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in the heat of sth

См. также в других словарях:

  • turn up the heat on sth — turn up the heat (on sb/sth) (also put the heat on sb) ► to try to force someone or something to do something in order to get the result you want: »OPEC could turn up the heat by increasing oil prices still further. Main Entry: ↑heat …   Financial and business terms

  • heat — UK US /hiːt/ noun INFORMAL ● feel/take/face the heat Cf. take/face the heat ● turn up the heat (on sb/sth) Cf. turn up the heat on sth …   Financial and business terms

  • turn up the heat on sb/sth — turn up the heat (on sb/sth) (also put the heat on sb) ► to try to force someone or something to do something in order to get the result you want: »OPEC could turn up the heat by increasing oil prices still further. Main Entry: ↑heat …   Financial and business terms

  • turn up the heat — (on sb/sth) (also put the heat on sb) ► to try to force someone or something to do something in order to get the result you want: »OPEC could turn up the heat by increasing oil prices still further. Main Entry: ↑heat …   Financial and business terms

  • turn up the heat on sb — turn up the heat (on sb/sth) (also put the heat on sb) ► to try to force someone or something to do something in order to get the result you want: »OPEC could turn up the heat by increasing oil prices still further. Main Entry: ↑heat …   Financial and business terms

  • if you can't stand the heat (get out of the kitchen) — if you can’t stand/take/the heat (get out of the kitchen) phrase used for telling someone that they should not do something if they cannot deal with the difficult or unpleasant aspects of it Thesaurus: ways of encouraging or telling someone to do …   Useful english dictionary

  • heat — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun 1 being hot/level of temperature ADJECTIVE ▪ burning, fierce (esp. BrE), great, intense, searing, terrible, tremendous ▪ The soil is baked dry by the fierce …   Collocations dictionary

  • heat — heat1 W2S2 [hi:t] n ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(warmth)¦ 2 the heat 3¦(in cooking)¦ 4¦(strong feelings)¦ 5¦(pressure)¦ 6¦(system to heat building)¦ 7¦(in a race)¦ 8 on heat ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ [: Old English; Origin: hAtu] …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • heat — 1 /hi:t/ noun 1 (U) warmth or hotness: The heat of the water caused the glass to shatter. | Black surfaces absorb heat from the sun. 2 the heat a) very hot weather: I couldn t stand the heat. | the heat of the day (=the hottest part of the day)… …   Longman dictionary of contemporary English

  • heat*/*/*/ — [hiːt] noun I 1) [singular/U] the quality of being hot, or how hot something is We felt the intense heat from the fire.[/ex] He could feel the heat of the sun on his back.[/ex] 2) the heat [singular] very hot weather The local people get out of… …   Dictionary for writing and speaking English

  • heat something up — ˌheat sthˈup derived to make sth hot or warm Syn: ↑warm up • Just heat up the food in the microwave. Main entry: ↑heatderived …   Useful english dictionary

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