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1 out of place
غَيْر مُلائِمHis clothes are quite out of place at a formal dinner.
2) not in the proper position; untidy:غَيْر مُرَتَّبAlthough he had had to run most of the way, he arrived with not a hair out of place.
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2 out
بَعِيدًا (عَن) \ apart: to separate, one from the other: These pillars are six feet apart. Fierce dogs should be kept apart. away: at a distance: Keep away from the wet paint, (with verbs of movement) to a distance: Go away! We drove the dog away. beyond: further; on or to the farther side: I looked across the river to the hills beyond. from afar: from a great distance. in the background: where one will not be noticed. in the distance: far away (from the point where one is): In the distance he could see the mountains. out: away from one’s country, to a distant place (use over for journeys that are not so distant, e.g. London to Paris): How long has she been out in Australia?;. clear of: safely away from: Stand clear of that machine. wide: far from the point that was aimed at: The ball went wide. -
3 out-of the way
بَعِيد \ distant: not close (place, view, relation, etc.). far, (farther, farthest): a long way: Is it far to the river? My thoughts were far away. off the beaten track: away from the busy roads. out-of the way: (of places) far from any town. remote: distant in time or in relationship; far and not easily reached: in the remote past; a remote interest in the subject; a remote village in the mountains; a remote possibility (a very slight one). -
4 out-of the way
ناءٍ \ distant: not close (place, view, relation, etc.). far, (farther, further, farthest): a long way: Is it far to the river? My thoughts were far away. out-of the way: (of places) far from any town. remote: distant in time or in relationship; far and not easily reached: a remote village in the mountains. -
5 out of joint
(of a limb etc) not in the correct place; dislocated:لَيس في المَكان الصَّحيحHe put his shoulder out of joint when he moved the wardrobe.
•Remark: see also join. -
6 come out
بَرَزَ \ arise, (arose, arisen): to come up and be noticed (of storm, trouble, etc.): A serious difficulty has arisen. come on the scene: to make an effective appearance: Britain was losing the war until Churchill came on the scene. come out: to appear: Our roses are coming out. emerge: to come out from a place where one could not be seen; appear: He emerged from his hiding place. The moon emerged from behind the clouds. figure: to appear (in a story or report): Well-known sportsmen often figure in the newspaper. jutt: (always with out) to stand out: An overflow pipe jutted out from the wall of the house. project: to stick out: That branch projects over the wall. protrude: stick out: The letter-box was full, and one letter protruded from the opening. stand out: to be easily seen; to be especially noticeable: Bright colours stand out against a dark surface behind them. \ See Also ظَهَرَ (جَلِيًّا) (لَعِبَ دورًا)، نشأ (نَشَأَ) -
7 stand out
بَرَزَ \ arise, (arose, arisen): to come up and be noticed (of storm, trouble, etc.): A serious difficulty has arisen. come on the scene: to make an effective appearance: Britain was losing the war until Churchill came on the scene. come out: to appear: Our roses are coming out. emerge: to come out from a place where one could not be seen; appear: He emerged from his hiding place. The moon emerged from behind the clouds. figure: to appear (in a story or report): Well-known sportsmen often figure in the newspaper. jutt: (always with out) to stand out: An overflow pipe jutted out from the wall of the house. project: to stick out: That branch projects over the wall. protrude: stick out: The letter-box was full, and one letter protruded from the opening. stand out: to be easily seen; to be especially noticeable: Bright colours stand out against a dark surface behind them. \ See Also ظَهَرَ (جَلِيًّا) (لَعِبَ دورًا)، نشأ (نَشَأَ) -
8 come out
ظَهَرَ \ appear: to come into sight: A figure appeared in the distance, to present oneself; be seen publicly I have to appear in court today. arise (arose, arisen): to come up and be noticed (of storm, trouble, etc.) A serious difficulty has arisen. come on the scene: to make an effective appearance: Britain was losing the war until Churchill came on the scene. come out: to appear: Our roses are coming out. Most newspapers come out every day. Your photograph came out well. emerge: to come out from a place where one could not be seen; appear: He emerged from his hiding place. The moon emerged from behind the clouds. figure: to appear (in a story or report): Well-known sportsmen often figure in the newspaper. seem: to appear to be: He seems (to be) honest. It seems (clear) to me that I ought to go. show: to be seen: Dirt shows more on white clothes than on dark ones. turn up: (of sth. that was missing) to appear: The stolen goods turned up in the market. \ See Also بان (بَانَ)، لاح (لاَحَ)، برز (بَرَزَ)، طلع (طَلَعَ) -
9 freeze-out
Gen Mgtthe exclusion of minority shareholders in a company that has been taken over. A freeze-out provision may exist in a takeover agreement, which permits the acquiring organization to buy the noncontrolling shares held by small shareholders. A fair price is usually set, and the freeze-out may take place at a specified time, perhaps two to five years after the takeover. A freeze-out can still take place, even if provision for it is not made in a corporate charter, by applying pressure to minority shareholders to sell their shares to the acquiring company. -
10 cut out
تَرَكَ (إلى غير رَجْعَةٍ) \ abandon: to leave sth. or sb., not intending to return: The thieves abandoned the stolen car. cut out: to leave out: You can cut out the last sentence. Cut out that silly talking!. forsake: to leave for ever; give up completely: She forsook the religion of her family in favour of that of her husband. leave: to go away from, for ever: He left school when he was 14. I left my job because I wanted more money, to let sb. or sth. remain (in a certain place or condition) I left my daughter in his care (on purpose). Why did you leave the door open? She left her handbag in the bus (by mistake). \ See Also هجر (هَجَرَ)، تَخَلَّى عن، حذف (حَذَفَ)، غادر (غادَرَ) -
