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101 volare
fly* * *volare v. intr.1 to fly* (anche fig.): le aquile volano alte, eagles fly high; l'uccello volò via, the bird flew away; il canarino è volato via dalla gabbia, the canary flew out of the cage; gli aerei volavano a bassa quota, the planes were flying low; volare a velocità di crociera, to cruise; volare controvento, to fly into (o against) the wind; il treno, l'auto volava attraverso la campagna, the train, the car sped (o flew) through the countryside; devo volare alla stazione, I must rush (o fly) to the station; la notizia volò per tutto il paese, the news flew through the country // il mio pensiero volava a te, my thoughts flew to you; volò con la memoria agli anni passati, his mind raced (o flew) back to the past years // volare in paradiso, ( morire) to go to heaven // far volare, to blow: il vento mi fece volare via il cappello, the wind blew my hat off3 (di cose leggere, librarsi) to blow*; to be blown: le foglie volavano per il giardino, leaves were blowing across the garden4 (di tempo, passare veloce) to fly* by, to pass quickly: le nostre vacanze sono volate, our holiday flew by; il tempo vola, time flies5 ( essere scagliato) to fly*, to be thrown about: far volare i piatti, to throw plates about; il pallone volò fuori dal campo, the ball flew off the pitch; cominciarono a volare schiaffi, blows began to fly; volarono insulti pesanti durante la lite, unpleasant insults flew about during the argument6 ( precipitare) to fall* off: è volato giù dal terzo piano, he fell from the third floor // accidenti, la tovaglia è volata giù dal balcone!, gosh, the tablecloth has blown off the balcony!* * *[vo'lare]verbo intransitivo (aus. essere, avere)1) (spostarsi nell'aria) [animale, aereo, aquilone] to fly*; (viaggiare in aereo) [ persona] to fly*; (volteggiare nell'aria) [polvere, piuma, foglie] to fly*, to blow* aroundvolare via — [ animale] to fly away o off; [fogli, cappello] to blow away o off
2) (essere lanciato) [pietre, schiaffi, insulti, minacce] to fly*3) (cadere)volare giù dalle scale — to tumble o fall down the stairs
4) (correre, precipitarsi) to rush, to fly*5) (trascorrere velocemente) [ tempo] to fly** * *volare/vo'lare/ [1](aus. essere, avere)1 (spostarsi nell'aria) [animale, aereo, aquilone] to fly*; (viaggiare in aereo) [ persona] to fly*; (volteggiare nell'aria) [polvere, piuma, foglie] to fly*, to blow* around; volare via [ animale] to fly away o off; [fogli, cappello] to blow away o off; volare con la British Airways to fly British Airways2 (essere lanciato) [pietre, schiaffi, insulti, minacce] to fly*3 (cadere) volare giù dalle scale to tumble o fall down the stairs; volare giù dal quarto piano to fall from the fourth floor4 (correre, precipitarsi) to rush, to fly*; volo in farmacia I'll rush to the chemist's -
102 discendere
descend( trarre origine) be a descendant (da of), be descended (da from)da veicoli, da cavallo alight (da from)* * *discendere v. intr.1 to go* down, to come* down, (form.) to descend: l'angelo discese dal cielo, the angel descended from heaven; il fiume discende verso il mare, the river runs down to the sea (o flows towards the sea) // discendere a terra, ( approdare) to land (o to go ashore); discendere da un'auto, to get out of a car; discendere da cavallo, to dismount; discendere dal treno, to get off (o to get out of) the train // discendere in basso, (fig.) to sink2 ( declinare) to descend, to slope down: il giardino discende verso il fiume, the garden descends (o slopes down) to the river; le montagne discendevano bruscamente verso ovest, the hills fell steeply away to the west3 ( di astri) to sink*, to set*5 ( trarre origine) to descend; to come* from: discendere da un re, to descend (o to be descended) from a king; discendere da una nobile famiglia, to come from a noble family6 ( conseguire) to follow, to proceed: ne discende che..., it follows that...◆ v.tr. to descend, to go* down, to come* down: discese le scale, he descended (o went down o came down) the stairs.* * *1. [diʃ'ʃendere]vb irreg vi (aus essere)1) (scendere) to come (o go) down, descenddiscendere da — (treno) to get off, (macchina) to get out of, (tetto) to get down from
discendere da cavallo — to dismount, get off one's horse
2)discendere da — to be descended from, come from2. vt(scale) to come (o go) down, descend* * *[diʃ'ʃendere] 1.verbo transitivo1) (scendere) to go* down [ scala]2) (percorrere) to come* down [ fiume]; to run* [ rapide]2.discendere in linea diretta da — to be a direct descendant of, to be directly descended from
2) (derivare)ne discende che... — it follows that
3) (scendere)4) (digradare) to descend, to slope down* * *discendere/di∫'∫endere/ [10]1 (scendere) to go* down [ scala](aus. essere)1 (avere origine) discendere da to descend from; discendere in linea diretta da to be a direct descendant of, to be directly descended from2 (derivare) ne discende che... it follows that...3 (scendere) discendere dal treno to get off the train4 (digradare) to descend, to slope down. -
103 jump
I [dʒʌmp]1) (leap) salto m., balzo m.2) equit. ostacolo m.3) fig. (step)to be one jump ahead — essere un passo più avanti (of sb. rispetto a qcn.)
4) (sudden increase) (in price) aumento m. improvviso (in in)II 1. [dʒʌmp]she's made the jump from deputy to director — ha fatto un balzo nella carriera passando da sostituta a direttrice
1) (leap over) saltare, superare (con un salto) [obstacle, ditch]2) (anticipate)to jump the lights — [ motorist] passare con il rosso
to jump the queue — passare davanti agli altri, non rispettare la coda
3) (escape)to jump ship — [ crewman] abbandonare la nave (violando gli obblighi contrattuali)
4) (miss) [ stylus] saltare [ groove]; [ disease] saltare [ generation]2.1) (leap) saltare, fare un saltoto jump across o over saltare al di là di [ ditch]; to jump to one's feet balzare in piedi; to jump to conclusions saltare alle conclusioni; to jump up and down — [ gymnast] fare dei saltelli; [ child] saltellare qua e là; fig. (in anger) sbattere i piedi (dalla rabbia)
3) (rise) [prices, rate] salire rapidamente, avere un'impennata4) (move)5) (welcome)to jump at — cogliere al volo [ opportunity]; accogliere, accettare (volentieri o di buon grado) [ offer]
