-
21 drown
1) (to (cause to) sink in water and so suffocate and die: He drowned in the river; He tried to drown the cat.) drukkna; drekkja2) (to cause (a sound) not to be heard by making a louder sound: His voice was drowned by the roar of the traffic.) yfirgnæfa -
22 earshot
noun (the distance at which sound can be heard: He did not hear her last remark as he was out of earshot.) heyrnarmál, heyrnarsvið -
23 escapade
[eskə'peid](a daring or adventurous act, often one that is disapproved of by others: Have you heard about his latest escapade?) ævintÿri, uppátæki -
24 excerpt
['eksə:pt](a part taken from a book etc: I heard an excerpt from his latest novel on the radio.) útdráttur, ágrip -
25 explosion
[-ʒən]1) (a blowing up, or the noise caused by this: a gas explosion; The explosion could be heard a long way off.) sprenging; sprengjudrunur2) (the action of exploding: the explosion of the atom bomb.) sprenging3) (a sudden showing of strong feelings etc: an explosion of laughter.) kast4) (a sudden great increase: an explosion in food prices.) skyndileg útþensla, aukning, sprenging -
26 face to face
(in person; in the actual presence of one another: I'd like to meet him face to face some day - I've heard so much about him.) augliti til auglitis -
27 first-hand
adjective, adverb ((of a story, description etc) obtained directly, not through various other people: a first-hand account; I heard the story first-hand.) milliliðalaus; frá fyrstu hendi -
28 footstep
noun (the sound of a foot: She heard his footsteps on the stairs.) fótatak -
29 freeze
[fri:z] 1. past tense - froze; verb1) (to make into or become ice: It's so cold that the river has frozen over.) frjósa, frysta2) ((of weather) to be at or below freezing-point: If it freezes again tonight all my plants will die.) frjósa, frysta3) (to make or be very cold: If you had stayed out all night in the snow you might have frozen to death (= died of exposure to cold).) frjósa, (of)kólna4) (to make (food) very cold in order to preserve it: You can freeze the rest of that food and eat it later.) frysta5) (to make or become stiff, still or unable to move (with fear etc): She froze when she heard the strange noise.) stirðna upp/verða agndofa af skelfingu6) (to fix prices, wages etc at a certain level: If the situation does not improve, wages will be frozen again.) frysta laun/verð(lag)2. noun(a period of very cold weather when temperatures are below freezing-point: How long do you think the freeze will last?) frost- freezer- freezing
- frozen
- freezing-point
- freeze up -
30 fresh
[freʃ]1) (newly made, gathered, arrived etc: fresh fruit (= fruit that is not tinned, frozen etc); fresh flowers.) ferskur2) ((of people etc) healthy; not tired: You are looking very fresh this morning.) frísklegur3) (another; different; not already used, begun, worn, heard etc: a fresh piece of paper; fresh news.) ferskur, nÿr4) ((of weather etc) cool; refreshing: a fresh breeze; fresh air.) svalur, hressandi5) ((of water) without salt: The swimming-pool has fresh water in it, not sea water.) ferskvatn•- freshen- freshly
- fresh-water -
31 funny
1) (amusing; making one laugh: a funny story.) fyndinn, skemmtilegur2) (strange; peculiar: I heard a funny noise.) skrÿtinn -
32 gather
['ɡæðə] 1. verb1) (to (cause to) come together in one place: A crowd of people gathered near the accident.) safnast saman2) (to learn (from what has been seen, heard etc): I gather you are leaving tomorrow.) álykta3) (to collect or get: He gathered strawberries from the garden; to gather information.) tína4) (to pull (material) into small folds and stitch together: She gathered the skirt at the waist.) rykkja2. noun(a fold in material, a piece of clothing etc.) rykking- gather round
- gather together -
33 groan
-
34 gunshot
noun (the sound of a gun firing: I heard a gunshot and a man dropped dead.) byssuskot -
35 hearing
1) (the ability to hear: My hearing is not very good.) heyrn2) (the distance within which something can be heard: I don't want to tell you when so many people are within hearing; I think we're out of hearing now.) heyrnarmál3) (an act of listening: We ought to give his views a fair hearing.) áheyrn4) (a court case: The hearing is tomorrow.) réttarhald -
