-
1 propustiti
vt pf let through, let pass; (nemarom) omit, neglect, fail to do; (priliku) let slip, pass up, miss out (on), miss (a chance); leave undone; sch pass, give a passing mark (AE grade) | ne propustiti not fail to; be careful to; ne propustiti trenutak seize the moment; ne propustiti (* * *• throw away• yield• waste• skip• slip• let by• leave out• lose• let off• fail• balk• admit• omit• overlook• pass• pass through• miss out• miss• nod -
2 prokuhati
vt vi pf boil well/thoroughly/ /through; (iznova) re-boil; fig digest | -ala je voda the water is on the boil (ili is boiling/ /seething); neka malo -a let it boil briefly; pustim da -a dvaput (kava) I bring it to boil twice; med -ati špricu boil/steriliz* * *• boil• cook in boiling liquid -
3 promaknuti
vi/vt pf slip by/through, pass unnoticed, be overlooked, escape attention; (unaprijediti) promote, advance | valjda mi je -lo I must have let it slip (ili missed it), it must have slipped my mind (ili escaped my attention); ništa joj nije promaknutilo she didn't m* * *• promote• advance -
4 propuštati
vt impf - propustiti | moje cipele -ju vodu my shoes let water in; čamac je počeo -ti the boat sprang a leak; ne -ti not fail to; not miss; (zrake) stop, filter out* * *• leak• flow through• ooze -
5 propušten
pp & adj let through, allowed to pass; sch given a passing mark; (neiskorišten) neglected, omitted, missed* * *• transmitted• admitted• omitted• missed
См. также в других словарях:
let slip through fingers — If you let something slip through your fingers, such as a good opportunity, you fail to obtain it or keep it. He should have accepted the job when it was offered. He let the opportunity slip through his fingers … English Idioms & idiomatic expressions
let slip through the fingers — miss an opportunity; lose because of recklessness … English contemporary dictionary
through — [ θru ] function word *** Through can be used in the following ways: as a preposition (followed by a noun): They were riding through a forest. as an adverb (without a following noun): There s a hole in the roof where the rain comes through. as an … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
let — [[t]le̱t[/t]] ♦ lets, letting (The form let is used in the present tense and is the past tense and past participle.) 1) VERB If you let something happen, you allow it to happen without doing anything to stop or prevent it. [V n inf] People said… … English dictionary
let — let1 /let/, v., let, letting, n. v.t. 1. to allow or permit: to let him escape. 2. to allow to pass, go, or come: to let us through. 3. to grant the occupancy or use of (land, buildings, rooms, space, etc., or movable property) for rent or hire… … Universalium
let — I. transitive verb (letted; letted or let; letting) Etymology: Middle English letten, from Old English lettan to delay, hinder; akin to Old High German lezzen to delay, hurt, Old English lǣt late Date: before 12th century archaic hinder, prevent… … New Collegiate Dictionary
let — {{11}}let (n.) stoppage, obstruction (obsolete unless in legal contracts), late 12c., from archaic verb letten to hinder, from O.E. lettan hinder, delay, from P.Gmc. *latjanan (Cf. O.S. lettian to hinder, O.N. letja to hold back, O.H.G. lezzen to … Etymology dictionary
let — verb 1) let him sleep for now Syn: allow to, permit to, give permission to, give leave to, authorize to, sanction to, grant the right to, license to, empower to, enable to, entitle to; archaic suffer to Ant: prevent, prohibit … Thesaurus of popular words
through — through1 W1S1 [θru:] prep, adv ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(door/passage etc)¦ 2¦(cutting/breaking)¦ 3¦(across an area)¦ 4¦(see through something)¦ 5¦(past a place)¦ 6¦(time)¦ 7¦(process/experience)¦ 8¦(competitions)¦ 9¦(because of something)¦ … Dictionary of contemporary English
through */*/*/ — UK [θruː] / US [θru] adjective, adverb, preposition Summary: Through can be used in the following ways: as a preposition (followed by a noun): They were riding through a forest. as an adverb (without a following noun): There s a hole in the roof… … English dictionary
through — 1 /Tru:/ preposition 1 entering something such as a door, passage, tube, or hole at one end or side and leaving it at the other: They were suddenly plunged into darkness as the train went through the tunnel. | The ball went flying through the… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English