•- jump on- jump out- jump up••* * *1. verb1) (to (cause to) go quickly off the ground with a springing movement: He jumped off the wall / across the puddle / over the fallen tree / into the swimming-pool; Don't jump the horse over that fence!) saltare, far saltare2) (to rise; to move quickly (upwards): She jumped to her feet; He jumped into the car.) saltare3) (to make a startled movement: The noise made me jump.) sobbalzare4) (to pass over (a gap etc) by bounding: He jumped the stream easily.) saltare2. noun1) (an act of jumping: She crossed the stream in one jump.) salto2) (an obstacle to be jumped over: Her horse fell at the third jump.) ostacolo (da saltare)3) (a jumping competition: the high jump.) salto4) (a startled movement: She gave a jump when the door suddenly banged shut.) balzo5) (a sudden rise, eg in prices: There has been a jump in the price of potatoes.) impennata•- jumpy- jump at
- jump for joy
- jump on
- jump the gun
- jump the queue
- jump to conclusions / jump to the conclusion that
- jump to it* * *jump /dʒʌmp/n.2 sobbalzo; soprassalto: to wake with a jump, svegliarsi con un sobbalzo (o di soprassalto); My heart gave a jump, il mio cuore ha avuto un sobbalzo3 (fig.) salto ( di grado, qualità, ecc.); passo in avanti: He's been made headmaster; quite a jump!, è stato fatto preside; un bel salto!; further jumps in surgery, ulteriori passi in avanti della chirurgia4 (fig.) aumento improvviso, impennata; sbalzo ( della temperatura): a jump in prices, un balzo (o un'impennata) dei prezzi5 (fig.) passo: to stay (o to be) one jump ahead of sb., essere un passo più avanti di q.; essere in vantaggio su q.6 (fam.) – the jump, vantaggio: to have the jump on sb., essere in vantaggio su q.; to get the jump on sb., ottenere un (o portarsi in) vantaggio su q.; superare q.7 ( sport: atletica, pattinaggio) salto; ( calcio, basket, ecc.) balzo, scatto, stacco, elevazione, sospensione: long jump ( USA: broad jump), salto in lungo; high jump, salto in alto; ski jump, salto con gli sci; ( basket) jump shot, tiro in sospensione; standing jump, salto senza rincorsa10 (elettr.) salto13 (al pl.; fam.) – the jumps, agitazione, nervosismo; fifa, tremarella● ( basket) jump ball, (palla del) salto a due □ (comput.) jump drive, chiavetta USB □ (fig.) a jump into the unknown, un salto nel buio □ (aeron.) jump jet, jet a decollo verticale □ (autom., elettr., GB) jump lead, cavo con morsetti ( per collegare due batterie) □ jump-off, ( sport) partenza; (ipp.) spareggio; (fig.) inizio □ ( USA) jump rope, corda per saltare □ (autom.) jump seat, strapuntino □ jump ski, sci da salto □ ( atletica, ecc.) jump start, partenza anticipata □ jump suit, tuta □ (fam.) to be for the high jump, stare per essere licenziato □ ( slang USA) from the jump, fin dall'inizio.♦ (to) jump /dʒʌmp/A v. i.1 saltare; balzare; fare un salto: to jump back, fare un salto indietro; arretrare con un balzo; to jump down the stairs, scendere a salti le scale; to jump into the water, saltare in acqua; to jump out of a window, saltare da una finestra; ( anche) gettarsi da una finestra; to jump over st., saltare al di là di qc.; scavalcare qc.; superare qc. con un salto; to jump up (o to one's feet) balzare (o scattare) in piedi2 sobbalzare; fare un salto; sussultare; trasalire: The noise made me jump, il rumore mi fece sobbalzare; My heart jumped when…, il mio cuore ha avuto un sobbalzo (o il cuore mi è balzato in gola) quando…; to jump with fright, sobbalzare (o fare un salto) per la paura3 (fig.) passare bruscamente; saltare: to jump from one subject to another, saltare da un argomento all'altro; to jump to conclusions, trarre conclusioni affrettate; saltare alle conclusioni4 (fig.: di prezzi, ecc.) balzare; fare un balzo; aumentare improvvisamente; impennarsi: The population of developing countries has jumped sharply, c'è stato un grande balzo demografico nei paesi in via di sviluppo7 ( sport: atletica) saltare; eseguire un salto; ( calcio, ecc.) saltare, scattare, staccare; andare in elevazione; svettareB v. t.2 saltare; omettere; tralasciare; sorvolare su: to jump a chapter in a book, saltare un capitolo in un libro; to jump a few lines, omettere qualche riga3 (fam.) saltare addosso a (q.); aggredire: The woman was jumped on her way home, la donna è stata aggredita mentre stava andando a casa6 ( sport: atletica, equit., sci, ecc.) saltare: to jump a hurdle, saltare un ostacolo; to jump eight metres ( nel lungo), saltare otto metri7 (equit.) far saltare ( il cavallo): He jumped his horse safely over the last fence, fece saltare al cavallo l'ultimo steccato senza danno9 ( slang USA) lasciare; abbandonare; scappare da: to jump town, lasciare in fretta e furia la città11 (volg.) sbattere, fottere, scopare (volg.)● (leg.) to jump bail, non comparire in giudizio dopo aver ottenuto la libertà provvisoria dietro cauzione □ (fam.) to jump a claim, impossessarsi di un terreno o di diritti minerari, scavalcando q. □ ( atletica, equit.) to jump clear, superare l'ostacolo in bellezza; saltare bene □ (fig.) to jump down sb. 's throat, rispondere in modo aggressivo a q.; saltare addosso a q. □ ( anche fig.) to jump for joy, saltare dalla gioia; fare i salti di gioia □ ( USA) to jump a freight = to jump a train ► sotto □ to jump the gun, ( sport) scattare prima del segnale (di partenza); (fig.) essere troppo precipitoso □ (autom.) to jump the lights, bruciare il semaforo; passare col rosso □ (fam. USA) to jump in line = to jump the queue ► sotto □ (fig.) to jump out of the frying pan into the fire, cadere dalla padella nella brace □ to jump out of one's skin, fare un salto per lo spavento; spaventarsi a morte □ (fam.) to jump the queue, non fare (o non rispettare) la coda; passare davanti agli altri ( anche fig.); scavalcare (fig.) □ to jump the rails (o the track), ( di treno) deragliare; (fig.) uscire di carreggiata (o dai binari), fare cose strane □ ( USA) to jump rope, saltare con la corda ( gioco) □ (naut.) to jump ship, ( di marinaio) lasciare la nave senza permesso; disertare; (fig.) tagliare la corda, squagliarsela □ (fig.) to jump through the hoops, fare i salti mortali (per fare qc.) □ (mil.) to jump to attention, scattare sull'attenti □ to jump to sb. 's defence, correre in difesa di q. □ to jump to the eyes, saltare all'occhio □ Jump to it!, sbrigati!; forza!; muoviti!; scattare! □ (fam.) to jump up and down, essere furibondo, dare in escandescenze; ( anche) fare i salti di gioia □ (volg. USA) to jump sb. 's bones, scopare q.; sbattere q. □ (fam. USA) to jump a train, viaggiare (di nascosto) su un treno merci □ (fam.) Go (and) jump in the lake!, togliti dai piedi!; levati di torno!; sparisci!* * *I [dʒʌmp]1) (leap) salto m., balzo m.2) equit. ostacolo m.3) fig. (step)to be one jump ahead — essere un passo più avanti (of sb. rispetto a qcn.)
