-
1 heave to
-
2 heave-ho
-
3 heave ho
-
4 heave up
-
5 heave ho
to give sb the [old] \heave ho ( dismissal) jdn hinauswerfen [o ( fam) an die Luft setzen]; ( reject a friend) jdm den Laufpass geben ( fam), mit jdm Schluss machen ( fam) -
6 heave
heave I v 1. heben (z. B. Lasten); anheben, hochheben; 2. sich heben (bei Entlastung); 3. sich heben, sich werfen (z. B. Straße bei Frosteinwirkung); 4. BOD heben, quellen heave II BOD, ERDB Hebung f, Auftrieb m, Bodenhub mEnglish-German dictionary of Architecture and Construction > heave
-
7 heave in
-
8 heave
1. transitive verb1) (lift) heben; wuchten (ugs.)3)2. intransitive verbheave a sigh [of relief] — [erleichtert] aufseufzen
1) (pull) ziehen2) (retch) sich übergeben3) p.t. & p.p.3. noun(pull) Zug, der* * *[hi:v]I. n2. (up and down movement) Auf und Ab nt; of sea, chest Wogen nt geh; of stomach Würgen nt; TECH Hub m\heave of the sea Seegang mthe dry \heaves das trockene WürgenII. vt1. (move)he \heaved himself out of his armchair er hievte sich aus seinem Stuhlto \heave sth open etw aufstemmen2. (utter)to \heave a sigh [of relief] einen Seufzer [der Erleichterung] ausstoßen4.< hove, hove>to \heave anchor den Anker lichtenIII. vi1. (pull, push) hieven, ziehenafter the race she was covered in sweat, her chest heaving nach dem Rennen war sie schweißgebadet und sie keuchte heftig4.<hove, hove>to \heave in sight in Sicht kommen* * *[hiːv]1. vthe heaved himself out of bed — er hievte sich aus dem Bett (inf)
2) (= throw) werfen, schmeißen (inf)3) sigh, sob ausstoßento heave anchor — den Anker lichten
2. vi1) (= pull) ziehen, hieven2) (= move ground) sich heben und senken; (sea, waves, bosom) wogen (geh); (stomach) sich umdrehen; (body) sich krümmenthe earthquake made the ground heave — bei dem Beben hob sich die Erde
3. n(of sea, waves) Auf und Ab nt, Wogen nt (geh); (of bosom, chest) Wogen nt (geh)to lift/throw sth with a great heave — etw mit großer Anstrengung hochhieven or hochwuchten/mit großer Wucht werfen
* * *heave [hiːv]A s1. Heben n, Hub m, (mächtiger) Ruck2. Hochziehen n, -winden n3. umg Wurf m5. Wogen n:6. GEOL Verwerfung f, (horizontale) Verschiebunghave the heaves dämpfig seina) ihn würgt es,b) er kotzt1. (hoch)heben, (-)wuchten, (-)stemmen, (-)hieven:we heaved him to his feet wir hievten ihn auf die Beine2. hochziehen, -winden3. umg schmeißen, werfen4. SCHIFF hieven:heave the anchor den Anker lichten;heave the lead (log) loten (loggen)6. umg auskotzen7. heben und senkenC v/i1. sich heben und senken, wogen:2. keuchen3. umgb) würgen, Brechreiz haben:his stomach heaved ihm hob sich der Magen5. SCHIFFa) hieven, ziehen (at an dat):heave ho! holt auf!, allg hau ruck!b) treiben:* * *1. transitive verb1) (lift) heben; wuchten (ugs.)3)2. intransitive verbheave a sigh [of relief] — [erleichtert] aufseufzen
1) (pull) ziehen2) (retch) sich übergeben3) p.t. & p.p.3. noun(pull) Zug, der* * *n.Hub ¨-e m. v.heben v.(§ p.,pp.: hob, gehoben)hochheben v. -
9 heave
[hi:v] n2) ( up and down movement) Auf und Ab nt; of sea, chest Wogen nt ( geh) of stomach Würgen nt; tech Hub m;\heave of the sea Seegang m;the dry \heaves das trockene Würgen1) ( move)he \heaved himself out of his armchair er hievte sich aus seinem Stuhl;to \heave sth open etw aufstemmen2) ( utter)to \heave a sigh [of relief] einen Seufzer [der Erleichterung] ausstoßento \heave sth ( cast) etw werfen;( haul) etw hieven;to \heave anchor den Anker lichten vi1) (pull, push) hieven, ziehenafter the race she was covered in sweat, her chest heaving nach dem Rennen war sie schweißgebadet und sie keuchte heftigto \heave in sight in Sicht kommen -
