-
1 harbour
1. noun(a place of shelter for ships: All the ships stayed in (the) harbour during the storm.) havn2. verb1) (to give shelter or refuge to (a person): It is against the law to harbour criminals.) skjule, huse2) (to have (usually bad) thoughts in one's head: He harbours a grudge against me.) nære•Isubst. \/ˈhɑːbə\/ eller harbor1) havn2) ( overført) havn, skjul, tilfluktsted3) ( dyrs) hule, hi, leie4) ( militærvesen) depotIIverb \/ˈhɑːbə\/ eller harbor1) huse, ta imot, gi ly2) skjule, holde skjult3) ( overført) huse, nære4) søke havn, ankre opp5) søke tilflukt (i), finne ly (i), søke ly (i) -
2 seize
si:z1) (to take or grasp suddenly, especially by force: She seized the gun from him; He seized her by the arm; He seized the opportunity of leaving.) gripe2) (to take, especially by force or by law: The police seized the stolen property.) pågripe, beslaglegge•- seizure- seize on
- seize upbeslaglegge--------forstå--------konfiskereverb \/siːz\/1) gripe, gripe fatt i, ta fatt i, ta, ta tak i, hugge tak i, benytte• he seized the opportunity\/occation2) ta i besittelse, bemektige seg, innta, erobre3) ( jus) beslaglegge, konfiskere, ta i beslag4) ( jus) pågripe, arrestere5) forstå, fatte, begripe6) ( sjøfart) bendsle, seise, surre, belegge7) ( mekanikk) skjære seg, brenne fast, henge seg opp, brenne sammenbe seized with something få et anfall av noe, bli grepet av noebli fylt av\/med angerbe seized with sympathy for somebody få medlidenhet med noen, få sympati for noenbe\/stand seized of være i (lovlig) besittelse avseize upon\/on gripe tak i, gripe fatt i, rykke til seg, kaste seg over, hoppe på -
3 smuggle
1) (to bring (goods) into, or send them out from, a country illegally, or without paying duty: He was caught smuggling (several thousand cigarettes through the Customs).) smugle2) (to send or take secretly: I smuggled some food out of the kitchen.) smugle•- smuggler- smugglingsmugleverb \/ˈsmʌɡl\/( også overført) smugle, drive med smugling -
4 traffic
'træfik 1. noun1) (vehicles, aircraft, ships etc moving about: There's a lot of traffic on the roads / on the river.) trafikk, ferdsel2) (trade, especially illegal or dishonest: the drug traffic.) (ulovlig) handel/trafikk2. verb(to deal or trade in, especially illegally or dishonestly: They were trafficking in smuggled goods.) drive (ulovlig) handel- traffic island
- traffic jam
- traffic lights
- traffic wardenferdsel--------handel--------samkvem--------trafikkIsubst. \/ˈtræfɪk\/1) trafikk, ferdsel, fart, kjøring2) handel, omsetning3) ( om ulovlig handel) trafikk4) ( telekommunikasjon) trafikk5) (handels)forbindelse6) ( jernbane) vare- og persontransport7) omgang, samkvemclosed to wheeled traffic all innkjøring forbudtgeneral traffic ( jus) alminnelig ferdsellawful traffic ( jus) lovlig ferdselno through traffic gjennomkjøring forbudtshoot the traffic lights kjøre på rødt lystraffic in handel medtraffic with omgang medwater-borne traffic sjøfart, skipstrafikk, sjøgående trafikkIIverb \/ˈtræfɪk\/1) trafikkere2) handle, drive handel, gjøre forretninger3) ( nedsettende) drive ulovlig handel, gjøre penger på4) omsette, selge5) ( slang) lange, pushetraffic in handle medtraffic with omgås med, vanke hos handle med
См. также в других словарях:
smuggled — smuggled, *bootleg, contraband are comparable in meaning transported in defiance of the law but each has implications and applications not shared with the others. Smuggled applies to what is taken out of or brought into an area (as a nation or… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
smuggled commerce — index contraband Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
smuggled goods — index contraband Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
smuggled trade — index contraband Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
smuggled traffic — index contraband Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
Smuggled — Smuggle Smug gle, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Smuggled}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Smuggling}.] [Of Low German or Scand. origin; cf. LG. smuggeln, D. smokkelen, G. schmuggeln, Dan. smugle, Sw. smyga to introduce or convey secretly, Dan. i smug secretly, D.… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
smuggled — adj. imported or exported illegally; brought in or taken out secretly smug·gle || smÊŒgl v. import or export illegally; bring in or take out secretly … English contemporary dictionary
smuggled goods — merchandise that was brought into a country in a manner that is against the law … English contemporary dictionary
smuggled — adjective distributed or sold illicitly the black economy pays no taxes • Syn: ↑bootleg, ↑black, ↑black market, ↑contraband • Similar to: ↑illegal • Derivationally rel … Useful english dictionary
bootleg — smuggled or stolen Originally it referred to intoxicants, supposedly from the bottles concealed on the legs when transporting supplies illegally to American Indians. Standard English of smuggled intoxicants during Prohibition: ... had… … How not to say what you mean: A dictionary of euphemisms
duty not paid — smuggled Especially of tobacco and alcoholic drinks into countries with higher taxes than their neighbours: The 1993 paper tells us that BAT s Brazilian subsidiary, Souza Cruz, [was] increasing its market share as a result of DNP, Duty… … How not to say what you mean: A dictionary of euphemisms