4) (sudden increase) (in price) aumento m. improvviso (in in)II 1. [dʒʌmp]she's made the jump from deputy to director — ha fatto un balzo nella carriera passando da sostituta a direttrice
1) (leap over) saltare, superare (con un salto) [obstacle, ditch]2) (anticipate)to jump the lights — [ motorist] passare con il rosso
to jump the queue — passare davanti agli altri, non rispettare la coda
3) (escape)to jump ship — [ crewman] abbandonare la nave (violando gli obblighi contrattuali)
4) (miss) [ stylus] saltare [ groove]; [ disease] saltare [ generation]2.1) (leap) saltare, fare un saltoto jump across o over saltare al di là di [ ditch]; to jump to one's feet balzare in piedi; to jump to conclusions saltare alle conclusioni; to jump up and down — [ gymnast] fare dei saltelli; [ child] saltellare qua e là; fig. (in anger) sbattere i piedi (dalla rabbia)
3) (rise) [prices, rate] salire rapidamente, avere un'impennata4) (move)5) (welcome)to jump at — cogliere al volo [ opportunity]; accogliere, accettare (volentieri o di buon grado) [ offer]
•- jump on- jump out- jump up•• -
104 stoßen
to hit; to hustle; to impinge; to knock; to jab; to strike; to thrust; to push; to poke; to shove; to kick; to bump* * *sto|ßen ['ʃtoːsn] pret stieß [ʃtiːs] ptp gestoßen [gə'ʃtoːsn]1. vt1) (= einen Stoß versetzen) to push, to shove (inf); (leicht) to poke; (mit Faust) to punch; (mit Fuß) to kick; (mit Ellbogen) to nudge, to dig (Brit), to poke; (mit Kopf, Hörnern) to butt; (= stechen) Dolch to plunge, to thrust; (vulg) to fuck (vulg), to shag (Brit sl to poke (sl)an den Kopf etc stóßen — to hit one's head etc
jdm or jdn in die Seite stóßen — to nudge sb, to dig (Brit) or poke sb in the ribs
jdn von sich stóßen — to push sb away; (fig) to cast sb aside
jdn/etw zur Seite stóßen — to push sb/sth aside; (mit Fuß) to kick sb/sth aside or to one side
er stieß den Ball mit dem Kopf ins Tor — he headed the ball into the goal (Brit), he hit the ball into the goal with his head
ein Loch ins Eis stóßen — to make or bore a hole in the ice
2) (= werfen) to push; (SPORT ) Kugel to putjdn von der Treppe/aus dem Zug stóßen —
jdn aus dem Haus stóßen (fig) jdn ins Elend stóßen (liter) — to throw or turn sb out (of the house) to plunge sb into misery
3) (= zerkleinern) Zimt, Pfeffer, Zucker to pound4) (Sw = schieben, drücken) to push2. vrto bump or bang or knock oneselfstóßen (lit) — to bump etc oneself on or against sth; (fig) to take exception to sth, to disapprove of sth
er stößt sich daran, wenn Männer Ohrringe tragen — he takes exception to men wearing earrings
3. vi1) aux sein (= treffen, prallen) to run or bump into (auch fig); (= herabstoßen Vogel) to swoop down (auf +acc on)stóßen — to bump into or hit sth
gegen etw stóßen — to run into sth
zu jdm stóßen — to meet up with sb, to join sb
auf jdn stóßen — to bump or run into sb
auf Erdöl stóßen — to strike oil
auf Grundwasser stóßen — to discover underground water
auf Widerstand stóßen — to meet with or encounter resistance
auf Ablehnung/Zustimmung stóßen — to meet with disapproval/approval
an seine Grenzen stóßen — to reach one's limits
2) (mit den Hörnern) to butt (nach at)3) (TECH) to butt (an +acc against)4) (Gewichtheben) to jerk5) (old = blasen) to blow, to soundSee:→ Horn* * *1) (to poke: He dug his brother in the ribs with his elbow.) dig2) bump3) (to strike (someone or something) with the head: He fell over when the goat butted him.) butt4) (to make hard contact with (something), and force or cause it to move in some direction: The batsman hit the ball (over the wall).) hit5) (to push quickly and roughly: The man was hustled out of the office.) hustle6) ((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.) knock7) shove8) (to push (something) violently or suddenly into: He plunged a knife into the meat.) plunge9) (to push something into; to prod: He poked a stick into the hole; He poked her in the ribs with his elbow.) poke10) (to press against something, in order to (try to) move it further away: He pushed the door open; She pushed him away; He pushed against the door with his shoulder; The queue can't move any faster, so stop pushing!; I had a good view of the race till someone pushed in front of me.) push11) stick12) (to hurt (especially a toe) by striking it against something hard: She stubbed her toe(s) against the bedpost.) stub13) (to push suddenly and violently: He thrust his spade into the ground; She thrust forward through the crowd.) thrust* * *sto·ßen<stößt, stieß, gestoßen>[ˈʃto:sn̩]I. vter hat sie die Treppe hinunterge\stoßen he shoved her down the stairsjdn aus dem Haus \stoßen (fig) to throw sb out [of the house]jdn von der Leiter/aus dem Zug \stoßen to push sb down the ladder/out of the trainjdn ins Elend \stoßen (fig) to plunge sb into miseryjdn mit der Faust/dem Fuß/dem Kopf \stoßen to punch/kick/butt sbjdn in die Seite \stoßen to poke sb in the ribssie stieß ihn mit dem Ellbogen in die Seite she poked him in the ribs with her elbowjdn/etw zur Seite \stoßen to push sb/sth aside; (mit dem Fuß) to kick sb/sth aside [or to one side]; s.a. Kopfein Loch ins Eis \stoßen to make [or bore] a hole in the icejdm einen Dolch/ein Messer in die Rippen \stoßen to plunge [or thrust] a dagger/knife into sb's ribsden Ball mit dem Kopf ins Tor \stoßen to head the ball into the goalman muss sie immer drauf \stoßen she always has to have things pointed out to her6. (zerstoßen)Pfeffer/Zimt/Zucker \stoßen to pound pepper/cinnamon/sugar▪ jdm etw \stoßen to hammer sth home to sbein Fahrrad \stoßen to push a bicycle▪ jdn \stoßen to give sb a pushkönnen Sie mich bitte mal \stoßen? can you please give me a push?10. (vulg)eine Frau \stoßen to poke a woman vulgII. vrsie stolperte und stieß sich das Knie am Tisch she tripped and banged her knee on the tableer stößt sich daran, wenn Frauen Zigarren rauchen he takes exception to women smoking cigarsIII. vi1. Hilfsverb: sein (aufschlagen)2. Hilfsverb: haben (zustoßen)er hat mit einem Messer nach mir ge\stoßen he trust at me with a knifeer stieß immer wieder mit dem Stock nach mir he tried again and again to hit me with the stickder Stier stieß [mit den Hörnern] nach dem Torero the bull charged the matador [with lowered horns]jdm in die Seite \stoßen to poke sb in the ribs3. Hilfsverb: sein (grenzen)mein Grundstück stößt im Süden an einen Bach my plot is bordered to the south by a stream, a stream borders my plot to the south4. Hilfsverb: sein (direkt hinführen)5. Hilfsverb: sein (zufällig begegnen)▪ auf jdn \stoßen to bump [or run] into sb6. Hilfsverb: sein (sich jdm anschließen)▪ zu jdm \stoßen to join sb7. Hilfsverb: sein (entdecken)▪ auf etw \stoßen to find [or come across [or upon]] sthauf Erdöl \stoßen to strike oilauf Grundwasser \stoßen to discover underground water8. Hilfsverb: sein (konfrontiert werden)auf Ablehnung/Zustimmung \stoßen to meet with disapproval/approvalauf Widerstand \stoßen to meet with [or encounter] resistancebitte \stoßen! please push!ins Horn/in die Trompete \stoßen to blow [or sound] the horn/trumpet11. Hilfsverb: sein (angreifen)* * *1.unregelmäßiges transitives Verb1) auch itr. (mit der Faust) punch; (mit dem Fuß) kick; (mit dem Kopf, den Hörnern) butt; (mit dem Ellbogen) digjemanden od. jemandem in die Seite stoßen — dig somebody in the ribs; (leicht) nudge somebody in the ribs
3) (stoßend hervorbringen) knock, bang < hole>4) (schleudern) pushdie Kugel stoßen — (beim Kugelstoßen) put the shot; (beim Billard) strike the ball