36 hold one's breath
(to stop breathing (often because of anxiety or to avoid being heard): He held his breath as he watched the daring acrobat.) halda í sér andanum -
37 inaudible
[in'o:dəbl](not loud or clear enough to be heard: Her voice was inaudible because of the noise.) óheyranlegur- inaudibility -
38 instant
['instənt] 1. adjective1) (immediate: Anyone disobeying these rules will face instant dismissal; His latest play was an instant success.) tafarlaus; sem verður samstundis2) ((of food etc) able to be prepared etc almost immediately: instant coffee/potato.) skyndi-2. noun1) (a point in time: He climbed into bed and at that instant the telephone rang; He came the instant (that) he heard the news.) á þeirri stundu; undir eins2) (a moment or very short time: It all happened in an instant; I'll be there in an instant.) andartak, andrá•- this instant -
39 jolt
[‹əult] 1. verb1) (to move jerkily: The bus jolted along the road.) hrista; rykkja2) (to shake or move suddenly: I was violently jolted as the train stopped.) rykkjast2. noun1) (a sudden movement or shake: The car gave a jolt and started.) kippur2) (a shock: He got a jolt when he heard the bad news.) áfall -
40 knock
[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.) banka2) (to cause to move, especially to fall, by hitting (often accidentally): She knocked a vase on to the floor while she was dusting.) rekast á; hrinda3) (to put into a certain state or position by hitting: He knocked the other man senseless.) slá4) ((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.) rekast á; reka í2. 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.) bank; högg2) (the sound made by a knock, especially on a door etc: Suddenly they heard a loud knock.) bank•- knocker- knock-kneed
- knock about/around
- knock back
- knock down
- knock off
- knock out
- knock over
- knock up
- get knocked up
См. также в других словарях:
Heard — ist der Familienname folgender Personen: Amber Heard (* 1986), US amerikanische Schauspielerin Fats Heard (1923–1987), US amerikanischer Jazzschlagzeuger Floyd Heard (* 1966), US amerikanischer Leichtathlet Gyasi Cline Heard (* 1979), US… … Deutsch Wikipedia
Heard — may refer to: Hearing (sense) Heard Island and McDonald Islands Heard County, Georgia, U.S. People with the surname G. Alexander Heard (1917–2009), president of Vanderbilt University 1963 1982 Amber Heard, American actress Gar Heard, former… … Wikipedia
Heard — (h[ e]rd), imp. & p. p. of {Hear}. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Heard — (spr. Hörd), Grafschaft im Staate Georgia. (Nordamerika); 13 QM., vom Chattahoochee River u. den Whitewater u. Sundalhatchee River durchflossen; große Nadel u. Laubholzwaldungen; Producte: Baumwolle, Mais, Weizen. Hafer, Bataten, Gold, Eisen,… … Pierer's Universal-Lexikon
Héard — Rencontré en Bretagne (44, 35) et dans le Maine et Loire, semble une forme contractée de Hélard (rencontré dans les Côtes d Armor), nom de personne d origine germanique, Hailhard (hail = bien portant + hard = dur) … Noms de famille
heard — past tense and pp. of HEAR (Cf. hear), O.E. herde … Etymology dictionary
Heard — Cette page d’homonymie répertorie les différents sujets et articles partageant un même nom. Sur les autres projets Wikimedia : « Heard », sur le Wiktionnaire (dictionnaire universel) John Heard, acteur et réalisateur de cinéma.… … Wikipédia en Français
Heard — Hear Hear (h[=e]r), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Heard} (h[ e]rd); p. pr. & vb. n. {Hearing}.] [OE. heren, AS,. hi[ e]ran, h[=y]ran, h[=e]ran; akin to OS. h[=o]rian, OFries. hera, hora, D. hooren, OHG. h[=o]ren, G. h[ o]ren, Icel. heyra, Sw. h[ o]ra, Dan … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Heard — This interesting surname of early medieval English origin, found chiefly in the West country, is an occupational name for a tender of animals, usually a cowherd or shepherd. It is derived from the Middle English he(a)rde which is a development of … Surnames reference
Heard — Sp Hèrdas Ap Heard L JAV apyg. (Džordžija) … Pasaulio vietovardžiai. Internetinė duomenų bazė
heard — un·heard; … English syllables