-
21 scintillating
['sintileitiŋ](witty; very clever and amusing: She was in a scintillating mood; scintillating wit.) leiftrandi -
22 sober
['səubə]1) (not drunk: He was still sober when he left.) ódrukkinn2) (serious in mind: a sober mood.) alvarlegur3) ((of colour) not bright: She wore a sober (grey) dress.) dempaður, daufur4) (moderate; not overdone or too emotional: His account of the accident was factual and sober.) ÿkjulaus, yfirvegaður•- sobering- soberly
- soberness
- sober up -
23 sombre
['sombə]1) (dark (and gloomy): Black is a sombre colour.) þungbúinn, myrkur2) (grave; serious: He was in a sombre mood.) dapur, þungbúinn -
24 spirits
1) (a person's mood: He's in good/high/low spirits (= He's happy / very cheerful / depressed); This news may raise his spirits.) hugarástand2) (strong alcoholic drink, eg whisky, gin, vodka etc.) brenndur drykkur -
25 stormy
1) (having a lot of strong wind, heavy rain etc: a stormy day; stormy weather; a stormy voyage.) stormasamur2) (full of anger or uncontrolled feeling: in a stormy mood; a stormy discussion.) ofsafenginn -
26 sulky
adjective (sulking, or tending to sulk: in a sulky mood; a sulky girl.) fúll, önugur -
27 temper
['tempə] 1. noun1) (a state of mind; a mood or humour: He's in a bad temper.) skap2) (a tendency to become (unpleasant when) angry: He has a terrible temper.) skap3) (a state of anger: She's in a temper.) vont skap2. verb1) (to bring metal to the right degree of hardness by heating and cooling: The steel must be carefully tempered.) styrkja, bæta2) (to soften or make less severe: One must try to temper justice with mercy.) milda•- - tempered- keep one's temper
- lose one's temper -
28 temperamental
[-'men-]adjective (emotional; excitable; showing quick changes of mood.) mislyndur, viðkvæmur -
29 thoughtful
1) ((appearing to be) thinking deeply: You look thoughtful; a thoughtful mood.) íhugull2) (thinking of other people; consideration: It was very thoughtful of you to do that.) hugulsamur -
30 touchy
adjective (easily annoyed or offended: You're very touchy today; in rather a touchy mood.) fyrtinn -
31 ugly
1) (unpleasant to look at: She is rather an ugly young woman.) ljótur2) (unpleasant, nasty or dangerous: ugly black clouds; The crowd was in an ugly mood.) uggvænlegur•- ugliness -
32 unsettled
1) ((of weather) changeable.) breytilegur2) (anxious or restless: in an unsettled mood.) órólegur, í uppnámi
- 1
- 2
См. также в других словарях:
Mood — Mood … Deutsch Wikipedia
mood — W3S3 [mu:d] n ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(way you feel)¦ 2 be in a mood 3 be/feel in the mood for something 4 be in no mood for something/to do something 5¦(way a place or event feels)¦ 6¦(grammar)¦ ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ [Sense: 1 5; Origin: Old English mod mind, courage ] … Dictionary of contemporary English
mood — [ mud ] noun *** 1. ) count or uncount the way someone is feeling, for example whether they are happy, sad, or angry: He listens to rock or country music, depending on his mood. medicines that affect your mood and mental function in a… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
mood — mood, humor, temper, vein mean a temporary state or frame of mind in which one emotion or desire or one set of emotions gains the ascendancy. Mood is the comprehensive term for any such frame of mind, regardless of its particular cause, its… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
Mood 92.0 FM — Mood 92 (Formally Mood FM) City of license Amman … Wikipedia
mood — mood1 [mo͞od] n. [ME < OE mod, mind, soul, courage, akin to Ger mut, mental disposition, spirit, courage < IE base * me , to strive strongly, be energetic > L mos, custom, customary behavior] 1. a particular state of mind or feeling;… … English World dictionary
Mood — Mood, n. [OE. mood, mod, AS. m[=o]dmind, feeling, heart, courage; akin to OS. & OFries. m[=o]d, D. moed, OHG. muot, G. muth, mut, courage, Dan. & Sw. mod, Icel. m[=o][eth]r wrath, Goth. m[=o]ds.] Temper of mind; temporary state of the mind in… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Mood — (m[=oo]d), n. [The same word as mode, perh. influenced by mood temper. See {Mode}.] 1. Manner; style; mode; logical form; musical style; manner of action or being. See {Mode} which is the preferable form). [1913 Webster] 2. (Gram.) Manner of… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Mood — may refer to: Mood (psychology), a relatively long lasting emotional state Grammatical mood, one of a set of morphologically distinctive forms that are used to signal modality Mood (city), a city in Iran Mood District, a district in Iran Mood… … Wikipedia
mood|y — «MOO dee», adjective, mood|i|er, mood|i|est. 1. likely to have changes of mood: »It is difficult to predict his reaction because he is so moody. 2. often having gloomy moods: » … Useful english dictionary
mood — mood·i·ly; mood·i·ness; mood; … English syllables