5) (zerstoßen) pound <sugar, cinnamon, pepper>2.unregelmäßiges intransitives Verb1) mit sein (auftreffen) bump ( gegen into)2) mit sein (begegnen)auf jemanden stoßen — bump or run into somebody
3) mit sein (entdecken)auf etwas (Akk.) stoßen — come upon or across something
auf Ablehnung stoßen — (fig.) meet with disapproval
4) mit seinzu jemandem stoßen — (jemanden treffen) meet up with somebody; (sich jemandem anschließen) join somebody
5) mit sein (zuführen)auf etwas (Akk.) stoßen — <path, road> lead [in]to something
6) (grenzen)3.an etwas (Akk.) stoßen — <room, property, etc.> be [right] next to something
unregelmäßiges reflexives Verb bump or knock oneselfich habe mich am Kopf gestoßen — I bumped or banged my head
sich (Dat.) den Kopf blutig stoßen — bang one's head and cut it
sich an etwas (Dat.) stoßen — (fig.) object to or take exception to something
* * *stoßen; stößt, stieß, hat oder ist gestoßenA. v/t (hat)1. push; mit einer Waffe: thrust; mit der Faust: punch; mit dem Fuß: kick; (puffen) nudge, jostle; mit einem Stock etc: poke; (rammen) ram; (treiben) drive; SPORT (Kugel) put; im Mörser: pound;jemanden in die Rippen stoßen nudge sb, give sb a dig in the ribs;jemanden vor einen Zug stoßen push sb in front of a train;jemanden mit dem Kopf stoßen butt sb with one’s head;jemandem das Messer in die Brust stoßen plunge a knife into sb’s chest;den Ball ins Tor stoßen drive the ball into the net;von sich stoßen push away; fig disown2. unabsichtlich:3. fig:jemanden aus dem Haus/Verein stoßen turn sb out of the house/expel sb from the club;4. vulg (Frau) fuck, bangB. v/r (hat) (sich wehtun) knock o.s., hurt o.s.;sich stoßen an (+dat) knock ( oder run, bump) against; fig take offence (US -se) at, take exception to;an der Unordnung darfst du dich nicht stoßen just ignore the mess, you mustn’t mind the messC. v/i1. (hat) Bock etc: butt;2. (ist)stoßen an (+akk) odergegen bump into, knock (o.s.) against;ich bin bei dem Marathon an meine (eigenen) Grenzen gestoßen I was touching my limits (of endurance) in the marathon;stoßen auf (+akk) fig, auf Erdöl: strike; Straße etc: lead onto, hit umg; (zufällig begegnen) (happen to) meet, come across, run ( oder bump) into; (entdecken) come across, stumble on; auf Ablehnung, Widerstand etc: meet with;zu jemandem, einer Partei etcstoßen join (up with);* * *1.unregelmäßiges transitives Verb1) auch itr. (mit der Faust) punch; (mit dem Fuß) kick; (mit dem Kopf, den Hörnern) butt; (mit dem Ellbogen) digjemanden od. jemandem in die Seite stoßen — dig somebody in the ribs; (leicht) nudge somebody in the ribs
3) (stoßend hervorbringen) knock, bang < hole>4) (schleudern) pushdie Kugel stoßen — (beim Kugelstoßen) put the shot; (beim Billard) strike the ball
5) (zerstoßen) pound <sugar, cinnamon, pepper>2.unregelmäßiges intransitives Verb1) mit sein (auftreffen) bump ( gegen into)2) mit sein (begegnen)auf jemanden stoßen — bump or run into somebody
3) mit sein (entdecken)auf etwas (Akk.) stoßen — come upon or across something
auf Ablehnung stoßen — (fig.) meet with disapproval
4) mit seinzu jemandem stoßen — (jemanden treffen) meet up with somebody; (sich jemandem anschließen) join somebody
5) mit sein (zuführen)auf etwas (Akk.) stoßen — <path, road> lead [in]to something
6) (grenzen)3.an etwas (Akk.) stoßen — <room, property, etc.> be [right] next to something
unregelmäßiges reflexives Verb bump or knock oneselfich habe mich am Kopf gestoßen — I bumped or banged my head
sich (Dat.) den Kopf blutig stoßen — bang one's head and cut it
sich an etwas (Dat.) stoßen — (fig.) object to or take exception to something
* * *(an, gegen) v.to impinge (on, upon) v. (nach) v.to thrust at v. adj.stricken adj. v.(§ p.,pp.: stieß, gestossen)= to bump v.to butt v.to hustle v.to knock (at) v.to poke v.to punt v.to push v.to ram v.to shove v.to strike v.(§ p.,p.p.: struck)or p.p.: stricken•)to thrust v.(§ p.,p.p.: thrust) -
105 vallen
3 [terechtkomen] fall4 [plaatshebben op] fall6 [tot stand komen, ontstaan] 〈zie voorbeelden 6〉7 [op een bepaalde manier zijn] 〈zie voorbeelden 7〉8 [in een situatie terechtgekomen zijn] come, fall9 [sneuvelen] fall (in battle)14 [zich aangetrokken voelen tot] go (for), take (to)♦voorbeelden:1 er valt sneeuw/hagel • it's snowing/hailinguit elkaar/aan stukken vallen • fall apart/to pieceszij kwam lelijk te vallen • she had/took a bad fallzich laten vallen • allow oneself to be dropped, fall, drophij viel languit op de grond • he fell headlong/sprawling to the ground〈 figuurlijk〉 op/over een woord vallen • take offence at/quibble over a wordvan de trap vallen • fall/tumble down the stairsik zou hem/haar niet kennen al zou ik over hem/haar vallen • I wouldn't know him/her from Adam3 zijn blik laten vallen op • let one's eye fall on, cast a glance at4 Kerstmis valt op een woensdag • Christmas (Day) falls on/is a Wednesdayer vielen doden/gewonden • there were fatalities/casualtieser valt een schot • a shot is fired/rings outer viel een stilte • there was a hush, silence felleen woord laten vallen • drop a remarkhet valt niet te ontkennen dat … • there is no denying the fact that …met haar valt niet te praten • there is no talking to herer valt wel iets voor te zeggen om … • there is something to be said for …8 dat valt buiten zijn bevoegdheid • that is/falls outside his authority/jurisdictiondat valt niet onder het contract • that does not come/fall under the contract, that is not covered by the contract12 dat valt goed/verkeerd • 〈 gewaardeerd worden〉 that goes down well/badly; 〈 uitvallen〉 that turns out well/badlyhet viel hem zwaar • he found it hard going/difficulteen eis laten vallen • drop a demandiemand laten vallen • drop/ditch someonehij liet de aanklacht vallen • he dropped the charge -
106 clatter
1. nounKlappern, das2. intransitive verb1) klappern2) (move or fall with a clatter) poltern3. transitive verb* * *['klætə] 1. noun(a loud noise like hard objects falling, striking against each other etc: the clatter of pots falling off the shelf.) das Getrampel2. verb(to (cause to) make such a noise: The dishes clattered while I was washing them in the sink.) klappern mit* * *clat·ter[ˈklætəʳ, AM -t̬ɚ]I. vtII. vi1. (rattle) klappern* * *['kltə(r)]1. nKlappern nt, Geklapper nt; (of hooves also) Trappeln nt, Getrappel nt2. viklappern; (hooves also) trappelnthe box of tools went clattering down the stairs — der Werkzeugkasten polterte die Treppe hinunter
the cart clattered over the cobbles — der Wagen polterte or rumpelte über das Pflaster
3. vtklappern mit* * *clatter [ˈklætə(r)]A v/i1. klappern, rasseln2. poltern, klappern, trappen:3. fig plappern, schwatzen pejC s1. Geklapper n, Gerassel n2. Getrappel n, Getrampel n3. Krach m, Lärm m4. Geplapper n pej* * *1. nounKlappern, das2. intransitive verb1) klappern2) (move or fall with a clatter) poltern3. transitive verb* * *v.klappern v.rattern v. -
107 poltern
v/i1. (hat gepoltert) make a racket; (fallen) crash; polternd umfallen fall over ( oder down) with a crash2. (ist) (sich polternd bewegen) rumble (along); der LKW polterte durch die Straße the lorry (Am. truck) rumbled down the street3. (hat) umg. (schimpfen) rant and rave* * *das Polternbluster* * *pọl|tern ['pɔltɐn]vidie Kinder poltern oben — the children are crashing about or banging about upstairs, the children are making a din or racket (inf) upstairs
was hat da eben so gepoltert? — what was that crash or bang?
