-
61 mistake
mi'steik 1. past tense - mistook; verb1) ((with for) to think that (one person or thing) is another: I mistook you for my brother in this bad light.) forveksle2) (to make an error about: They mistook the date, and arrived two days early.) ta feil (av)2. noun(a wrong act or judgement: a spelling mistake; It was a mistake to trust him; I took your umbrella by mistake - it looks like mine.) feil(takelse), misforståelse- mistaken- mistakenlyfeil--------mistakIsubst. \/mɪˈsteɪk\/1) feil, feiltak(else), mistak, feilgrep, blunder, tabbe2) misforståelse, villfarelse3) forveksling• he's a good lad, and no mistakeby mistake ved en feiltakelsein mistake for ved en feiltakelsemake a mistake gjøre en feil, feile, ta feilmake no mistake about it ( hverdagslig) tro ikke noe annet, vær du sikkermistake of fact ( jus) faktisk villfarelsemistake of law ( jus) rettsvillfarelsemy mistake min feil, jeg tar feilyour mistake ( hverdagslig) nå tar du feilII1) misforstå, misoppfatte2) ta feil3) forveksle, ta feil avmistake one's way gå feil, gå (seg) villmistake somebody\/something for forveksle noen\/noe med, ta feil av noen\/noe, ta noen\/noe for å værethere is no mistaking det råder ingen tvil om -
62 misuse
mis'ju:s((a) wrong or bad use: the misuse of company money; The machine was damaged by misuse.) misbruk, feil bruk- misusemisbrukIsubst. \/ˌmɪsˈjuːs\/1) misbruk, utnyttelse2) gal brukIIverb \/ˌmɪsˈjuːz\/1) misbruke, utnytte2) bruke galt3) mishandle, misbruke -
63 no
nəu 1. adjective1) (not any: We have no food; No other person could have done it.) ingen, ikke noe(n)2) (not allowed: No smoking.) ikke tillatt3) (not a: He is no friend of mine; This will be no easy task.) ingen, ikke noe(n)2. adverb(not (any): He is no better at golf than swimming; He went as far as the shop and no further.) ikke (noe)3. interjection(a word used for denying, disagreeing, refusing etc: `Do you like travelling?' `No, (I don't).'; No, I don't agree; `Will you help me?' `No, I won't.') nei4. noun plural( noes)1) (a refusal: She answered with a definite no.) nei, avslag2) (a vote against something: The noes have won.) neistemme•- nobody5. noun(a very unimportant person: She's just a nobody.) null, ubetydelighet- no-one- there's no saying
- knowingingen--------ne--------neiIsubst. (i flertall: noes) \/nəʊ\/1) nei2) neistemme3) avslagIIdeterm. \/nəʊ\/1) ingen, ikke noen, ikke noe, ingenting2) ( som forbud) ingen3) ( brukt for å angi at noe snarere er det motsatte av det som sies) ingen, ikke, aldrihun er ikke akkurat en engel \/ hun er min santen ingen engel• there is no knowing when...man kan ikke vite når \/ man kan aldri vite når...det var ikke mulig å misforstå hva han mente, det rådde ingen tvil om hva han menteno man could have done it det kan ingen ha gjort aleneno one ingen, ikke noenno two men think alike det finnes ikke to mennesker som tenker liktno two ways about something ingen tvil om noeno way! aldri i livet!, ikke snakk om!, det går ikke!no words can describe it det kan ikke beskrives med ordof no value uten verdi, verdiløsIIIadv. \/nəʊ\/1) ikke i det hele tatt, slett ikke2) nei, ikke• I suspect, no, I am certain, that he is wrongjeg har en mistanke om, nei, jeg er sikker på at han tar feil• I haven't had a better meal anywhere, no, not even in Francejeg har aldri fått et bedre måltid, ikke engang i Frankrike3) ikkeno? jaså, ikke det?no better than before ikke bedre enn før, ikke bedre enn tidligereno can do! ( slang) kan ikke!, det går (bare) ikke!of no small importance av ikke liten betydningor no eller ikke• broke or no, you can't just take itom du er blakk eller ikke, du kan ikke bare ta dento no inconciderable extent ikke i ubetydelig omfangwhether or no hvorvidt -
64 seduce
si'dju:s(to persuade or attract into doing, thinking etc (something, especially something foolish or wrong): She was seduced by the attractions of the big city.) forføre, lokke- seductiveforføreverb \/sɪˈdjuːs\/1) forføre2) lokke, lure3) forlede, lokke på avveierseduce somebody from something forlede noen til å svikte noeseduce somebody into doing something lokke noen til å gjøre noe -
65 tack
