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1 commotion
nounTumult, der* * *[kə'məuʃən]((a) confused, noisy uproar: He was woken by a commotion in the street.) der Aufruhr* * *com·mo·tion[kəˈməʊʃən, AM -ˈmoʊ-]what's all this \commotion was soll der ganze Wirbelto cause a \commotion Chaos verursachen* * *[k\@'məUSən]nAufregung f usu no indef art; (= noise) Lärm m, Spektakel m* * *commotion [kəˈməʊʃn] s1. heftige Bewegung, Erschütterung f2. Erregung f, Aufregung f3. POL und fig Aufruhr m4. Durcheinander n, Wirrwarr m* * *nounTumult, der* * *n.Aufregung f.Erschütterung f. -
2 pandemonium
nounChaos, das; (uproar) Tumult, der* * *[pændi'mouniəm](a state of noise and confusion: There was pandemonium in the classroom before the teacher arrived.) der Höllenlärm* * *pan·de·mo·nium[ˌpændəˈməʊniəm, AM -ˈmoʊ-]n no pl\pandemonium reigns es herrscht Chaos* * *["pndI'məʊnɪəm]nChaos ntat this there was pandemonium or pandemonium broke out — daraufhin brach ein Chaos aus or die Hölle los
judging by the pandemonium coming from the classroom — dem Höllenlärm in der Klasse nach zu urteilen
* * *pandemonium [ˌpændıˈməʊnjəm; -nıəm] s2. Hölle f3. figa) Chaos n, Tumult mb) Höllenlärm m umg* * *nounChaos, das; (uproar) Tumult, der -
3 commotion
com·mo·tion [kəʼməʊʃən, Am -ʼmoʊ-] nwhat's all this \commotion was soll der ganze Wirbelto cause a \commotion Chaos verursachen -
4 pandemonium
pan·de·mo·nium [ˌpændəʼməʊniəm, Am -ʼmoʊ-] n\pandemonium reigns es herrscht Chaos;
См. также в других словарях:
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Tumult — Tu mult, n. [L. tumultus; probably akin to Skr. tumula noise, noisy, and perhaps to L. tumere to swell, E. tumid: cf. F. tumulte.] 1. The commotion or agitation of a multitude, usually accompanied with great noise, uproar, and confusion of… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
racket — racket1 [rak′it] n. [prob. echoic] 1. a noisy confusion; loud and confused talk or activity; uproar 2. Archaic a period of lively, exciting social life or revelry 3. ☆ a) an obtaining of money illegally, as by bootlegging, fraud, or, esp.,… … English World dictionary
commotion — noun Etymology: Middle English, from Anglo French commocion, from Latin commotion , commotio, from commovēre Date: 15th century 1. a condition of civil unrest or insurrection 2. steady or recurrent motion 3. mental excitement or … New Collegiate Dictionary
ado — /euh dooh /, n. busy activity; bustle; fuss. [1250 1300; ME (north) at do, a phrase equiv. to at to ( < ON, which used at with the inf.) + do DO1] Syn. flurry; confusion, upset, excitement; hubbub, noise, turmoil. ADO, TO DO, COMMOTION, STIR,… … Universalium
bed|lam — «BEHD luhm», noun, adjective. –n. 1. a) noisy confusion; uproar: »When our team won, there was bedlam in the gym. SYNONYM(S): Babel. b) a scene of such confusion. SYNONYM(S): pandemonium. 2. Archaic. an insane asylum; … Useful english dictionary
tu·mult — /ˈtuːˌmʌlt, Brit ˈtjuːˌmʌlt/ noun, pl mults formal 1 : a state of noisy confusion or disorder [count] A great tumult [=uproar, commotion] arose in the street. We had to shout to be heard over the tumult. [noncount] The country was in … Useful english dictionary