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1 sight
N1. दृष्टिHe lost his sight in an accident.2. दृश्यAfter ten days at sea we had our first sight of land.3. निगाहRadha's father wants to marry her daughter but there was no one in sight.4. नज़ाराThe flowers are a lovely sight in spring.5. लक्षकThe sight of a rifle have something in one's sights.--------V1. देखनाAfter a long tired journey, we sighted the refugee camp. -
2 starve
VI1. भूखा मरनाThe poor man was literature starved to death.--------VT1. भूख लगनाI am starving to have something as I had not taken anything since last night. -
3 bargain
N1. लेन-देनWe will give you a good discount as part of the bargain.--------V1. मोल-भाव\bargainकरनाWe have to bargain in order to buy something at less price. -
4 snub
Adj1. चिपटा\snubहुआMy friends nose something snub from the front.--------N1. झिड़की/ड़ाँट/अपमानHis remarks in the T.V. interview are being interpreted as a deliberate snub to the president.--------V1. डपटना/झिड़कनाOur football players have consistantly snobbed the tournament because of the poor prize money. -
5 superstitiously
Adv1. अन्धविश्वास सेOne who does something superstitiously will have to repent.
См. также в других словарях:
have something on — {v. phr.}, {informal} To have information or proof that someone did something wrong. * /Mr. Jones didn t want to run for office because he knew the opponents had something on him./ * /Mr. Smith keeps paying blackmail to a man who has something on … Dictionary of American idioms
have something on — {v. phr.}, {informal} To have information or proof that someone did something wrong. * /Mr. Jones didn t want to run for office because he knew the opponents had something on him./ * /Mr. Smith keeps paying blackmail to a man who has something on … Dictionary of American idioms
have something against something — have something against someone/something phrase to dislike or not approve of someone or something for a particular reason I think he’s got something against artists. have nothing against someone/something (=have no reason to dislike someone or… … Useful english dictionary
have something against someone — have something against someone/something phrase to dislike or not approve of someone or something for a particular reason I think he’s got something against artists. have nothing against someone/something (=have no reason to dislike someone or… … Useful english dictionary
have something in common with something — have something in common (with something) phrase to have the same features as something else This area obviously has a lot in common with other inner city areas. Thesaurus: to be similar to, or the same as, something or someonesynonym Main entry … Useful english dictionary
have something to say about something — have something to say to someone/about something/ phrase to be angry with someone or about something ‘Uh oh,’ said Jimmy. ‘Mum’s going to have something to say to you.’ The boss will have something to say about this. Thesaurus: to be, or to… … Useful english dictionary
have something to say to someone — have something to say to someone/about something/ phrase to be angry with someone or about something ‘Uh oh,’ said Jimmy. ‘Mum’s going to have something to say to you.’ The boss will have something to say about this. Thesaurus: to be, or to… … Useful english dictionary
have something to show for something — have something/nothing/to show for something phrase to have achieved something nothing as a result of something that you have done They had absolutely nothing to show for weeks of hard work. Thesaurus: progress and developmentsynonym Main … Useful english dictionary
have something in common with something — have (something) in common (with (someone/something)) to share interests or characteristics. What these very old objects have in common is that they were all stolen and smuggled out of the country. What does the new model have in common with… … New idioms dictionary
have something to say for yourself — have something/a lot/nothing/etc to say for yourself phrase to be fairly/very/not at all keen to talk, especially about yourself and your reasons for doing something He didn’t have a lot to say for himself. She’s always got far too much to say… … Useful english dictionary
have something coming out of your ears — informal phrase to have a lot of something, or more of it than you need We have information coming out of our ears and we just need time to sift through it. Thesaurus: to have a particular quality or thingsynonym Main entry: ear * * * … Useful english dictionary