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1 jumble
I ['dʒʌmbl]1) (of papers, objects) mucchio m.; (of ideas, words) guazzabuglio m., miscuglio m.II ['dʒʌmbl]verbo transitivo confondere [ideas, words, letters]* * *1. verb((often with up or together) to mix or throw together without order: In this puzzle, the letters of all the words have been jumbled (up); His shoes and clothes were all jumbled (together) in the cupboard.) mischiare2. noun1) (a confused mixture: He found an untidy jumble of things in the drawer.) guazzabuglio2) (unwanted possessions suitable for a jumble sale: Have you any jumble to spare?) (oggetti scartati)•* * *jumble /ˈdʒʌmbl/n. [u]1 confusione; mescolanza; miscuglio; scompiglio; mucchio; guazzabuglio● jumble sale, vendita di beneficenza □ jumble shop, bazar.(to) jumble /ˈdʒʌmbl/A v. t.confondere; mischiare; scompigliare; ammucchiare; gettare alla rinfusa: Our things were jumbled ( up o together) in the trunk, le nostre cose sono state gettate alla rinfusa nel bauleB v. i.confondersi; mescolarsi; ammucchiarsi.* * *I ['dʒʌmbl]1) (of papers, objects) mucchio m.; (of ideas, words) guazzabuglio m., miscuglio m.II ['dʒʌmbl]verbo transitivo confondere [ideas, words, letters] -
2 rummage
I ['rʌmɪdʒ]1) (look)II ['rʌmɪdʒ]to have a rummage in — rovistare o frugare in
verbo intransitivo frugare, rovistare ( for alla ricerca di)* * *1. verb(to search by turning things out or over: He rummaged in the drawer for a clean shirt.) frugare, rovistare2. noun(a thorough search.) perquisizione, rovistata* * *rummage /ˈrʌmɪdʒ/n.1 (fam.) rovistata; perquisizione3 (dog., naut.) visita doganale; perquisizione4 ( USA, = rummage sale) vendita di roba usata; vendita di beneficenza; vendita di fondi di magazzino.(to) rummage /ˈrʌmɪdʒ/v. t. e i.1 frugare; rovistare: to rummage through the attic, rovistare da ogni parte in soffitta; to rummage in one's pockets, frugarsi le tasche● to rummage about, mettere sottosopra; scompigliare □ to rummage out (o up), trovare (o scoprire, scovare) rovistando.* * *I ['rʌmɪdʒ]1) (look)II ['rʌmɪdʒ]to have a rummage in — rovistare o frugare in
verbo intransitivo frugare, rovistare ( for alla ricerca di) -
3 tumble
I ['tʌmbl]1) (fall) caduta f., capitombolo m.to take a tumble — fare un capitombolo, cadere; fig. [price, share, market] crollare
to have a tumble in the hay — imboscarsi, infrattarsi
2) (of clown, acrobat) capriola f., salto m. mortale3) (jumble) confusione f., disordine m.II ['tʌmbl]to tumble down sth. — [ water] scendere giù da qcs. a cascate
2) econ. [price, share, currency] crollare3) sport [clown, acrobat, child] fare capriole, acrobazie4)to tumble to sth. — colloq. (understand) (arrivare a) capire [fact, plan]
•* * *1. verb1) (to (cause to) fall, especially in a helpless or confused way: She tumbled down the stairs; The box suddenly tumbled off the top of the wardrobe.) cadere2) (to do tumbling.) capitombolare2. noun(a fall: She took a tumble on the stairs.) caduta- tumbler- tumblerful
- tumble-drier
- tumbling* * *tumble /ˈtʌmbl/n.1 caduta; capitombolo; ruzzolone: I took ( o had) a nasty tumble, feci una brutta caduta; DIALOGO → - Skiiing- I only had a little tumble on the last afternoon, ho fatto solo un piccolo capitombolo l'ultimo pomeriggio2 capriola; salto mortale3 confusione; disordine; scompiglio7 (volg.) chiavata; scopata (volg.)● (metall.) tumble-plating process, zincatura per barilatura □ ( nuoto: in piscina) tumble turn, virata a capriola.(to) tumble /ˈtʌmbl/A v. i.1 cadere; capitombolare; fare un capitombolo; ruzzolare; precipitare: to tumble down the stairs, ruzzolare giù dalle scale; to tumble out of a window, precipitare da una finestra; Do you think the government is going to tumble?, credi che il governo cadrà?2 agitarsi; dimenarsi; ruzzolarsi: The little boy was tumbling about on the floor, il bambino si ruzzolava sul pavimento3 fare acrobazie; fare salti mortali5 fare capriole; fare acrobazieB v. t.1 far cadere; far ruzzolare; gettare a gambe all'aria; mandare sottosopra; rovesciare: The crash tumbled some passengers out of the train, lo scontro fece cadere (o scaraventò) alcuni viaggiatori fuori dal treno2 arruffare; disordinare; scompigliare; mettere sottosopra (o in disordine): to tumble one's bed, mettere sottosopra il letto5 (volg.) chiavare, scopare, fottere (volg.)