tæk 1. noun1) (a short nail with a broad flat head: a carpet-tack.) nellik-/pumpespiker2) (in sewing, a large, temporary stitch used to hold material together while it is being sewn together properly.) tråklesting3) (in sailing, a movement diagonally against the wind: We sailed on an easterly tack.) baug4) (a direction or course: After they moved, their lives took a different tack.) kurs2. verb1) ((with down, on etc) to fasten (with tacks): I tacked the carpet down; She tacked the material together.) stifte, feste med småspiker2) ((of sailing-boats) to move diagonally (backwards and forwards) against the wind: The boat tacked into harbour.) baute, kryssefeste--------tråkleIsubst. \/tæk\/1) stift, liten spiker (med stort hode), tegnestift (amer.)2) ( tekstil) tråklesting, nest3) provisorisk festing (av noe)4) (sjøfart, på seil) hals, halsbarm5) ( sjøfart og overført) kurs, retning6) metode, taktikk, fremgangsmåte7) (sjøfart, vending opp mot vinden) baut, stagvending8) ( sjøfart) slag (under krysning)9) klebrighet, bindeevne10) seletøy, ridetøybe on the port\/starboard tack seile for babords\/styrbords halserhang by a tack henge i en trådIIsubst. \/tæk\/( hverdagslig) matIIIsubst. \/tæk\/skrap, smørjeIVverb \/tæk\/1) spikre, stifte, feste med stift2) tråkle, neste3) ( sjøfart) stagvende, krysse, baute4) ( overført) endre kurs, forandre taktikk5) ( om lov e.l.) tilføye, legge til, hefte påtack about ( sjøfart) stagvende, gå over stag krysse, bautetack to port seile for babords halser -
66 track
træk 1. noun1) (a mark left, especially a footprint etc: They followed the lion's tracks.) spor, far, fotavtrykk2) (a path or rough road: a mountain track.) sti, tråkk3) ((also racetrack) a course on which runners, cyclists etc race: a running track; ( also adjective) the 100 metres sprint and other track events.) (idretts)bane4) (a railway line.) jernbanelinje2. verb(to follow (eg an animal) by the marks, footprints etc that it has left: They tracked the wolf to its lair.) følge et spor- in one's tracks
- keep/lose track of
- make tracks for
- make tracks
- track down
- tracker dogfar--------fotspor--------skinne--------spor--------sti--------tråkkIsubst. \/træk\/1) (også overført, ofte flertall) spor, far2) fotspor, fotavtrykk, fotefar3) ( etter bil) hjulspor4) ( også overført) sti, tråkk, løype5) (jernbane)linje, skinnegang, spor, skinner6) ( også overført) kurs, rute7) bane8) ( sjøfart) kjølevannsstripe9) (sport, også running track) (løpe)bane10) banesport11) ( på magnetbånd) spor12) ( på grammofonplate) rille, spor13) (på grammofonplate, CD-plate e.l.) låt, sang14) fremgangsmåte, linje, kurs15) ( på bulldoser e.l.) belte16) (om bildekk, også width of track) sporvidde17) ( på bildekk e.l.) slitebane18) (byggfag, også track width) sporvidde20) (amer.) perrongborn on the right\/wrong side of the tracks (amer.) (være) født rik\/fattig (be)on someone's track (være) på sporet av noencover (up) one's tracks skjule sporene etter segdouble track ( jernbane) dobbeltsporfollow in someone's tracks følge i noens fotsporget off the track eller run off the track spore av ( overført også) komme inn på feil spor, miste tråden, bli avsporetin one's tracks ( hverdagslig) på stedetstrakskeep track of holde rede på holde kontakten med, ha oppsyn med følge med, holde seg orientert om, være à jour medlose track of miste kontakten med miste oversikten over, miste følingen medmake tracks ( hverdagslig) ta beina på nakken, legge på sprangse å komme seg hjem, ta fatt på hjemveienoff the beaten track utenfor allfarveion one's track etter seg, i hælene på seg (be)on the right track (være) på rett spor (be)on the track of (være) på sporet avput someone on the right track hjelpe noen på rett sporsingle track ( jernbane) enkeltsporstart someone on the track\/way følge noen et stykke på veienjeg skal hjelpe\/følge deg et stykke på veienstay on the track holde seg til sakenthrow someone off the track lede noen på villspor, villede noenIIverb \/ˈtræk\/1) ( også overført) spore, følge sporet av, oppspore, etterspore2) sette spor (etter)3) legge ut spor (for)4) ( om grammofonstift) følge rillen5) (film eller TV, om kamera) kjøre6) ( om dekk) ha en sporvidde på7) ( om dekk) ha samme sporvidde som8) ( militærvesen) plotte9) (amer.) reise, dra, farte, flakke10) (skotsk, om te) la trekketrack down (forsøke å) spore opp, forfølge (forfølge og) fangetrack out spore, følge• track out the development of...( film) bevege kameraet vekk fra den eller det som filmesIIIverb \/ˈtræk\/( sjøfart) forklaring: slepe, hale eller taue et fartøy, spesielt fra en elvebredd e.l. -
67 unhappy
1) (sad or miserable: He had an unhappy childhood.) ulykkelig, lei seg2) (regrettable: He has an unhappy knack of always saying the wrong thing.) uheldig•- unhappilyulykkeligadj. \/ˌʌnˈhæpɪ\/1) ulykkelig, ikke fornøyd, bedrøvet, lei seg, nedfor2) uheldig, ulykkelig, ulykkesbringende, fatal, mislykket, upassendebe unhappy about ( også) ikke være fornøyd medfeel unhappy ( også) vantrives -
68 be hard on
1) (to punish or criticize severely: Don't be too hard on the boy - he's too young to know that he was doing wrong.) være hard/slem mot2) (to be unfair to: If you punish all the children for the broken window it's a bit hard on those who had nothing to do with it.) skjære alle over én kam -
