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1 jumble
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.) pomíchat; naházet2. noun1) (a confused mixture: He found an untidy jumble of things in the drawer.) směsice2) (unwanted possessions suitable for a jumble sale: Have you any jumble to spare?) veteš•* * *• promíchat• přeházet• sušenka tvaru prstenu• směsice• harampádí• náhodně rozmístit• míchanice• nepřehledné množství věcí
См. также в других словарях:
scramble — verb 1》 move or make one s way quickly and awkwardly, typically by using one s hands as well as one s feet. ↘informal act in a hurried, disorderly, or undignified manner: firms scrambled to win public sector contracts. 2》 (with reference to… … English new terms dictionary
jum´bler — jum|ble1 «JUHM buhl», verb, bled, bling, noun. –v.t. 1. to mix or confuse: »She jumbled up everything in her drawer while hunting for her white gloves. 2. to confuse mentally: »To jumble the innocent and the guilty…by a general indemnity (Edmund… … Useful english dictionary
jum´ble|ment — jum|ble1 «JUHM buhl», verb, bled, bling, noun. –v.t. 1. to mix or confuse: »She jumbled up everything in her drawer while hunting for her white gloves. 2. to confuse mentally: »To jumble the innocent and the guilty…by a general indemnity (Edmund… … Useful english dictionary
jum|ble — jum|ble1 «JUHM buhl», verb, bled, bling, noun. –v.t. 1. to mix or confuse: »She jumbled up everything in her drawer while hunting for her white gloves. 2. to confuse mentally: »To jumble the innocent and the guilty…by a general indemnity (Edmund… … Useful english dictionary
collection — noun 1 group of objects ADJECTIVE ▪ big, extensive, huge, large, major, massive, substantial, vast ▪ small … Collocations 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
Leet — For other uses, see Leet (disambiguation). One way to write the word Wikipedia in Leet Leet (or 1337 ), als … Wikipedia
collapse — I. verb (collapsed; collapsing) Etymology: Latin collapsus, past participle of collabi, from com + labi to fall, slide more at sleep Date: 1732 intransitive verb 1. to fall or shrink together abruptly and completely ; fall into a jumbled or… … New Collegiate 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
stego — v. To hide secret information electronically by embedding it inside an ordinary file such as an image or sound clip. Example Citation: Something is stegoed in the wired world when encrypted words, diagrams, maps or images are embedded into an… … New words
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… …