-
81 around
1. preposition, adverb1) (on all sides of or in a circle about (a person, thing etc): Flowers grew around the tree; They danced around the fire; There were flowers all around.) aplink2) (here and there (in a house, room etc): Clothes had been left lying around (the house); I wandered around.) po2. preposition(near to (a time, place etc): around three o'clock.) apie3. adverb1) (in the opposite direction: Turn around!) aplink2) (near-by: If you need me, I'll be somewhere around.) netoliese -
82 as yet
(up to the time referred to, usually the present: I haven't had a book published as yet.) iki šiol -
83 aspect
['æspekt]1) (a part of something to be thought about: We must consider every aspect of the problem.) aspektas, pusė2) (a side of a building etc or the direction it faces in.) pusė3) (look or appearance: His face had a frightening aspect.) išraiška -
84 assert
[ə'sə:t]1) (to say definitely: She asserted that she had not borrowed his book.) tvirtinti2) (to insist on: He should assert his independence.) reikalauti, siekti•- assertive
- assert oneself -
85 association
1) (a club, society etc.) asociacija, susivienijimas, organizacija2) (a friendship or partnership.) bendravimas, draugystė3) (a connection in the mind: The house had associations with her dead husband.) asociacija -
86 at a disadvantage
(in an unfavourable position: His power was strengthened by the fact that he had us all at a disadvantage.) nepalankioje, blogesnėje padėtyje -
87 at full blast
(at full power, speed etc: He had the radio going at full blast (= as loud as possible).) visu tempu/galingumu/garsu -
88 at short notice
(without much warning time for preparation etc: He had to make the speech at very short notice when his boss suddenly fell ill.) iš anksto neįspėjus, staiga, tuojau pat -
89 audition
[o:'diʃən](a trial performance for an actor, singer, musician etc: She had an audition for a part in the television play.) perklausa -
90 back and forth
(first in one direction and then in the other; backwards and forwards: We had to go back and forth many times before we moved all our furniture to the new house.) pirmyn ir atgal -
91 balsam
['bo:lsəm](a pleasant-smelling substance obtained from certain trees: He inhaled balsam when he had a bad cold.) balzamas -
92 bandage
-
93 bath
1. plural - baths; noun1) (a large container for holding water in which to wash the whole body: I'll fill the bath with water for you.) vonia2) (an act of washing in a bath: I had a bath last night.) maudymasis3) (a container of liquid etc in which something is immersed: a bird bath.) baseinas2. verb(to wash in a bath: I'll bath the baby.) maudyti(s)- bathroom
- bathtub -
94 be hard on
1) (to punish or criticize severely: Don't be too hard on the boy - he's too young to know that he was doing wrong.) būti griežtam su2) (to be unfair to: If you punish all the children for the broken window it's a bit hard on those who had nothing to do with it.) būti neteisingam kieno nors atžvilgiu -
95 be in / out of practice
((not) having had a lot of practice recently: I haven't played the piano for months - I'm very out of practice.) įgudęs, atpratęs -
96 beak
[bi:k](the hard, horny (usually pointed) part of a bird's mouth: The bird had a worm in its beak.) snapas -
97 beg
[beɡ] 1. past tense, past participle - begged; verb1) (to ask (someone) for (money, food etc): The old man was so poor that he had to beg in the street; He begged (me) for money.) prašyti išmaldos, elgetauti2) (to ask (someone) desperately or earnestly: I beg you not to do it.) maldauti•- beggar2. verb(to make very poor: He was beggared by the collapse of his firm.) nuskurdinti- beg to differ -
98 bereft
[bi'reft]((with of) having had something taken away: bereft of speech.) netekęs, praradęs -
99 bitty
( informal) adjective (made up of small, unrelated pieces: We had a very bitty conversation; His essay was rather bitty.) fragmentiškas, nerišlus -
100 blackout
1) (a period of darkness produced by putting out all lights: Accidents increase during a blackout.) užtemdymas2) (a ban (on news etc): a blackout of news about the coup.) įslaptinimas3) (a period of unconsciousness: He has had several blackouts during his illness.) sąmonės praradimas4) (a brief, temporary loss of memory, as when an actor forgets his/her lines.) proto užtemimas5) ((also outage) a period of a general power failure.) elektros srovės nutrūkimas6) ((in the theatre) the putting out of the stage lights at the end of a scene etc.) scenos šviesų užgesimas/išjungimas
См. также в других словарях:
Had gadya — Had gadia Un chevreau Had gadia (en araméen: חַד גַדְיָה Had gadia, « un petit chevreau ») est une chanson juive écrite dans un araméen entrecoupé d hébreu. C est la dernière chanson du séder de pessa h avant le chant final L shana Ha… … Wikipédia en Français
Had — (h[a^]d), imp. & p. p. of {Have}. [OE. had, hafde, hefde, AS. h[ae]fde.] See {Have}. [1913 Webster] {Had as lief}, {Had rather}, {Had better}, {Had as soon}, etc., with a nominative and followed by the infinitive without to, are well established… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Had as lief — Had Had (h[a^]d), imp. & p. p. of {Have}. [OE. had, hafde, hefde, AS. h[ae]fde.] See {Have}. [1913 Webster] {Had as lief}, {Had rather}, {Had better}, {Had as soon}, etc., with a nominative and followed by the infinitive without to, are well… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Had as soon — Had Had (h[a^]d), imp. & p. p. of {Have}. [OE. had, hafde, hefde, AS. h[ae]fde.] See {Have}. [1913 Webster] {Had as lief}, {Had rather}, {Had better}, {Had as soon}, etc., with a nominative and followed by the infinitive without to, are well… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Had better — Had Had (h[a^]d), imp. & p. p. of {Have}. [OE. had, hafde, hefde, AS. h[ae]fde.] See {Have}. [1913 Webster] {Had as lief}, {Had rather}, {Had better}, {Had as soon}, etc., with a nominative and followed by the infinitive without to, are well… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Had rather — Had Had (h[a^]d), imp. & p. p. of {Have}. [OE. had, hafde, hefde, AS. h[ae]fde.] See {Have}. [1913 Webster] {Had as lief}, {Had rather}, {Had better}, {Had as soon}, etc., with a nominative and followed by the infinitive without to, are well… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
had — 1. had better. See better 1. 2. had have. This occurs with unreal (or unfulfilled) propositions in the past, constructed either with if (or an equivalent construction) as in the sentence If I had have known, I would have said something or with a… … Modern English usage
had better, had rather — Had better is widely used in giving advice or issuing a mild threat: We had better get started before midnight. You had better apologize to me for that remark. The phrase had best can be substituted for had better in such expressions. Neither is… … Dictionary of problem words and expressions
Had Nes 229 — (Had Nes,Израиль) Категория отеля: Адрес: Had Nes 229, Had Nes, 12950, Израиль … Каталог отелей
ḤAD GADYA — (Aram. חַד גַּדְיָא; An Only Kid ), initial phrase and name of a popular Aramaic song chanted at the conclusion of the Passover seder . Composed of ten stanzas, the verse runs as follows: A father bought a kid for two zuzim; a cat came and ate… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
Had I but known — is a form of foreshadowing that hints at some looming disaster in which the first person narrator laments his or her course of action which precipitates some or other unfortunate series of actions. Classically, the narrator never makes explicit… … Wikipedia