69 be under the impression (that)
(to have the (often wrong) feeling or idea that: I was under the impression that you were paying for this meal.) tro at, ha inntrykk av atEnglish-Norwegian dictionary > be under the impression (that)
-
70 be under the impression (that)
(to have the (often wrong) feeling or idea that: I was under the impression that you were paying for this meal.) tro at, ha inntrykk av atEnglish-Norwegian dictionary > be under the impression (that)
-
71 fall into the hands (of someone)
(to be caught, found, captured etc by someone: He fell into the hands of bandits; The documents fell into the wrong hands (= were found, captured etc by someone who was not supposed to see them).) falle i hendene påEnglish-Norwegian dictionary > fall into the hands (of someone)
-
72 fall into the hands (of someone)
(to be caught, found, captured etc by someone: He fell into the hands of bandits; The documents fell into the wrong hands (= were found, captured etc by someone who was not supposed to see them).) falle i hendene påEnglish-Norwegian dictionary > fall into the hands (of someone)
-
73 find out
1) (to discover: I found out what was troubling her.) finne ut, oppdage2) (to discover the truth (about someone), usually that he has done wrong: He had been stealing for years, but eventually they found him out.) finne ut, gjennomskue
См. также в других словарях:
I Was Wrong — Infobox Single Name = I Was Wrong Caption = Artist = Social Distortion from Album = White Light, White Heat, White Trash A side = B side = Released = 1996 Format = CD5 Recorded = Genre = Punk rock Length = 3:58 Label = Sony 550 Music Writer =… … Wikipedia
wrong — [[t]rɒ̱ŋ, AM rɔ͟ːŋ[/t]] ♦♦ wrongs, wronging, wronged 1) ADJ GRADED: v link ADJ, oft ADJ with n If you say there is something wrong, you mean there is something unsatisfactory about the situation, person, or thing you are talking about. Pain is… … English dictionary
wrong — 1 adjective 1 NOT CORRECT saying, believing, or depending on something that is not correct: Your calculations must be wrong. | be wrong to think/say: I m sorry; I was wrong to assume that you wanted to go. | prove sb wrong: I wish you d stop… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
wrong — wrong1 W1S1 [rɔŋ US ro:ŋ] adj ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(not correct)¦ 2 be wrong (about somebody/something) 3¦(problems)¦ 4¦(not the right one)¦ 5¦(not morally right)¦ 6¦(not suitable)¦ 7¦(not working)¦ 8 be the wrong way round/around 9 the wrong way up … Dictionary of contemporary English
wrong — I adj. 1) completely, dead (colloq.), totally wrong 2) wrong in (I was wrong in going there) 3) wrong to + inf. (it was wrong of them to gossip = they were wrong to gossip; I was wrong to disregard your advice; it is wrong to lie) 4) wrong with… … Combinatory dictionary
wrong — wrong1 [ rɔŋ ] adjective *** 1. ) not accurate or correct: INCORRECT: We must have gone the wrong way. the wrong answer a ) not sensible: Think about this carefully you don t want to make the wrong decision. b ) used for saying that someone s… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
wrong — I UK [rɒŋ] / US [rɔŋ] adjective *** 1) [never before noun] if there is something wrong, there is a problem You don t look well. Is anything wrong? One look at her face told us that something was terribly wrong. I checked the engine, but I couldn… … English dictionary
wrong — I. noun Etymology: Middle English, from Old English wrang, from *wrang, adjective, wrong Date: before 12th century 1. a. an injurious, unfair, or unjust act ; action or conduct inflicting harm without due provocation or just cause b. a violation… … New Collegiate Dictionary
wrong — The infringement of a legal right belonging to a definite specific person. Kamm v Flink, 113 NJL 582, 175 A 62, 99 ALR 1. In common usage, an act in violation of a moral principle. The word, as the word injury, in law imports the invasion of a… … Ballentine's law dictionary
Wrong Kind of Stone Age — was an Australian post punk band formed in 1983 in inner city Sydney by Gavin Williams (of Sydney punk band Identity X) and Miriam Williamson. The early Wrong Kind of Stone Age sound was a unique and wild fusion of post punk attitude and bottom… … Wikipedia
wrong, wrongly — Wrong is both an adjective and an adverb. It is correct to say That s the wrong attitude to take and Everything went wrong that day. Wrongly, an adverb only, should be used before a verb: The word was wrongly pronounced. Wrong in its adverbial… … Dictionary of problem words and expressions