10 heave to
-
11 heave up
-
12 heave
-
13 heave up
-
14 heave ahead
-
15 heave astern
-
16 heave down
-
17 heave out
-
18 heave-off hinge
English-German dictionary of Architecture and Construction > heave-off hinge
-
19 heave a sigh
(to sigh: She heaved a sigh of relief when she found her purse.) einen Seufzer ausstoßen -
20 heave of a fault
См. также в других словарях:
Heave — (h[=e]v), v. t. [imp. {Heaved} (h[=e]vd), or {Hove} (h[=o]v); p. p. {Heaved}, {Hove}, formerly {Hoven} (h[=o] v n); p. pr. & vb. n. {Heaving}.] [OE. heven, hebben, AS. hebban; akin to OS. hebbian, D. heffen, OHG. heffan, hevan, G. heben, Icel.… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Heave — (h[=e]v), v. i. 1. To be thrown up or raised; to rise upward, as a tower or mound. [1913 Webster] And the huge columns heave into the sky. Pope. [1913 Webster] Where heaves the turf in many a moldering heap. Gray. [1913 Webster] The heaving sods… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
heave to — {v.} To bring a ship to a stop; bring a sailing ship to a standstill by setting the sails in a certain way. * / Heave to! the captain shouted to his crew./ * /We fired a warning shot across the front of the pirate ship to make her heave to./ … Dictionary of American idioms
heave to — {v.} To bring a ship to a stop; bring a sailing ship to a standstill by setting the sails in a certain way. * / Heave to! the captain shouted to his crew./ * /We fired a warning shot across the front of the pirate ship to make her heave to./ … Dictionary of American idioms
heave — heave; heave·less; up·heave; up·heave·ment; … English syllables
heave — ► VERB (past and past part. heaved or chiefly Nautical hove) 1) lift or haul with great effort. 2) produce (a sigh) noisily. 3) informal throw (something heavy). 4) rise and fall rhythmically or spasmodically. 5) … English terms dictionary
heave-ho — ☆ heave ho [hēv′hō′] n. [see the phrase HEAVE HO! in HEAVE ] Informal dismissal, as from a position: chiefly in the phrase give (or get) the (old) heave ho … English World dictionary
Heave — Heave, n. 1. An effort to raise something, as a weight, or one s self, or to move something heavy. [1913 Webster] After many strains and heaves He got up to his saddle eaves. Hudibras. [1913 Webster] 2. An upward motion; a rising; a swell or… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
heave — [hēv] vt. HEAVED or (esp. Naut.) hove, heaving, heaved [ME heven < OE hebban, akin to Ger heben (Goth hafjan) < IE base * kap , to seize, grasp > HAVE, L capere] 1. to raise or lift, esp. with effort 2. a) to lift in this … English World dictionary
heave-ho — interjection, n 1.) old fashioned used as an encouragement to a person or group of people who are pulling something, especially on ships 2.) give someone the (old) heave ho informal to end a relationship with someone, or to make someone leave… … Dictionary of contemporary English
heave-ho — noun give someone the heave ho INFORMAL 1. ) to end a relationship with someone 2. ) to tell someone they have to leave their job … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English