es fiel polternd zu Boden — it crashed to the floor, it fell with a crash to the floor
es polterte fürchterlich, als er... — there was a terrific crash or bang when he...
es poltert ( an der Tür/vor dem Haus) — there's a real racket (inf) or din going on (at the door/ in front of the house)
an die Tür poltern — to thump or bang on the door
2) aux sein (= sich laut bewegen) to crash, to bangüber das Pflaster poltern — to clatter over the cobbles
4) (inf = Polterabend feiern) to celebrate on the eve of a wedding* * ** * *pol·tern[ˈpɔltɐn]vida poltert es an der Tür there's a banging on the door▪ irgendwohin \poltern to go crashing somewhereder Schrank polterte die Treppe hinunter the wardrobe went crashing down the stairs▪ irgendwohin \poltern to stump [or stomp] [or clump] somewhere* * *intransitives Verb1) (lärmen) crash or thump aboutes poltert — there is a bang or crash
2) mit sein3) (schimpfen) rant [and rave]* * *poltern v/ipolternd umfallen fall over ( oder down) with a crashder LKW polterte durch die Straße the lorry (US truck) rumbled down the street3. (hat) umg (schimpfen) rant and rave4. (hat) am Vorabend der Hochzeit: have an eve-of-the-wedding party* * *intransitives Verb1) (lärmen) crash or thump aboutes poltert — there is a bang or crash
2) mit sein3) (schimpfen) rant [and rave]* * *v.to jangle v.to rumble v. -
108 pound
pound [paʊnd]livre ⇒ 1 (a), 1 (b) fourrière ⇒ 1 (c) broyer ⇒ 2 (a) cogner (sur) ⇒ 2 (b), 3 (a) taper ⇒ 3 (a) battre ⇒ 3 (b)1 noun(a) (unit of weight) = 453,6 grammes, livre f;∎ to sell goods by the pound vendre des marchandises à la livre;∎ three pound or pounds of apples trois livres fpl de pommes;∎ two dollars a pound deux dollars la livre;∎ figurative to get one's pound of flesh obtenir ce que l'on exigeait;∎ he wants his pound of flesh il veut son dû à n'importe quel prix∎ have you got change for a pound? avez-vous la monnaie d'une livre?;∎ two for a pound deux pour une livre;∎ the pound fell yesterday against the Deutschmark la livre est tombée hier face au Deutsche Mark;∎ pound coin pièce f d'une livre;∎ the Lebanese/Maltese pound la livre libanaise/maltaise;∎ the pound sterling la livre sterling(c) (for dogs, cars) fourrière f(a) (crush, pulverize → grain) broyer, concasser; (→ spices, drugs etc) piler, broyer; (→ rocks) concasser, broyer, piler;∎ to pound sth to a powder/a paste réduire qch en poudre/en bouillie∎ she pounded the table with her fist elle martelait la table du poing;∎ the soldiers' heavy boots pounded the earth les soldats martelaient le sol de leurs lourdes bottes;∎ the waves pounded the rocks/boat les vagues battaient les rochers/venaient s'écraser violemment contre le bateau;∎ he began pounding the typewriter keys il commença à taper sur ou à marteler le clavier de la machine à écrire(c) (bombard, shell) bombarder, pilonner;∎ they pounded the enemy positions with mortar fire ils ont bombardé les positions ennemies au mortier(d) (walk → corridor) faire les cent pas dans, aller et venir dans;∎ to pound the streets battre le pavé;∎ to pound the beat (policeman) faire sa ronde∎ the neighbours started pounding on the ceiling les voisins ont commencé à cogner au plafond;∎ we had to pound on the door before anyone answered il a fallu frapper à la porte à coups redoublés avant d'obtenir une réponse;∎ the waves pounded against the rocks les vagues battaient les rochers;∎ the rain was pounding on the roof la pluie tambourinait sur le toit(b) (rhythmically → drums) battre; (→ heart) battre fort; (→ with fear, excitement) battre la chamade;∎ my head was pounding from the noise le bruit me martelait la tête∎ he pounded up/down the stairs il monta/descendit l'escalier bruyamment;∎ the horses came pounding along the track les chevaux arrivaient au grand galop dans un bruit de tonnerre►► Cookery pound cake ≃ quatre-quarts m inv;(a) (on typewriter, piano, drums)∎ he was pounding away at the piano il martelait les touches du piano;∎ she's been pounding away at her typewriter since eight o'clock elle s'acharne sur sa machine à écrire depuis huit heures;∎ every weekend, he pounds away on his drums il passe ses week-ends à taper sur sa batterie;∎ he spent the holidays pounding away at his thesis il a passé les vacances à travailler dur à sa thèse∎ to pound away at the enemy lines pilonner sans arrêt les lignes ennemies;∎ we heard the guns pounding away nous entendions le bruit incessant des canons∎ pound the millet down to a fine powder réduisez le millet en une poudre fine;∎ pound the mixture down to a pulp réduisez le mélange en bouillie(b) (flatten → earth) pilonner, tasser∎ the pianist was pounding out a tune le pianiste martelait un air(b) (letter, document) taper (avec fougue);∎ she pounds out a book a month elle sort ou écrit un livre par moispiler, concasserⓘ Pound of flesh Cette formule ("une livre de chair") vient du Marchand de Venise, de Shakespeare, pièce dans laquelle Shylock vient réclamer son dû à Antonio (une livre de la chair de ce dernier) comme dédommagement pour n'avoir pas tenu ses engagements. Aujourd'hui on utilise cette expression pour parler des conditions exactes d'un contrat ou d'une façon plus générale en référence à une somme d'argent qu'un débiteur est dans l'incapacité de payer. On pourra dire par exemple We're barely able to make ends meet as it is, the last thing we need is the taxman asking for his pound of flesh ("on a déjà du mal à joindre les deux bouts, on n'a vraiment pas besoin que le percepteur vienne nous réclamer de l'argent"). -
109 bump
1. nounthis car has had a few bumps — der Wagen hat schon einige Dellen abgekriegt
2) (swelling) Beule, die2. adverbbums; rums, bums3. transitive verb1) anstoßenI bumped the chair against the wall — ich stieß mit dem Stuhl an die Wand
2) (hurt)4. intransitive verbbump one's head/knee — sich am Kopf/Knie stoßen
1)bump against somebody/something — jemanden/an etwas (Akk.) od. gegen etwas stoßen
2) (move with jolts) rumpelnPhrasal Verbs:- academic.ru/84955/bump_into">bump into- bump off- bump up* * *1. verb(to knock or strike (something): She bumped into me; I bumped my head against the ceiling.) prallen, stoßen2. noun•- bumper3. adjective(excellent in some way, especially by being large: a bumper crop.) Rekord...- bumpy- bump into
- bump of* * *[bʌmp]I. nspeed \bump Bodenschwelle f (zur Verkehrsberuhigung)3. AM ( fam: in price) Erhöhung f; (in salary) Erhöhung f, Aufbesserung f; (promotion) Beförderung fhe got a \bump to manager er wurde zum Geschäftsführer befördertto get a \bump on one's head sich dat den Kopf anschlagento go \bump rumsen fam, polternto give sb the \bumps jdn an Armen und Beinen festhalten und dann mehrmals hintereinander hochwerfenII. vt1. (have accident)to \bump a vehicle mit einem Fahrzeug zusammenstoßen, ein Fahrzeug anfahrento get \bumped from a flight von der Passagierliste gestrichen werden, aus einem Flug ausgebucht werdenIII. vi▪ to \bump along (vehicle) dahinrumpeln; (passenger) durchgeschüttelt werden, eine unruhige Fahrt haben; (air passenger) einen unruhigen Flug haben* * *[bʌmp]1. nto get a bump on the head — sich (dat) den Kopf anschlagen
I accidentally gave her a bump on the chin — ich habe sie aus Versehen ans Kinn geboxt or gestoßen
the car has had a few bumps — mit dem Auto hat es ein paar Mal gebumst
each bump was agony as the ambulance... — jede Erschütterung war eine Qual, als der Krankenwagen...
