-
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
all one — noun A matter of indifference; a matter having no importance or consequence. But what care I? I care not an she were a black a moor; tis all one to me … Wiktionary
all one's eggs in one basket — noun a) The state of having invested heavily in just one area the stock market decline wouldn’t have hurt him so badly if he hadn’t had all his eggs in one basket b) The state of having devoted all of one’s resources to one thing at his age he… … Wiktionary
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