a subject usually with he; as, he himself will bear the blame; used alone in the predicate, either in the nominative or objective case; as, it is… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
To leave one to himself — Himself Him*self , pron. 1. An emphasized form of the third person masculine pronoun; used as a subject usually with he; as, he himself will bear the blame; used alone in the predicate, either in the nominative or objective case; as, it is… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Gave — Give Give (g[i^]v), v. t. [imp. {Gave} (g[=a]v); p. p. {Given} (g[i^]v n); p. pr. & vb. n. {Giving}.] [OE. given, yiven, yeven, AS. gifan, giefan; akin to D. geven, OS. ge[eth]an, OHG. geban, G. geben, Icel. gefa, Sw. gifva, Dan. give, Goth.… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
sacrificed himself — gave himself up … English contemporary dictionary
The Man Who Haunted Himself — Directed by Basil Dearden Produced by Michael Relph Starring … Wikipedia
give one enough rope and he will hang himself — {informal} Give a bad person enough time and freedom to do as he pleases, and he may make a bad mistake or get into trouble and be caught. A proverb. * /Johnny is always stealing and hasn t been caught. But give him enough rope and he ll hang… … Dictionary of American idioms
give one enough rope and he will hang himself — {informal} Give a bad person enough time and freedom to do as he pleases, and he may make a bad mistake or get into trouble and be caught. A proverb. * /Johnny is always stealing and hasn t been caught. But give him enough rope and he ll hang… … Dictionary of American idioms
give\ one\ enough\ rope\ and\ he\ will\ hang\ himself — informal proverb Give a bad person enough time and freedom to do as he pleases, and he may make a bad mistake or get into trouble and be caught. Johnny is always stealing and hasn t been caught. But give him enough rope and he ll hang himself.… … Словарь американских идиом
talked to himself — talked to no one, spoke to an empty room, gave a monologue … English contemporary dictionary
international relations — a branch of political science dealing with the relations between nations. [1970 75] * * * Study of the relations of states with each other and with international organizations and certain subnational entities (e.g., bureaucracies and political… … Universalium