3) (AVIAT: rising air current) Bö f2. vt1) stoßen ( obj gegen); car wing etc, one's own car eine Delle fahren in (+acc); another car auffahren auf (+acc)to bump one's head/knee — sich (dat) den Kopf/das Knie anstoßen or anschlagen (on, against an +dat )
3. vi(= move joltingly) holpernthe economy is continuing to bump along the bottom (Brit) — die Wirtschaft befindet sich noch immer auf der Talsohle
4. advto go bump — bumsen (inf)
things that go bump in the night — Geräusche pl im Dunkeln or in der Nacht
* * *bump [bʌmp]A v/t1. (heftig) stoßenbump one’s head against the door mit dem Kopf gegen die Tür rennen oder umg knallen3. TECH US einen Kotflügel etc ausbeulena) die Preise etc hochtreiben,b) ein Gehalt, Ergebnis etc aufbessernB v/i1. (against, into) stoßen, prallen, bumsen umg (gegen, an akk), zusammenstoßen (mit), anrempeln (akk):bump into figa) jemanden zufällig treffen,b) zufällig stoßen auf (akk)2. rumpeln, holpern (Fahrzeug)C s2. Beule f3. Unebenheit f5. US umg Rundung f (Busen)6. FLUG Steigbö f* * *1. noun2) (swelling) Beule, die2. adverbbums; rums, bums3. transitive verb1) anstoßen2) (hurt)4. intransitive verbbump one's head/knee — sich am Kopf/Knie stoßen
1)bump against somebody/something — jemanden/an etwas (Akk.) od. gegen etwas stoßen
2) (move with jolts) rumpelnPhrasal Verbs:- bump off- bump up* * *n.Bö -en f.Plumps m.Puff ¨-e m. v.anschlagen v.plumpsen v.stoßen v.(§ p.,pp.: stieß, gestossen) -
110 downstairs
adjective (, downstairs adverb on or towards a lower floor: He walked downstairs; I left my book downstairs; a downstairs flat.) abajodownstairs adj adv abajothe kitchen is downstairs la cocina está abajo / la cocina está en el piso de abajotr[daʊn'steəz]1 (down the stairs) abajo; (on or to lower floor) a la planta baja■ can you come downstairs? ¿puedes bajar?1 (room) (del piso) de abajo1 planta bajadownstairs ['daʊn'stærz] adv: abajodownstairs ['daʊn.stærz] adj: del piso de abajodownstairs ['daʊn'stærz, -.stærz] n: planta f bajaadj.• de abajo adj.adv.• abajo adv.• de abajo adv.n.• piso inferior s.m.
I 'daʊn'sterz, ˌdaʊn'steəzadverb abajothe kitchen's downstairs — la cocina está abajo or en el piso de abajo
II
noun planta f baja; (before n) <neighbor, toilet> (del piso) de abajo['daʊn'stɛǝz]1.ADJ (=on the ground floor) de la planta baja; (=on the floor underneath) del piso de abajo2.ADV en la planta baja, abajoto come/go downstairs — bajar la escalera
3.Nthe downstairs — [of building] la planta baja
* * *
I ['daʊn'sterz, ˌdaʊn'steəz]adverb abajothe kitchen's downstairs — la cocina está abajo or en el piso de abajo
II
noun planta f baja; (before n) <neighbor, toilet> (del piso) de abajo -
111 slip
1. I1) he slipped он поскользнулся: his foot slipped and he fell down the steps он поскользнулся и упал с лестницы; see that the knife does not slip смотрите, чтобы нож не соскользнул2) the knot is so firm that it can't slip узел хорошо затянут и не развяжется; the clutch slipped сцепление пробуксовало3) prices have slipped coll. цены упали4) don't let the chance (the opportunity) slip не упускайте этого случая (этой возможности)2. IIIslip smth.1) the fact (the matter, this point, etc.) slipped smb.'s mind (smb.'s memory) этот факт и т.д. вылетел у кого-л. из головы (улетучился у кого-л. из памяти); it slipped my attention я этого не заметил, я не обратил на это внимания, это ускользнуло от меня2) slip a stitch спустить петлю (в вязанье)3. XIbe slipped into smth. the book can easily be slipped into quite a small pocket книжка легко войдет /влезет/ даже в маленький карман4. XVI1) slip on (along, (in)to, off, from, etc.) smth. slip on the ice (on the stairs, on the deck, on the polished surface, etc.) поскользнуться на льду и т.д.; he slippad on a banana peel он поскользнулся на шкурке от банана; the ring slips along the rope кольцо скользит по веревке; slip into water (into a river, into a hole, etc.) поскользнуться и упасть в воду и т.д.; slip off the bed (off one's chair, off smb.'s knees, etc.) соскользнуть с постели и т.д.; the trolley slipped off the wire ролик соскочил с проводов; the shawl slipped off her shoulders шаль соскользнула с ее плеч; slip over the edge of a cliff соскользнуть /скатиться/ со скалы; slip to the ground упасть /сползти/ на землю; slip down behind the bookcase соскользнуть /упасть/ [и закатиться] за книжный шкаф; the paper slipped from the table газета соскользнула со стола; slip from the path of virtue оступиться, сойти со стези добродетели; the lamp (the axe, the knife, etc.) slipped out of /from/ smb.'s hand (s) /from smb.'s fingers/ лампа и т.д. выскользнула у кого-л. из рук; let one's pen (the letter, the knife, the reins, etc.) slip out of one's hands /from one's fingers/ выпустить ручку и т.д. из рук; the car began to slip in the mud машина начала буксовать в грязи; easily slip out of the memory легко забываться2) slip out of (into, through, etc.) smth. slip out of stirrup вынуть ногу из стремени; slip into the room (into the house, into the kitchen, etc.) проскользнуть в комнату и т.д.; he slipped into Russian он незаметно перешел на русский; many errors slipped into the text в текст вкралось много ошибок; slip out of the room улизнуть /ускользнуть/ из комнаты; slip between the sheets (under a mosquito-net) забраться /"нырнуть"/ под одеяло (под москитную сетку); slip through the crowd пробраться /прошмыгнуть/ через толпу; slip through smb.'s fingers проскочить /пройти/ между пальцами у кого-л.; the boat slips through the waves (through the water) лодка скользит по волнам (по воде); slip into another suit (into a dress, into one's dressing-gown, into one's evening clothes, etc.) быстро надеть /накинуть/ другой костюм и т.д.; slip out of a dress быстро снять /скинуть/ платье; the drawer slips into place ящик хорошо задвигается; as the door closes the catch slips into place когда дверь закрывается, замок защелкивается; May slipped into June май незаметно перешел в июнь3) slip in smth. he slips now and then in his grammar он иногда по небрежности делает грамматические ошибки5. XXI1slip smth. into (from, on, etc.) smth. slip a note into smb.'s hand (a paper into his pocket, a few things into a handbag, etc.) незаметно сунуть записку кому-л. [в руку] и т.д.; slip one's feet into one's slippers быстро сунуть ноги в тапочки; slip a cartridge into a gun вложить патрон в револьвер; slip poison (a white powder) into smb.'s glass незаметно подсыпать яд (белый порошок) в чей-л. стакан; he slipped the letter into the box он опустил письмо в ящик; slip the ring from one's finger снять /стянуть/ кольцо с пальца; slip the ring on smb.'s finger надеть кому-л. кольцо на палец; slip a pair of handcuffs on a man's wrist надеть на кого-л. наручники; slip a dress over one's head надеть /натянуть/ платье через голову; slip one's arm round smb.'s waist обнять кого-л. за талию -
112 bump
̈ɪbʌmp I
1. сущ. существительное и глагол звукоподражательные
1) а) столкновение (обычно сильное) ;
глухой тяжелый удар His mood of exaltation fell with a bump into the trough of melancholy. ≈ Его хорошее настроение с грохотом обрушилось в дыру меланхолии. б) спорт столкновение яхт при обгоне, след на корпусе яхты от столкновения (считается доказательством успешного обгона) ∙ bump on a log
2) что-л. неровное а) опухоль;
шишка б) изгиб, выпуклость;
выпуклая вмятина, вздутие в) колдобина, выбоина
3) шишка (в френологии - отдел мозга, где концентрируется какая-л. способность) ;
перен. разг. способность bump of locality ≈ способность ориентироваться на местности
4) авиац. а) воздушная яма б) неаккуратная посадка
5) сл. танец живота
2. гл.
