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1 heap
[hi:p] 1. noun1) (a large amount or a large number, in a pile: a heap of sand/apples.) bunke2) ((usually in plural with of) many, much or plenty: We've got heaps of time; I've done that heaps of times.) bunke; masse2. verb1) (to put, throw etc in a heap: I'll heap these stones (up) in a corner of the garden.) samle i en bunke; dynge sammen2) (to fill or cover with a heap: He heaped his plate with vegetables; He heaped insults on his opponent.) skovle; dynge•- heaped* * *[hi:p] 1. noun1) (a large amount or a large number, in a pile: a heap of sand/apples.) bunke2) ((usually in plural with of) many, much or plenty: We've got heaps of time; I've done that heaps of times.) bunke; masse2. verb1) (to put, throw etc in a heap: I'll heap these stones (up) in a corner of the garden.) samle i en bunke; dynge sammen2) (to fill or cover with a heap: He heaped his plate with vegetables; He heaped insults on his opponent.) skovle; dynge•- heaped -
2 scrap heap
(a heap of waste material, unwanted objects etc.) skrotbunke* * *(a heap of waste material, unwanted objects etc.) skrotbunke -
3 pile
I 1. noun1) (a (large) number of things lying on top of each other in a tidy or untidy heap; a (large) quantity of something lying in a heap: There was a neat pile of books in the corner of the room; There was pile of rubbish at the bottom of the garden.) bunke; dynge2) (a large quantity, especially of money: He must have piles of money to own a car like that.) bunke2. verb(to make a pile of (something); to put (something) in a pile: He piled the boxes on the table.) dynge; stable- pile-up- pile up II(a large pillar or stake driven into the ground as a foundation for a building, bridge etc: The entire city of Venice is built on piles.) pille; pælIII noun(the thick soft surface of carpets and some kinds of cloth eg velvet: The rug has a deep/thick pile.) luv* * *I 1. noun1) (a (large) number of things lying on top of each other in a tidy or untidy heap; a (large) quantity of something lying in a heap: There was a neat pile of books in the corner of the room; There was pile of rubbish at the bottom of the garden.) bunke; dynge2) (a large quantity, especially of money: He must have piles of money to own a car like that.) bunke2. verb(to make a pile of (something); to put (something) in a pile: He piled the boxes on the table.) dynge; stable- pile-up- pile up II(a large pillar or stake driven into the ground as a foundation for a building, bridge etc: The entire city of Venice is built on piles.) pille; pælIII noun(the thick soft surface of carpets and some kinds of cloth eg velvet: The rug has a deep/thick pile.) luv -
4 conglomeration
[kənɡlomə'reiʃən](a mixed heap or collection: a conglomeration of old clothes.) konglomerat; sammenhobning* * *[kənɡlomə'reiʃən](a mixed heap or collection: a conglomeration of old clothes.) konglomerat; sammenhobning -
5 disorderly
1) (not neatly arranged; in confusion: His clothes lay in a disorderly heap.) uordentlig2) (lawless; causing trouble: a disorderly group of people.) uregerlig* * *1) (not neatly arranged; in confusion: His clothes lay in a disorderly heap.) uordentlig2) (lawless; causing trouble: a disorderly group of people.) uregerlig -
6 drift
[drift] 1. noun1) (a heap of something driven together, especially snow: His car stuck in a snowdrift.) drive; snedrive2) (the direction in which something is going; the general meaning: I couldn't hear you clearly, but I did catch the drift of what you said.) mening2. verb1) (to (cause to) float or be blown along: Sand drifted across the road; The boat drifted down the river.) drive2) ((of people) to wander or live aimlessly: She drifted from job to job.) flakke•- drifter- driftwood* * *[drift] 1. noun1) (a heap of something driven together, especially snow: His car stuck in a snowdrift.) drive; snedrive2) (the direction in which something is going; the general meaning: I couldn't hear you clearly, but I did catch the drift of what you said.) mening2. verb1) (to (cause to) float or be blown along: Sand drifted across the road; The boat drifted down the river.) drive2) ((of people) to wander or live aimlessly: She drifted from job to job.) flakke•- drifter- driftwood -
7 heaped
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8 litter
['litə(r)] 1. noun1) (an untidy mess of paper, rubbish etc: Put your litter in that bin.) affald; skrald2) (a heap of straw etc for animals to lie on etc.) høbunke; kattegrus3) (a number of animals born to the same mother at the same time: a litter of kittens.) kuld2. verb(to cover (the ground etc) with scattered objects: Papers littered the table.) ligge og flyde* * *['litə(r)] 1. noun1) (an untidy mess of paper, rubbish etc: Put your litter in that bin.) affald; skrald2) (a heap of straw etc for animals to lie on etc.) høbunke; kattegrus3) (a number of animals born to the same mother at the same time: a litter of kittens.) kuld2. verb(to cover (the ground etc) with scattered objects: Papers littered the table.) ligge og flyde -
