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с норвежского на английский

i+can't+hack+it

  • 1 hack

    hæk 1. verb
    1) (to cut or chop up roughly: The butcher hacked the beef into large pieces.) hakke (løs på)
    2) (to cut (a path etc) roughly: He hacked his way through the jungle; He hacked (out) a path through the jungle.) hogge ut
    2. noun
    1) (a rough cut made in something: He marked the tree by making a few hacks on the trunk.) hakk, blink(merke), skår
    2) (a horse, or in the United States, a car, for hire.) leiehest, leiebil
    - hacking
    - hacksaw
    drosje
    --------
    hakke
    I
    subst. \/hæk\/
    1) hakke (verktøy), rotøks
    2) hakk, skår, merke, blink(merke) (på tre)
    3) (sport, spesielt i rugby) (sår etter) spark på skinnebenet
    4) (sport, spesielt i basket) slag på armen
    5) tørr og hakkete hoste
    6) ( hverdagslig) datahacking, datasnoking
    7) ( gammeldags) kutt, sår
    II
    subst. \/hæk\/
    1) ridehest (ikke fullblods)
    2) leiehest
    3) ( nedsettende) gamp, øk
    4) ( også hack journalist eller hack writer)
    bladsmører, journalist, forklaring: forfatter eller skribent som utfører litterært dusinarbeid
    5) klodrian, fuske
    6) (amer.) drosje, taxi
    7) forklaring: person som utfører kjedelig rutinearbeid
    III
    subst. \/hæk\/
    1) fôringsstativ
    2) ( for murstein) tørkehekk
    3) forklaring: murstein stablet opp til tørking før brenning
    IV
    verb \/hæk\/
    1) hakke, hakke løs på, lage hakk, lage skår
    2) ( overført) ødelegge
    3) (sport, spesielt i rugby) sparke motspillere på skinnebenet
    4) (sport, spesielt i basket) slå motspillere på armen
    5) (EDB, slang) hacke, bryte seg inn (på datasystemer som man ikke har lovlig tilgang til)
    6) (newzealandsk og amer., slang) holde ut, finne seg i
    7) hoste, harke
    hack around (amer.) drive dank, henge rundt
    hack at hakke på
    hack someone off ( hverdagslig) irritere noen, gjøre noen rasende
    V
    verb \/hæk\/
    1) ri (på leiehest)
    2) leie ut hester
    3) ( også hack about) forflate, banalisere, bruke til alt mulig
    4) skrive på bestilling, utføre litterært dusinarbeid
    5) (amer., hverdagslig) kjøre drosje
    VI
    adj. \/hæk\/
    1) leie-, utleie-
    2) forslitt, alminnelig, banal, triviell

    English-Norwegian dictionary > hack

См. также в других словарях:

  • can't hack it — Unable to perform an act, duty, job etc. (example: I have to quit my job as a computer technician; I just can t hack it.) …   The small dictionary of idiomes

  • hack — [[t]hæ̱k[/t]] hacks, hacking, hacked 1) VERB If you hack something or hack at it, you cut it with strong, rough strokes using a sharp tool such as an axe or knife. [V n] An armed gang barged onto the train and began hacking and shooting anyone in …   English dictionary

  • hack — hack1 [hæk] v [: Old English; Origin: haccian] 1.) [I and T] to cut something roughly or violently hack (away) at sth ▪ She hacked away at the ice, trying to make a hole. hack sth off/down etc ▪ Whole forests have been hacked down. hack your way… …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • hack — 1 verb 1 (intransitive always + adv/prep, transitive always + adv prep) to cut something into pieces roughly or violently: hack away/at etc: She hacked away at the ice, trying to make a hole. | hack sth into/through etc: We had to hack a path… …   Longman dictionary of contemporary English

  • hack — hack1 /hak/, v.t. 1. to cut, notch, slice, chop, or sever (something) with or as with heavy, irregular blows (often fol. by up or down): to hack meat; to hack down trees. 2. to break up the surface of (the ground). 3. to clear (a road, path,… …   Universalium

  • Hack Day — Yahoo! Internal Hack Day Event at Yahoo HQ (Sunnyvale, CA USA), June 6, 2006 Organi …   Wikipedia

  • hack — {{11}}hack (n.1) tool for chopping, early 14c., from HACK (Cf. hack) (v.1); Cf. Dan. hakke mattock, Ger. Hacke pickax, hatchet, hoe. Meaning an act of cutting is from 1836; figurative sense of a try, an attempt is first attested 1898. {{12}}hack… …   Etymology dictionary

  • hack — I [[t]hæk[/t]] v. t. 1) to cut, notch, slice, chop, or sever with irregular, often heavy blows (often fol. by up or down): to hack down trees[/ex] 2) to clear (a road, path, etc.) by cutting away vines, trees, or other growth 3) to damage or… …   From formal English to slang

  • hack — I. verb Etymology: Middle English hakken, from Old English haccian; akin to Old High German hacchōn to hack, Old English hōc hook Date: 13th century transitive verb 1. a. to cut or sever with repeated irregular or unskillful blows b. to cut or… …   New Collegiate Dictionary

  • hack — I. /hæk / (say hak) verb (t) 1. to cut, notch, or chop irregularly, as with heavy blows. 2. to break up the surface of (the ground). 3. to clear (a path, etc.) by cutting down brush, etc. 4. to damage by cutting harshly or ruthlessly: the… …  

  • hack — 01. We [hacked] a few dead branches off the tree to burn as firewood. 02. A number of villagers were [hacked] to death with axes and machetes by the guerrillas. 03. It took us hours to [hack] through the dense undergrowth of the forest to the… …   Grammatical examples in English

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