1) ударять(ся) (into - обо что-л.) ;
врезаться, впаяться, влететь Then he bumped me against the wall. ≈ Тогда он схватил меня за грудки и как шарахнет о стену. I've bumped into the door again and hurt my knee. ≈ Я стукнулся о дверь и поранил колено.
2) двигать, подталкивать, проталкивать, толкать;
пихать (очень сильно) Syn: nudge, push, shove
3) мор. а) сесть на мель, задеть килем дно б) спорт "подрезать" впереди идущую яхту при обгоне и врезаться в нее;
задеть впереди идущую яхту какой-л. частью своей (в некоторых правилах эквивалентно обгону)
4) воен.;
сл. взрываться( о мине) ;
подрываться( на мине, на минном поле)
5) трясти( о воздушном судне при полете в облачности)
6) уволить;
подсидеть ∙ bump into bump off bump up bump out
3. нареч. межд. звукоподражание, связано с глаголом
1) вдруг, внезапно
2) со стуком, с глухим ударом
3) шлеп! хлоп! бубух! And it comes bump on the head ≈ И этой штукой ба-бах по голове. II
1. сущ. крик выпи
2. гл. о выпи - издавать ее характерный крик, см. bump II
1., bittern I глухой удар;
столкновение - to make a * (спортивное) нагнать, победить в парусной гонке шишка, выпуклость шишка (во френологии) (разговорное) способность - the * of locality способность ориентироваться на местности (авиация) воздушная яма;
pl (сленг) болтанка( химическое) вскипание с толчками (сленг) вихляние тазом, эротическое движение в танце (в стриптизе и т. п.) (разговорное) снятие с должности( разговорное) повышение по службе;
"пинок наверх" - he's got a * to full colonel его произвели в полковники сильно;
с шумом - he went * down the stairs он с грохотом скатился с лестницы - to come * on the floor шлепнуться на пол - the car ran * into the wall машина врезалась в стену (against, into) ударяться;
налетать, наталкиваться - to * against the kerb врезаться в край тротуара - to * into another car налететь на другую машину ударять - I have *ed my knee я ушиб колено (спортивное) победить в парусной гонке прыгать, скакать - to * along подпрыгивать, трястись на ухабах (американизм) (военное) (жаргон) обстреливать( разговорное) выгнать, убрать, снять( с должности и т. п.) ;
отвести( кандидата) ;
провалить( на выборах) (разговорное) снять( пассажира с самолета) ;
не предоставить( заказанного) места( в самолете) bump вдруг, внезапно;
to come bump on the floor шлепнуться об пол ~ pl ав. воздушные возмущения;
воздушные ямы ~ выгиб, выпуклость ~ крик выпи ~ кричать( о выпи) ~ амер. воен. sl. обстреливать;
bump off амер. sl. устранить силой;
убить ~ опухоль;
шишка ~ спорт. победить в парусных гонках ~ столкновение;
глухой удар ~ толкать, подталкивать ~ ударять(ся) ~ ухаб ~ шишка (в френологии) ;
разг. способность;
the bump of locality способность ориентироваться на местности ~ шишка (в френологии) ;
разг. способность;
the bump of locality способность ориентироваться на местности ~ амер. воен. sl. обстреливать;
bump off амер. sl. устранить силой;
убить bump вдруг, внезапно;
to come bump on the floor шлепнуться об пол -
113 volo
m flight( caduta) fallprendere il volo di uccello fly awaydi persona run awayvolo a vela glidingvolo diretto direct flightvolo di linea scheduled flightvolo internazionale international flightvolo nazionale domestic flightvolo senza scalo nonstop flightfig afferrare qualcosa al volo be quick to grasp something* * *volo s.m.1 flight (anche fig.): un volo dell'immaginazione, dell'ingegno, a flight of the imagination, of genius; in volo, ( di uccello) on the wing: sparare a un uccello in volo, to shoot at a bird on the wing; spiccare il volo, to fly away (o off); colpire una palla al volo, to volley a ball // capire qlco. al volo, (fig.) to grasp sthg. immediately // cogliere un'occasione al volo, (fig.) to grasp an opportunity // prendere il volo, (fig.) to make off (o to disappear): i ladri hanno preso il volo, the thieves have disappeared; il bottino ha preso il volo, the loot has vanished into thin air // correre a casa di volo, to dash home // vado e torno in un volo, I'll go and come back in no time // ho fatto un volo dalle scale, I fell headlong down the stairs2 (aer.) flight; flying: volo acrobatico, stunt flying; volo a punto fisso, ( di elicottero) hovering; volo a vela, gliding (o sailflying); volo cieco, blind flying; volo strumentale, instrument flying; volo di allenamento, practice flight; volo di collaudo, test flight; volo di durata, endurance flight; volo librato, planato, glide; volo orizzontale, level flight; volo senza scalo, nonstop flight; comandi di volo, flying controls; durata di volo, flight (o flying) time; piano di volo, flight plan; spiccare il volo da una nave portaerei, to take off from an aircraft carrier // in volo, in flight: l'aeroplano è in volo, the airplane is in flight; a quest'ora sarà in volo per Londra, by now he'll be flying to London.* * *['volo]sostantivo maschile1) (di uccello, aereo) flightprendere il volo — [ uccello] to spread one's wings, to take wing o flight; fig. (sparire) [ persona] to cut and run, to take to one's heels
alzarsi in volo — [ uccello] to rise up, to soar up; [ aereo] to take off
a volo d'uccello — [ ripresa] bird's eye attrib.
