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1 overhoopliggen
2 [onenigheid hebben met] be at loggerheads (with)♦voorbeelden:ze liggen altijd met elkaar overhoop • they're always at loggerheads (with one another) -
2 door
door1〈 bijwoord〉1 through♦voorbeelden:de hele dag door • all day long, throughout the dayde kast kan de deur niet door • the cupboard won't go through the doorzijn hele leven door • his whole life long, throughout his lifemijn schoenen zijn door • my shoes are worn outde tunnel gaat onder het water door • the tunnel passes under the waterik ben door en door nat/koud • I'm wet through (and through), I'm chilled to the bonezij kent het land door en door • she knows the country like the back of her handdoor en door slecht • rotten to the core, thoroughly bad————————door2〈 voorzetsel〉1 [met betrekking tot een zijde/ruimte/opening/doorgang] through3 [middels] by (means of)5 [in passieve zinnen] by♦voorbeelden:door rood/oranje rijden • jump the lighthij vertrok door de tuin • he left via/through the gardenalles lag door elkaar • everything was in a messdoor haar heb ik hem leren kennen • it was thanks to her that I met him4 door het slechte weer • because of/owing to the bad weatherdoor ziekte verhinderd • prevented by illness from coming/attending/goingdat komt door jou • that's (all) because of youdoor wie is het geschreven? • who was it written by?door de week • through the week -
3 heel haar leven lag overhoop
heel haar leven lag overhoopVan Dale Handwoordenboek Nederlands-Engels > heel haar leven lag overhoop
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4 honderd
honderd1〈 het〉1 [honderd stuks] hundred2 [meervoud] [honderdtal] hundred(s)♦voorbeelden:2 honderden jaren/keren • hundreds of years/timesenige honderden (boeken) • a few hundred (books)zij sneuvelden bij honderden • they died in their hundredszijn verlies loopt in de honderden • his losses run into the hundredsde boel in het honderd sturen • mess things up————————honderd2〈 telwoord〉1 hundred♦voorbeelden:in geen honderd jaar! • not on your (sweet) life, not in a million years!het jaar honderd • the year one hundreddat heb ik nu al (minstens) honderd keer gezegd • (if I've said it once) I've said it a hundred timesde honderd meter (sprint) • the hundred metres (sprint)een paar honderd boeken • a few hundred booksik voel me niet helemaal honderd procent • I'm not feeling too brighthonderd procent zeker zijn (van) • be absolutely positivedie wordt nog honderd • he'll live to be a hundreder zijn er over de honderd • there are more than a hundredhij loopt tegen de honderd (jaar) • he's getting on for a hundredeen meisje uit honderd • a girl in a million
См. также в других словарях:
mess — 1 noun 1 DIRTY/UNTIDY (singular, uncountable) a situation in which a place looks very untidy or dirty, with things spread all around: Clean up this mess! | The house was an awful mess after the party. | make a mess: You can make cookies if you… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
mess — 01. This room is a total [mess]; do you think you could help me clean up? 02. Don t [mess] with Freddie if you value your life. 03. Why do my teenage children always leave such a [mess] in the bathroom? 04. His life is a [mess]; married three… … Grammatical examples in English
Mess of Me — Single by Switchfoot from the album Hello Hurricane Released September 1, 2009 (Compa … Wikipedia
mess with (something) — 1. to take apart or fix something complicated esp. in order to learn more about how it works. I enjoy messing with computers the way some folks get pleasure from rebuilding old cars. 2. to change something in a way that is likely to cause harm.… … New idioms dictionary
mess — mess1 [ mes ] noun ** ▸ 1 when someone/something is dirty ▸ 2 when there are problems ▸ 3 someone with problems ▸ 4 solid waste from animal ▸ 5 mess hall ▸ + PHRASES 1. ) count or uncount a situation in which a place is dirty or not neat: Your… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
mess — mess1 S2 [mes] n ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(dirty/untidy)¦ 2¦(problems/difficulties)¦ 3 make a mess of (doing) something 4¦(person)¦ 5 a mess of something 6¦(army/navy)¦ 7¦(waste substance)¦ ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ [Date: 1200 1300; : Old French; Origin: mes … Dictionary of contemporary English
mess — I UK [mes] / US noun Word forms mess : singular mess plural messes ** 1) [countable/uncountable] a situation in which a place is dirty or untidy Your room is a mess; please pick up your toys. What a mess! she said, looking at the kitchen. make a… … English dictionary
mess — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ absolute, complete, fine (esp. AmE), hopeless, real, royal (esp. AmE), total, utter ▪ I got myself into a complete mess … Collocations dictionary
mess up — verb 1. make a mess of, destroy or ruin (Freq. 1) I botched the dinner and we had to eat out the pianist screwed up the difficult passage in the second movement • Syn: ↑botch, ↑bodge, ↑bumble, ↑fumble, ↑ … Useful english dictionary
mess — I. noun Etymology: Middle English mes, from Anglo French, from Late Latin missus course at a meal, from missus, past participle of mittere to put, from Latin, to send more at smite Date: 14th century 1. a quantity of food: a. archaic food set on… … New Collegiate Dictionary
mess*/ — [mes] noun I 1) [C/U] a situation in which a place is dirty, untidy, or in bad condition The garden was a real mess.[/ex] Try not to make a mess because I ve been cleaning.[/ex] His papers were in a terrible mess.[/ex] 2) [singular] a difficult… … Dictionary for writing and speaking English