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maze+(noun)

  • 1 maze

    [meiz]
    (a deliberately confusing series of paths, often surrounded by walls or hedges, from which it's difficult to find the way out: I'm lost in a maze of rules and regulations.) völundarhús

    English-Icelandic dictionary > maze

  • 2 labyrinth

    ['læbərinƟ]
    (a place full of long, winding passages; a maze.) völundarhús

    English-Icelandic dictionary > labyrinth

  • 3 shepherd

    ['ʃepəd] 1. feminine - shepherdess; noun
    (a person who looks after sheep: The shepherd and his dog gathered in the sheep.) smali, fjárhirðir
    2. verb
    ((often with around, in, out etc) to guide or lead carefully: He shepherded me through a maze of corridors.) leiða, leiðbeina

    English-Icelandic dictionary > shepherd

См. также в других словарях:

  • maze — ► NOUN 1) a puzzle consisting of a network of paths and walls or hedges through which one has to find a way. 2) a confusing mass of information. ORIGIN originally denoting delirium or delusion: related to AMAZE(Cf. ↑amazement) …   English terms dictionary

  • maze — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ complex, complicated, confusing, intricate ▪ hedge ▪ the famous hedge maze at Hampton Court ▪ bureaucratic ( …   Collocations dictionary

  • maze´like´ — maze «mayz», noun, verb, maz, maz|ing. –n. 1. a) a network of paths or lines designed to be hard to find one s way through: »A guide led us through the maze of tunnels in the cave. He turned short into one of the mazes of the wood (Scott). b)… …   Useful english dictionary

  • maze — noun (C) 1 a maze of streets/paths/wires etc a complicated and confusing arrangement of streets etc: the maze of tiny streets in the old part of the city 2 a maze of rules/regulations/details etc a large number of rules etc which are complicated… …   Longman dictionary of contemporary English

  • maze — [ meız ] noun 1. ) count an arrangement of closely connected paths separated by tall bushes or trees. The paths often do not lead anywhere, and you have to use your memory and skill to get through. a ) singular a set of many small streets, paths …   Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • maze — noun the mainland s city streets were a baffling maze to the islanders Syn: labyrinth, complex network, warren; web, tangle, jungle, snarl; puzzle …   Thesaurus of popular words

  • maze — noun 1》 a network of paths and hedges designed as a puzzle through which one has to find a way. 2》 a confusing mass of information. verb (be mazed) archaic or dialect be dazed and confused. Derivatives mazy adjective Origin ME (denoting delirium… …   English new terms dictionary

  • maze — noun Syn: labyrinth, network, warren, web, tangle, confusion, jungle …   Synonyms and antonyms dictionary

  • maze — UK [meɪz] / US noun Word forms maze : singular maze plural mazes 1) a) [countable] an arrangement of closely connected paths separated by tall bushes or trees. The paths often do not lead anywhere, and you have to use your memory and skill to get …   English dictionary

  • maze — I. transitive verb (mazed; mazing) Etymology: Middle English Date: 13th century 1. chiefly dialect stupefy, daze 2. bewilder, perplex II. noun Date: 14th ce …   New Collegiate Dictionary

  • maze — [13] Maze was originally a verb (now obsolete) meaning ‘daze’, which arose by shortening of amaze. When it was first used as a noun it meant ‘delusion, delirium’, and it was not until the late 14th century that it began to be used for a… …   The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins

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