in volo — [uccello, aereo] in flight
di volo — [istruttore, scuola, condizioni] flying; [piano, rotta, registratore, simulatore] flight
volo interno — domestic o internal flight
il volo per Parigi — the Paris flight, the flight to Paris
2) (caduta) fall3) al volocogliere o prendere al volo — to seize, to grab, to jump at [offerta, opportunità]
•volo strumentale — blind o instrument flight
volo a vela — sport (hang-)gliding
* * *volo/'volo/sostantivo m.1 (di uccello, aereo) flight; prendere il volo [ uccello] to spread one's wings, to take wing o flight; fig. (sparire) [ persona] to cut and run, to take to one's heels; alzarsi in volo [ uccello] to rise up, to soar up; [ aereo] to take off; a volo d'uccello [ ripresa] bird's eye attrib.; in volo [uccello, aereo] in flight; di volo [istruttore, scuola, condizioni] flying; [piano, rotta, registratore, simulatore] flight; volo internazionale international flight; volo interno domestic o internal flight; volo di linea scheduled flight; il volo per Parigi the Paris flight, the flight to Paris; ci sono tre ore di volo tra it's a three-hour flight between2 (caduta) fall; fare un volo di tre metri to have a three-metre fall3 al volo sparare a un uccello al volo to shoot a bird in flight; afferrare una palla al volo to catch a ball in midair; colpire la palla al volo to volley the ball; è una che capisce al volo she's quick on the uptake; capì al volo la situazione she understood the situation immediately; prendere un treno al volo to jump on a train; cogliere o prendere al volo to seize, to grab, to jump at [ offerta, opportunità]volo planato glide; volo simulato simulated flight; volo strumentale blind o instrument flight; volo a vela sport (hang-)gliding; volo a vista contact flying. -
114 دفع
دَفَعَ \ bundle: to send away in a hurry: She bundled him down the stairs. drive (drove, driven): to cause (sb. or sth.) to move in a certain direction: We drove the sheep to market, to cause, sb. to be or do sth. The noise almost drove me mad. Hunger drove them to eat rats. pay: to give money for sth.: Whom should I pay for these goods? Pay the man at the door. How much must I pay? You must pay $4. You must pay that man $4. If you can’t pay now, come back later. prompt: to cause; urge: What prompted you to become a doctor? A quiet child won’t ask questions unless you prompt him. propel: to force (esp. a vehicle) forward. push: (the opposite of pull) to press forward: I pushed my bicycle up the hill. shove: to push. \ See Also سَاقَ \ دَفَعَ \ pay in, pay out: to hand money in or out: You can pay money in at the bank, and they will pay it out when you need it. \ See Also صرف (صَرَفَ) \ دَفَعَ أَجْرًا \ pay: to give regular money to an employed person: What do you pay your clerk? I pay him $80 a week. \ دَفَعَ إِكْرامِيَّة \ tip: to give a tip to: Did you tip the boy who brought you a newspaper? Yes, I tipped him 10 pence. \ دَفَعَ إلى السأم \ tire: to cause (sb.) to tire: The small print tired his eyes. I’m tired of paying your debts. \ دَفَعَ بِرِفْقٍ \ jog: to push or knock slightly: He jogged my arm, and my drink fell on the floor. \ دَفَعَ بسُرعَة \ hustle: to hurry (sb.) forcefully; to push: He hustled his family into the train. \ دَفَعَ بعَجَلةٍ \ rush: to urge (or cause) sb. to act too hastily: My wife rushed me into buying this house. \ See Also بِعُنْف \ دَفَعَ بِعُنْف \ thrust: to push suddenly and forcefully: He thrust a letter into my hand. \ دَفَعَ بالمِنْكَب \ jostle: to push roughly, among a crowd. \ دَفَعَ تَعْويضًا عن \ compensate: to make a suitable payment for some loss or bad effect: Many companies compensate their workers if they are hurt at work. \ دَفَعَ ثَمَنَ غَلْطَةٍ أو إهْمَال \ pay for: to suffer for (a foolish act): If you don’t oil that machine properly, you’ll pay for it later. \ دَفَعَ ثَمَنًا أو مُقابِلاً لِـ \ give: to pay; hand over (sth.) in return for sth. else: How much did you give for that watch? She gave her life for her children’s safety when the house was on fire. \ دَفَعَ شيئًا على عَجَلات \ wheel: to push (sth.) on wheels: He wheeled his bicycle into the hut. \ دَفَعَ مُقَدَّمًا \ advance: to pay money before it is earned; bring forward to an earlier date or time: My new employer advanced me $50 to buy a bicycle. -
115 رأس
رَأْس \ apex, apexes or apices: the highest point. head: the part of the body that is above the neck; the top of sth. (a list, a nail, etc.); the effective part of a tool (an axe, a hammer, etc.). top: the highest point or part: a mountain top; at the top of the tall building. \ بِالرَّأس \ headfirst: with the head before the body: He jumped headfirst through the window. \ الرَّأْسُ أولاً \ headfirst: with the head before the body: He jumped headfirst through the window. headlong: (only with to fall) headfirst: He fell headlong down the stairs. \ رَأْسُ البَرّ \ cape: a point of land that sticks out into the sea: The Cape of Good hope. headland: a point of land that sticks out into the sea. \ رَأْسُ الفِتْنة \ ringleader: the leader of a group of wrongdoers. \ رَأْسُ المَال \ capital: the whole wealth of a person or company: The company has a capital of $90,000. \ رَأْسُ مَال (مؤسسة علمية، إلخ) \ foundation: money, etc., given to help a school, etc., when it is set up. \ رَأْسٌ مُدَبَّب \ point: a sharp end (of a nail, pencil, weapon, etc.). -
116 kick
§ წიხლი; წიხლის ცემა, ფეხის კვრა§1 წიხლი, პანღური, ფეხის ამორტყმაfree / penalty kick თავისუფალი / საჯარიმო დარტყმა (პენალტი)●●he needs a good kick in the pants მაგრად საცემია / მაგას პანღური უნდა ამოსცხო2 ფეხის / წიხლის კვრაwhen he fell they kicked him როცა წაიქცა, წიხლებით დაუწყეს ცემა●●it's no use kicking against fate ბედს / ბედისწერას ვერ გაექცევიif you ask too much of him, he'll kick ზედმეტი თუ სთხოვე, ტლინკების ყრას დაიწყებს / გაჯიუტდება●●to kick the bucket ფეხების გაფშეკაto give smb. a vicious kick გამეტებით წიხლის კვრა -
117 capitombolare
capitombolare v. intr. to fall* headlong, to tumble down: capitombolò per le scale, he fell headlong (o tumbled) down the stairs.* * *[kapitombo'lare]* * *capitombolare/kapitombo'lare/ [1](aus. essere) to tumble. -
118 lumber
lumber ['lʌmbə(r)]1 noun∎ to get a lumber faire une touche(a) (large person, animal) marcher pesamment;∎ I could hear him lumbering down the stairs je l'entendais descendre l'escalier d'un pas pesant;∎ she lumbered into the room elle entra dans la pièce d'un pas lourd;∎ the tanks lumbered into the centre of the town la lourde colonne de chars avançait vers le centre de la ville►► lumber jacket grosse veste f de bûcheron;British lumber room débarras m∎ (usu passive) (encumber) to lumber sb with sth refiler qch à qn;∎ I'll get lumbered with it ça va me retomber dessus;∎ they've lumbered me with the cooking c'est moi qui me suis tapé tous les repas;∎ I was lumbered with him for the whole evening je l'ai eu sur le dos pendant toute la soirée -
119 headfirst
الرَّأْسُ أولاً \ headfirst: with the head before the body: He jumped headfirst through the window. headlong: (only with to fall) headfirst: He fell headlong down the stairs. \ بِتَسَرُّع \ headfirst: with the head before the body: He jumped headfirst through the window. headlong: in a rush; without stopping to think: He charged headlong into the fight. -
120 headlong
الرَّأْسُ أولاً \ headfirst: with the head before the body: He jumped headfirst through the window. headlong: (only with to fall) headfirst: He fell headlong down the stairs. \ بِتَسَرُّع \ headfirst: with the head before the body: He jumped headfirst through the window. headlong: in a rush; without stopping to think: He charged headlong into the fight.
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