-
81 back and forth
(first in one direction and then in the other; backwards and forwards: We had to go back and forth many times before we moved all our furniture to the new house.) pirmyn ir atgal -
82 bar
1. noun1) (a rod or oblong piece (especially of a solid substance): a gold bar; a bar of chocolate; iron bars on the windows.) strypas, lazdelė, (pailgas) gabalas2) (a broad line or band: The blue material had bars of red running through it.) juostelė, dryželis3) (a bolt: a bar on the door.) skląstis4) (a counter at which or across which articles of a particular kind are sold: a snack bar; Your whisky is on the bar.) prekystalis, bufetas5) (a public house.) baras, užkandinė6) (a measured division in music: Sing the first ten bars.) taktas7) (something which prevents (something): His carelessness is a bar to his promotion.) kliūtis8) (the rail at which the prisoner stands in court: The prisoner at the bar collapsed when he was sentenced to ten years' imprisonment.) barjeras, užtvaras2. verb1) (to fasten with a bar: Bar the door.) užsklęsti2) (to prevent from entering: He's been barred from the club.) ne(pri)leisti įeiti, neįleisti3) (to prevent (from doing something): My lack of money bars me from going on holiday.) neleisti, kliudyti3. preposition(except: All bar one of the family had measles.) išskyrus- barmaid- barman
- bar code -
83 batch
[bæ ](a number of things made, delivered etc, all at one time: a batch of bread; The letters were sent out in batches.) partija, siunta -
84 best
[best] 1. adjective, pronoun((something which is) good to the greatest extent: the best book on the subject; the best (that) I can do; She is my best friend; Which method is (the) best?; The flowers are at their best just now.) geriausias2. adverb(in the best manner: She sings best (of all).) geriausiai3. verb(to defeat: He was bested in the argument.) nugalėti- best man- bestseller
- the best part of
- do one's best
- for the best
- get the best of
- make the best of it -
85 canon
['kænən]1) (a rule (especially of the church).) kanonas2) (a clergyman belonging to a cathedral.) kanauninkas3) (a list of saints.) kanonas4) (a musical composition in which one part enters after another in imitation.) kanonas5) (all the writings of an author that are accepted as genuine: the Shakespeare canon.) autentiški raštai•- canonize
- canonise
- canonization
- canonisation -
86 cell
[sel]1) (a small room (especially in a prison or monastery).) celė, vienutė2) (a very small piece of the substance of which all living things are made; the smallest unit of living matter: The human body is made up of cells.) ląstelė3) ((the part containing the electrodes in) an electrical battery.) elementas4) (one of many small compartments making up a structure: the cells of a honeycomb.) akutė•- cellular- cellphone -
87 clan
[klæn](a tribe or group of families (especially Scottish) under a single chief, usually all having one surname.) klanas -
88 class
1. plural - classes; noun1) (a group of people or things that are alike in some way: The dog won first prize in its class in the dog show.) klasė, kategorija2) ((the system according to which people belong to) one of a number of economic/social groups: the upper class; the middle class; the working class; ( also adjective) the class system.) klasė3) (a grade or rank (of merit): musicians of a high class.) meistriškumas4) (a number of students or scholars taught together: John and I are in the same class.) klasė5) (a school lesson or college lecture etc: a French class.) pamoka, paskaita6) ((American) a course or series of lectures, often leading to an examination.) kursas2. verb(to regard as being of a certain type: He classes all women as stupid.) laikyti- class-room -
89 colour
1. noun1) (a quality which objects have, and which can be seen, only when light falls on them: What colour is her dress?; Red, blue and yellow are colours.) spalva2) (paint(s): That artist uses water-colours.) dažai3) ((a) skin-colour varying with race: people of all colours.) (odos) spalva4) (vividness; interest: There's plenty of colour in his stories.) koloritas2. adjective((of photographs etc) in colour, not black and white: colour film; colour television.) spalvotas3. verb(to put colour on; to paint: They coloured the walls yellow.) (nu)dažyti, spalvinti- coloured4. noun((sometimes used impolitely) a dark-skinned person especially of Negro origin.) spalvotasis- colouring
- colourless
- colours
- colour-blind
- colour scheme
- off-colour
- colour in
- show oneself in one's true colours
- with flying colours -
90 common