9 molehill
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10 mound
(a small hill or heap of earth etc: a grassy mound; a mound of rubbish.) høj* * *(a small hill or heap of earth etc: a grassy mound; a mound of rubbish.) høj -
11 rockery
plural - rockeries; noun (a heap of rocks in a garden with earth between them in which small plants are grown.) stenhøj* * *plural - rockeries; noun (a heap of rocks in a garden with earth between them in which small plants are grown.) stenhøj -
12 scrap
I 1. [skræp] noun1) (a small piece or fragment: a scrap of paper.) stump2) ((usually in plural) a piece of food left over after a meal: They gave the scraps to the dog.) madrest3) (waste articles that are only valuable for the material they contain: The old car was sold as scrap; ( also adjective) scrap metal.) skrot; skrot-4) (a picture etc for sticking into a scrapbook.) scrap2. verb(to discard: They scapped the old television set; She decided to scrap the whole plan.) skrotte; kassere- scrappy- scrappily
- scrappiness
- scrapbook
- scrap heap II 1. [skræp] noun(a fight: He tore his jacket in a scrap with another boy.) slagsmål2. verb(to fight: The dogs were scrapping over a bone.) slås* * *I 1. [skræp] noun1) (a small piece or fragment: a scrap of paper.) stump2) ((usually in plural) a piece of food left over after a meal: They gave the scraps to the dog.) madrest3) (waste articles that are only valuable for the material they contain: The old car was sold as scrap; ( also adjective) scrap metal.) skrot; skrot-4) (a picture etc for sticking into a scrapbook.) scrap2. verb(to discard: They scapped the old television set; She decided to scrap the whole plan.) skrotte; kassere- scrappy- scrappily
- scrappiness
- scrapbook
- scrap heap II 1. [skræp] noun(a fight: He tore his jacket in a scrap with another boy.) slagsmål2. verb(to fight: The dogs were scrapping over a bone.) slås
См. также в других словарях:
Heap — (h[=e]p), n. [OE. heep, heap, heap, multitude, AS. he[ a]p; akin to OS. h[=o]p, D. hoop, OHG. houf, h[=u]fo, G. haufe, haufen, Sw. hop, Dan. hob, Icel. h[=o]pr troop, flock, Russ. kupa heap, crowd, Lith. kaupas. Cf. {Hope}, in Forlorn hope.] 1. A … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
heap´er — heap «heep», noun, verb. –n. 1. a pile of many things thrown or lying together: »a heap of stones, a sand heap. SYNONYM(S): mass, stack, accumulation. 2. Informal. a large amount; a lot; multitude: »a heap of trouble. It did me a heap of good to… … Useful english dictionary
Heap — Heap, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Heaped} (h[=e]pt); p. pr. & vb. n. {Heaping}.] [AS. he[ a]pian.] 1. To collect in great quantity; to amass; to lay up; to accumulate; usually with up; as, to heap up treasures. [1913 Webster] Though he heap up silver as … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Heap — may refer to:In computer science: * heap (data structure), a tree like data structure * The heap (or free store ) is the area of memory used for dynamic memory allocationIn mathematics: *a heap (mathematics) is a generalization of a group.In… … Wikipedia
heap — n pile, stack, shock, cock, mass, bank (see under HEAP vb) Analogous words: *aggregate, aggregation, conglomerate, conglomeration: collection, assemblage (see under GATHER) heap vb Heap, pile, stack, shock, cock, mass, bank are comparable as… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
heap — [hēp] n. [ME hepe, a troop, heap < OE heap, a troop, band, multitude, akin to Ger hauf(en), Du hoop < IE * keub < base * keu , bend, arch > HOP1, HIVE] 1. a pile, mass, or mound of things jumbled together 2. [often pl.] Informal a… … English World dictionary
Heap — (englisch „Haufen“) steht für: eine Datenstruktur, siehe Heap (Datenstruktur) einen speziellen Speicherbereich, siehe Dynamischer Speicher Heap ist auch der Name von folgenden Personen Imogen Heap (* 1977), Sängerin, Komponistin, Musikerin und… … Deutsch Wikipedia
heap — ► NOUN 1) a pile of a substance or of a number of objects. 2) informal a large amount or number: heaps of room. 3) informal an untidy or dilapidated place or vehicle. ► VERB 1) put in or form a heap. 2) (heap with) load copiously with … English terms dictionary
heap|y — «HEE pee», adjective, heap|i|er, heap|i|est. forming a heap or heaps: »White heapy clouds, looking like balls…bring no rain (New Yorker) … Useful english dictionary
heap — [n] pile, accumulation abundance, agglomeration, aggregation, a lot*, amassment, assemblage, bank, batch, bulk, bunch, bundle, cargo, clump, cluster, collection, concentration, congeries, deposit, fullness, gathering, gobs*, great deal, harvest,… … New thesaurus
heap — index assemblage, bulk, collection (accumulation), hoard (noun), hoard (verb), plethora, quantity … Law dictionary