● to tumble downstairs, scendere le scale a precipizio □ to toss and tumble in bed, rigirarsi nel letto ( senza poter dormire).* * *I ['tʌmbl]1) (fall) caduta f., capitombolo m.to take a tumble — fare un capitombolo, cadere; fig. [price, share, market] crollare
to have a tumble in the hay — imboscarsi, infrattarsi
2) (of clown, acrobat) capriola f., salto m. mortale3) (jumble) confusione f., disordine m.II ['tʌmbl]to tumble down sth. — [ water] scendere giù da qcs. a cascate
2) econ. [price, share, currency] crollare3) sport [clown, acrobat, child] fare capriole, acrobazie4)to tumble to sth. — colloq. (understand) (arrivare a) capire [fact, plan]
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См. также в других словарях:
jumble — ► NOUN 1) an untidy collection of things. 2) Brit. articles collected for a jumble sale. ► VERB ▪ mix up in a confused way. ORIGIN probably symbolic … English terms dictionary
jumble — I UK [ˈdʒʌmb(ə)l] / US noun 1) [uncountable] British old clothes and other things that you no longer want, sold to raise money. The American word is rummage. 2) [singular] a collection of different things mixed together a delightful jumble of… … English dictionary
jumble — jum|ble1 [ dʒʌmbl ] noun 1. ) singular a collection of different things mixed together: a delightful jumble of pretty painted houses 2. ) uncount BRITISH RUMMAGE jumble jum|ble 2 [ dʒʌmbl ] verb intransitive or transitive jumble or jumble up to… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
jumble — 1 noun 1 (singular) an untidy mixture of things (+ of): a jumble of thoughts and feelings 2 (U) BrE things to be sold at a jumble sale; rummage 2 (2) AmE 2 also jumble up verb (transitive often passive) to mix things together so that they are not … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
jumble — 1. noun a jumble of books and toys Syn: untidy heap, clutter, muddle, mess, confusion, disarray, tangle, imbroglio; hodgepodge, mishmash, miscellany, motley collection, mixed bag, medley, jambalaya, farrago, gallimaufry 2. verb … Thesaurus of popular words
jumble — [ˈdʒʌmb(ə)l] noun I 1) [singular] a collection of different things that are mixed together a delightful jumble of pretty painted houses[/ex] 2) [U] British old things that are sold to raise money II verb [T] jumble [ˈdʒʌmb(ə)l]; ˌjumble sth ˈup… … Dictionary for writing and speaking English
jumble — noun 1》 an untidy collection of things. 2》 Brit. articles collected for a jumble sale. verb mix up in a confused way. Origin C16: prob. symbolic … English new terms dictionary
jumble — 1. noun the books were in a jumble Syn: heap, muddle, mess, tangle, confusion, disarray, chaos, hotchpotch; N.Amer. hodgepodge; informal shambles 2. verb the photographs are all jumbled up Syn: mix up, muddle up, disorganize … Synonyms and antonyms dictionary
jumble — I. verb (jumbled; jumbling) Etymology: perhaps imitative Date: circa 1529 intransitive verb to move in a confused or disordered manner transitive verb to mix into a confused or disordered mass often used with up II. noun Date: 16 … New Collegiate Dictionary
jumble — [c]/ˈdʒʌmbəl / (say jumbuhl) verb (jumbled, jumbling) –verb (t) 1. to mix in a confused mass; put or throw together without order. 2. to muddle or confuse mentally. –verb (i) 3. to meet or come together confusedly; be mixed up. –noun 4. a… …
jumble — 1. verb To mix or confuse. 2. noun a) A mixture of unrelated things. b) Items for a rummage sale … Wiktionary