['komən] 1. adjective1) (seen or happening often; quite normal or usual: a common occurrence; These birds are not so common nowadays.) įprastas, plačiai paplitęs, dažnai pasitaikantis2) (belonging equally to, or shared by, more than one: This knowledge is common to all of us; We share a common language.) bendras3) (publicly owned: common property.) visuomeninis4) (coarse or impolite: She uses some very common expressions.) storžieviškas, stačiokiškas, nemandagus5) (of ordinary, not high, social rank: the common people.) eilinis, paprastas6) (of a noun, not beginning with a capital letter (except at the beginning of a sentence): The house is empty.) bendrinis2. noun((a piece of) public land for everyone to use, with few or no buildings: the village common.) bendruomenės žemė/pieva- commoner- common knowledge
- common law
- common-law
- commonplace
- common-room
- common sense
- the Common Market
- the House of Commons
- the Commons
- in common -
91 congruent
['koŋɡruənt](of two or more geometrical figures, touching at all points when one is fitted on top of the other: congruent triangles.) sutampantis, kongruentus -
92 control
[kən'trəul] 1. noun1) (the right of directing or of giving orders; power or authority: She has control over all the decisions in that department; She has no control over that dog.) valdymas, galia2) (the act of holding back or restraining: control of prices; I know you're angry but you must not lose control (of yourself).) reguliavimas, susivaldymas3) ((often in plural) a lever, button etc which operates (a machine etc): The clutch and accelerator are foot controls in a car.) svirtis, rankenėlė, valdymo priemonė4) (a point or place at which an inspection takes place: passport control.) kontrolės punktas2. verb1) (to direct or guide; to have power or authority over: The captain controls the whole ship; Control your dog!) valdyti, vadovauti2) (to hold back; to restrain (oneself or one's emotions etc): Control yourself!) valdyti3) (to keep to a fixed standard: The government is controlling prices.) kontroliuoti, reguliuoti, prižiūrėti•- control-tower
- in control of
- in control
- out of control
- under control -
93 correspondent
1) (a person with whom one exchanges letters: He has correspondents all over the world.) susirašinėtojas2) (a person who contributes news to a newspaper etc: He's foreign correspondent for `The Times'.) korespondentas -
94 direction
[-ʃən]1) ((the) place or point to which one moves, looks etc: What direction did he go in?; They were heading in my direction (= towards me); I'll find my way all right - I've a good sense of direction.) kryptis2) (guidance: They are under your direction.) vadovavimas3) ((in plural) instructions (eg on how to get somewhere, use something etc): We asked the policeman for directions; I have lost the directions for this washing-machine.) instrukcija, nurodymai4) (the act of aiming or turning (something or someone) towards a certain point.) nukreipimas -
95 distinguish
[di'stiŋɡwiʃ]1) ((often with from) to mark as different: What distinguishes this café from all the others?) išskirti2) (to identify or make out: He could just distinguish the figure of a man running away.) įžiūrėti3) ((sometimes with between) to recognize a difference: I can't distinguish (between) the two types - they both look the same to me.) atskirti4) (to make (oneself) noticed through one's achievements: He distinguished himself at school by winning a prize in every subject.) pasižymėti•- distinguished -
96 drain
[drein] 1. verb1) (to clear (land) of water by the use of ditches and pipes: There are plans to drain the marsh.) (nu)sausinti, drenuoti2) ((of water) to run away: The water drained away/off into the ditch.) nutekėti3) (to pour off the water etc from or allow the water etc to run off from: Would you drain the vegetables?; He drained the petrol tank; The blood drained from her face.) nusunkti, išleisti (skystį), nutekėti4) (to drink everything contained in: He drained his glass.) išgerti iki dugno5) (to use up completely (the money, strength etc of): The effort drained all his energy.) iščiulpti, išsiurbti, išeikvoti2. noun1) (something (a ditch, trench, waterpipe etc) designed to carry away water: The heavy rain has caused several drains to overflow.) drenažas, vandens nuotakas2) (something which slowly exhausts a supply, especially of one's money or strength: His car is a constant drain on his money.) eikvotojas, alintojas•- drainage- draining-board
- drainpipe
- down the drain -
97 every
