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1 lumber
I 1. noun1) (old unwanted furniture etc.) gammelt skrap; skrot2) (timber sawn up.) trelast2. verb(to give (someone) an unwanted responsibility: to lumber someone with a job.) belemre (med)II verb(to move about heavily and clumsily.) trampe, slamre, ramletrelast--------tømmer--------vedIsubst. \/ˈlʌmbə\/1) ( spesielt britisk) (gammelt) skrap, rot, skrammel, gamle møbler2) ( overført også) rask, tyngende gods, dødvektslast3) (spesielt amer.) tømmer, trelastbe in (dead) lumber ( slang) sitte i saksen, sitte fint i detIIverb \/ˈlʌmbə\/1) trampe, lunte, klampe, traske2) dundre, drønne, buldre, rumlelumber along trampe i vei, buldre av gårde, dundre av stedIIIverb \/ˈlʌmbə\/1) fylle (med skrammel), tynge2) ligge og fylle opp3) (spesielt amer.) avvirke, hugge tømmerbe lumbered with (britisk, hverdagslig) være belemret med, drasse pålumber up belemre, fylle med skrap -
2 barge
1. noun1) (a flat-bottomed boat for carrying goods etc.) lekter, pram2) (a large power-driven boat.) tung båt2. verb1) (to move (about) clumsily: He barged about the room.) brase, bevege seg klosset2) (to bump (into): He barged into me.) buse/løpe på3) ((with in(to)) to push one's way (into) rudely: She barged in without knocking.) bruse innpramIsubst. \/bɑːdʒ\/1) kanalbåt2) lekter3) sjalupp4) ( hverdagslig) gammel slitt båt5) ( hverdagslig) uhåndterlig surfebrettdrilling barge borelekterIIverb \/bɑːdʒ\/1) ferge, transportere med båt2) ( hverdagslig) brase, storme, ruse, komme plutseligbarge in (on somebody) brase inn (til noen), avbryte (noen) trenge seg på (noen) (med viten og vilje)barge into buse inn i løpe tilfeldig påbarge on ture frem
См. также в других словарях:
stumble — verb 1) she stumbled and fell heavily Syn: trip (over/up), lose one s balance, lose/miss one s footing, slip 2) he stumbled back home Syn: stagger, totter, teeter, dodder, blunder, hobble, move clumsily … Thesaurus of popular words
lob´ber — lob1 «lob», noun, verb, lobbed, lob|bing. –n. 1. a ball, especially a tennis ball, hit in a high arc, usually to the back of the opponent s court. 2. an artillery shell, rock, or other object shot or thrown in a high arc. 3. a slow underhand… … Useful english dictionary
blun´der|er — blun|der «BLUHN duhr», noun, verb. –n. a stupid or careless mistake; bungle: »Misspelling the title of a book is a silly blunder to make in a book report. ╂[< verb] –v.i. 1. to make a stupid or careless mistake: »Someone blundered in sending… … Useful english dictionary
blun|der — «BLUHN duhr», noun, verb. –n. a stupid or careless mistake; bungle: »Misspelling the title of a book is a silly blunder to make in a book report. ╂[< verb] –v.i. 1. to make a stupid or careless mistake: »Someone blundered in sending you to the … Useful english dictionary
lob — I. /lɒb / (say lob) noun 1. Tennis, Squash, etc. a ball struck high into the opponent s court. 2. Cricket a slow underhand ball. 3. Obsolete a large deposit of gold. –verb (lobbed, lobbing) –verb (t) 4 …
clump — I. noun Etymology: probably from Low German klump Date: circa 1586 1. a group of things clustered together < a clump of bushes > 2. a compact mass 3. a heavy tramping sound • clumpy adjective II … New Collegiate Dictionary
lumber — I. /ˈlʌmbə / (say lumbuh) noun 1. timber sawn or split into planks, boards, etc. 2. miscellaneous useless articles that are stored away. –verb (i) 3. to cut timber and prepare it for market. –verb (t) 4. to heap together in disorder. 5. to fill… …
waddle — I. intransitive verb (waddled; waddling) Etymology: frequentative of wade Date: 1592 1. to walk with short steps swinging the forepart of the body from side to side 2. to move clumsily in a manner suggesting a waddle • waddler noun II. noun … New Collegiate Dictionary
lumber — 1. noun /ˈlʌm.bə,ˈlʌm.bɚ/ a) Wood intended as a building material. Here they live by fishing on the most plentiful coasts in the world; there they fell trees, by the sides of large rivers, for masts and lumber; b) Useless things that are stored… … Wiktionary
barge — [13] Barge comes in the first instance from Old French barge, but speculation has pushed it further back to medieval Latin *barica, which would have derived from báris, a Greek word for an Egyptian boat. This hypothetical *barica would have been… … The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins
foozling — adj a. clumsy, bungled b. trivial, footling. From the verb foozle meaning to play or move clumsily or bungle; itself from the German fuseln, meaning to work carelessly … Contemporary slang