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1 get
[get]1) дістава́ти; оде́ржувати; здобува́тиcan you get this book for me? — чи мо́жете ви діста́ти для ме́не цю кни́жку?
2) бра́ти, оде́ржуватиto get lessons — бра́ти уро́ки
3) заробля́тиto get a living — заробля́ти на життя́
4) доставля́ти, прино́ситиget me a chair — принеси́ мені́ стіле́ць
5) приму́шувати, переко́нуватиI got him to speak at last — наре́шті я приму́сив його́ говори́ти
6) розм. розумі́ти, збагну́тиI don't get you — я вас не розумі́ю
7) дістава́тися, добира́тися; досяга́ти, потрапля́тиhe got home early — він ра́но прийшо́в додо́му
8) (як дієслово-зв'язка у складеному іменному присудку або як допоміжне дієслово у pass.) става́ти, роби́тисяto get angry — розсе́рдитися
to get married — одружи́тися
9) perfect розм. ма́ти, володі́тиI have got — = I have
10) perfect з inf бу́ти зму́шеним, му́ситиI have got to go immediately — я пови́нен нега́йно йти
11) (з inf або gerund означає початок дії або її одноразовість)they got talking — вони́ почали́ розмовля́ти
•- get along
- get along with you!
- get at
- get away
- get back
- get down
- get in
- get off
- get on
- get out
- get over
- get round
- get through
- get through with
- get up••to get on smb.'s nerves — роздрато́вувати кого́сь
to get on well with — ла́дити з
to get under way — зру́шити з мі́сця; ви́рушити
to get hold of — зумі́ти схопи́ти ( думку тощо)
to get the mitten [the sack, walking orders, walking papers] — бу́ти зві́льненим
to get the upper hand — перемогти́; узя́ти ве́рх
to get one's own way — зроби́ти по-сво́єму
to get home — влу́чити
to get off with a whole skin — ви́йти сухи́м з води́
to get out of bed on the wrong side — вста́ти на лі́ву но́гу
to get used — зви́кнути
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2 _гроші
better an empty purse than an empty head a dollar saved is a dollar earned every man has his price a friend in the market is better than money in the purse a full purse has many friends he that is of the opinion money will do everything may well be suspected of doing everything for money he that serves God for money will serve the devil for better wages he who pays the piper, calls the tune honour and profit lie not in one sack if you want to know the value of money, try borrowing some a light purse is a heavy purse money answers all things money doesn't grow on trees money has no smell money has wings money in the purse will always be in fashion money is a good servant, but a bad master money is the root of all evil money is the sinews of war money isn't everything money makes money money makes the man money never comes out of season money will buy everything but real happiness more money, more sin muck and money go together never loan money to a friend unless you wish to lose him never spend your money before you have it nothing but money is sweeter than honey no ear is deaf to the song that gold sings a penny soul never came to twopence sailors get their money like horses, but spend it like asses there is no dust so blinding as gold dust those who have money have trouble about it the true value of life cannot be measured in. dollars the value of money lies in what we do with it when a man says money can do anything, it's a sure sign he hasn't got any wrinkled purses make wrinkled faces you cannot serve God and Mammon
См. также в других словарях:
(the) sack — dismissal from employment In the days when workmen had to provide their own tools, they were kept in a bag or sack at the employer s workshop, or carried in them to work. To be given it, or sacked, by your master meant you were dismissed:… … How not to say what you mean: A dictionary of euphemisms
got the sack — was fired, was dismissed, was kicked out … English contemporary dictionary
get the sack — {v. phr.}, {slang} 1. To be fired or dismissed from work. * /John got the sack at the factory last week./ 2. To be told by one s lover that the relationship is over. * /Joanna gave Sam the sack./ See: GET THE AX and GET THE BOUNCE(2) … Dictionary of American idioms
get the sack — {v. phr.}, {slang} 1. To be fired or dismissed from work. * /John got the sack at the factory last week./ 2. To be told by one s lover that the relationship is over. * /Joanna gave Sam the sack./ See: GET THE AX and GET THE BOUNCE(2) … Dictionary of American idioms
get\ the\ sack — v. phr. slang 1. To be fired or dismissed from work. John got the sack at the factory last week. 2. To be told by one s lover that the relationship is over. Joanna gave Sam the sack. See: get the axe and get the bounce(2) … Словарь американских идиом
get the sack — If someone gets the sack, they lose their job, usually because they have done something wrong. Charlie got the sack when his boss caught him stealing … English Idioms & idiomatic expressions
get the sack — AND get the ax tv. to be dismissed from one’s employment. □ Poor Tom got the sack today. He’s always late. □ I was afraid that Sally was going to get the ax … Dictionary of American slang and colloquial expressions
get the sack — to be told to leave your job. He got the sack when they found out that he d lied about his qualifications … New idioms dictionary
sack — See: GET THE SACK at GET THE BOUNCE(2), GIVE THE SACK at GIVE THE BOUNCE(2), HIT THE HAY or HIT THE SACK, LEAVE HOLDING THE BAG or LEAVE HOLDING THE SACK … Dictionary of American idioms
sack — See: GET THE SACK at GET THE BOUNCE(2), GIVE THE SACK at GIVE THE BOUNCE(2), HIT THE HAY or HIT THE SACK, LEAVE HOLDING THE BAG or LEAVE HOLDING THE SACK … Dictionary of American idioms
sack — Ⅰ. sack1 (săk) n. 1. a) A bag, especially one made of strong material for holding grain or objects in bulk. b) The amount that a sack can hold: »sold two sacks of rice. 2. also sacque A short loose fitting garment for women and children … Word Histories