['evri]1) (each one of or all (of a certain number): Every room is painted white; Not every family has a car.) kiekvienas2) (each (of an indefinite number or series): Every hour brought the two countries nearer war; He attends to her every need.) kiekvienas3) (the most absolute or complete possible: We have every reason to believe that she will get better.) visi, visokeriopas4) (used to show repetition after certain intervals of time or space: I go to the supermarket every four or five days; Every second house in the row was bright pink; `Every other day' means èvery two days' or `on alternate days'.) kas•- everyone
- everyday
- everything
- everywhere
- every bit as
- every now and then / every now and again / every so often
- every time -
98 excepting
preposition (leaving out or excluding: Those cars are all reliable, excepting the old red one.) išskyrus -
99 faith
[feiƟ]1) (trust or belief: She had faith in her ability.) (pasi)tikėjimas2) (religious belief: Years of hardship had not caused him to lose his faith.) tikėjimas3) (loyalty to one's promise: to keep/break faith with someone.) ištikimybė•- faithful- faithfully
- Yours faithfully
- faithfulness
- faithless
- faithlessness
- in all good faith
- in good faith -
100 fat
[fæt] 1. noun1) (an oily substance made by the bodies of animals and by some plants: This meat has got a lot of fat on it.) riebalai2) (a kind of such substance, used especially for cooking: There are several good cooking fats on the market.) riebalai2. adjective1) (having a lot of fat on one's body; large, heavy and round in shape: He was a very fat child.) riebus, storas2) (large or abundant: Her business made a fat profit; A fat lot of good that is! (= That is no good at all)) didžiulis•- fatness- fatten
- fatty
- fattiness
- fat-head
См. также в других словарях:
All one — One One (w[u^]n), a. [OE. one, on, an, AS. [=a]n; akin to D. een, OS. [=e]n, OFries. [=e]n, [=a]n, G. ein, Dan. een, Sw. en, Icel. einn, Goth. ains, W. un, Ir. & Gael. aon, L. unus, earlier oinos, oenos, Gr. o i nh the ace on dice; cf. Skr.… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
All one — All All, adv. 1. Wholly; completely; altogether; entirely; quite; very; as, all bedewed; my friend is all for amusement. And cheeks all pale. Byron. [1913 Webster] Note: In the ancient phrases, all too dear, all too much, all so long, etc., this… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
All one polynomial — An all one polynomial (AOP) is a polynomial used in finite fields, specifically GF(2) (binary). The AOP is a 1 equally spaced polynomial.An AOP of degree m has all terms from x m to x 0 with coefficients of 1, and can be written as:AOP(x) = sum… … Wikipedia
put all one's eggs in one basket — {v. phr.} To place all your efforts, interests, or hopes in a single person or thing. * /Going steady in high school is putting all your eggs in one basket too soon./ * /To buy stock in a single company is to put all your eggs in one basket./ *… … Dictionary of American idioms
put all one's eggs in one basket — {v. phr.} To place all your efforts, interests, or hopes in a single person or thing. * /Going steady in high school is putting all your eggs in one basket too soon./ * /To buy stock in a single company is to put all your eggs in one basket./ *… … Dictionary of American idioms
With all one's heart — Heart Heart (h[aum]rt), n. [OE. harte, herte, heorte, AS. heorte; akin to OS. herta, OFies. hirte, D. hart, OHG. herza, G. herz, Icel. hjarta, Sw. hjerta, Goth. ha[ i]rt[=o], Lith. szirdis, Russ. serdtse, Ir. cridhe, L. cor, Gr. kardi a, kh^r.… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
have all one's buttons — or[have all one s marbles] {v. phr.}, {slang} To have all your understanding; be reasonable. Usually used in the negative or conditionally. * /Mike acts sometimes as if he didn t have all his buttons./ * /He would not go to town barefooted if he… … Dictionary of American idioms
have all one's buttons — or[have all one s marbles] {v. phr.}, {slang} To have all your understanding; be reasonable. Usually used in the negative or conditionally. * /Mike acts sometimes as if he didn t have all his buttons./ * /He would not go to town barefooted if he… … Dictionary of American idioms
With all one's might and main — Main Main, n. [AS. m[ae]gen strength, power, force; akin to OHG. magan, Icel. megin, and to E. may, v. [root]103. See {May}, v.] 1. Strength; force; might; violent effort. [Obs., except in certain phrases.] [1913 Webster] There were in this… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
One (Metallica song) — One Single by Metallica from the album ...And Justice for All … Wikipedia
One (Metallica) — Pour les articles homonymes, voir One. One Single par Metallica extrait de l’album ...And Justice for All Sortie janvier 1989 (U.S.) … Wikipédia en Français