11 make out
أَدْرَكَ \ appreciate: to understand: I appreciate your point of view. attain: to reach; succeed in getting: He attained his goal of becoming rich. catch up: come level (with): He started early but I soon caught up (or caught him up or caught up with him). catch, (caught): to meet or join sb. or sth. by being at the right place at the right time: I caught the bus outside the cinema. I caught the headmaster as he left his office. comprehend: to understand: The child read the story but did not comprehend its meaning. find, (found): to learn or discover sth. (by experience or study of inquiry): She found him changed. You will find the hotel very comfortable. The judge found the prisoner guilty. I found that my car had been stolen. make out: to understand: I can’t make out what this means. overtake: (of a runner, etc.) to come level with sb., by going faster (and perhaps to pass him): I overtook him and gave him your message. perceive: to notice and understand, especially through the eyes or mind: I can’t perceive any difference between these two coins. We perceived that we were unwelcome, so we left. realize: to understand (the truth of sth.): Does she realize her mistake? (Does she know about it?) Do you realize that you are in great danger?. see: to understand (a reaon, a joke, a need, etc.): I can’t see why he wants it. It’s too hard for him, you see? Yes, I see. tell: (with can) to know; to recognize: Can you tell the difference between these two brothers?. understand: to know the meaning of: I don’t understand this question. \ See Also عرف (عَرِفَ)، فهم (فَهِم)، لحق بـ (لَحِقَ بِـ) -
12 look out for
بَحَثَ \ look out for: to be ready to see; be on the watch for: We’re looking out for a flat which is nearer my work. search: to look carefully (for sth. that is lost or needed): I’ve searched everywhere for my keys. hunt: to search: I’m hunting for my pen. scout around: to search (not for sth. that is lost): I’ll scout around for a good place to camp. seek: old use (still used formally with a few nouns such as advice, shelter or one’s fortune). look for. \ See Also فَتَّشَ عن -
13 speak out of turn
يَتَكَلَّم بدون إذْن2) to say something when it is not your place to say it or something you should not have said.يقول شَيئاً في غَيْر مَحَلِّه أو وقْتِه -
14 be out of position
to be (not) in the right place:في مَكانِه، في غير مَكانِهIs everything in position for the photograph?
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15 нелишний
разг.
not superfluous; useful (полезный); relevant (о высказывании и т.п.); not out of place* * ** * *not superfluous; useful; relevant -
16 уместно
1.1. прил. кратк. см. уместный2. предик. безл. it is appropriate, it is not out of place2. нареч.уместно заметить, что — it is appropriate, или not out of place, to mention here that
appropriately, aptly, in place; opportunely -
17 уместно
I1) кратк. прил. см. уместный2) предик. безл. it is appropriate [ə'prəʊ-], it is not out of placeуме́стно заме́тить, что — it is appropriate [not out of place] to mention here that
II нареч.бы́ло бы уме́стно сде́лать э́то сейча́с — it would be a good thing to do it now
appropriately [ə'prəʊ-], aptly, in place; opportunely -
18 лишний
1) ( избыточный) superfluous; excess; ( запасной) spareли́шний вес — excess weight, overweight
нет ли у вас ли́шнего карандаша́? — have you got an extra [a spare] pencil?
2) ( ненужный) unnecessaryон здесь ли́шний — he is not wanted here; he is one too many here разг.; he is the odd man out идиом.
3) ( дополнительный) additional, anotherли́шний раз — once more / again; one more time амер.
ли́шнее напомина́ние не помеша́ет — an additional reminder won't do any harm
э́то ли́шнее — this is unnecessary
вы́пить ли́шнего — have a drink too many
сказа́ть ли́шнее — say too much
••с ли́шним разг. — more than; and more
три киломе́тра с ли́шним — more than three kilometres, three kilometres and a bit
не ли́шне — not out of place
ли́шние лю́ди (о безработных) — the unemployed
без ли́шних слов — without further ado
хвати́ть, хлебну́ть ли́шнего — = хвати́ть, хлебну́ть ли́шку (см. лишек)
позволя́ть себе́ ли́шнее — step beyond the limit, go too far
не позволя́ть себе́ ничего́ ли́шнего — 1) (в разговорах, в поведении) not to step beyond the limit, not to take liberties 2) ( в расходах) not to allow oneself any extras
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19 лишний
1. superfluous; ( ненужный) unnecessaryон здесь лишний — he is not wanted here; he is one too many here разг.; he is the odd man out идиом.
2. ( запасной) spare3. как сущ. с.:он наговорил много лишнего — he said, или gave away, too much
♢
с лишним разг. — more than:три километра с лишним — more than three kilometres, three kilometres and a bit
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20 нелишний
разг.not superfluous; not out of place; ( полезный) useful; (о высказывании и т.п.) relevantбыть нели́шним — be useful
вам э́то бу́дет нели́шне — it will do you good
См. также в других словарях:
Out of place — Out Out (out), adv. [OE. out, ut, oute, ute, AS. [=u]t, and [=u]te, [=u]tan, fr. [=u]t; akin to D. uit, OS. [=u]t, G. aus, OHG. [=u]z, Icel. [=u]t, Sw. ut, Dan. ud, Goth. ut, Skr. ud. [root]198. Cf. {About}, {But}, prep., {Carouse}, {Utter}, a.]… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Out-of-place artifact — (OOPArt) is a term coined by American naturalist and cryptozoologist Ivan T. Sanderson for an object of historical, archaeological, or paleontological interest found in a very unusual or seemingly impossible context[1] that could challenge… … Wikipedia
not have a hair out of place — phrase to look very tidy and clean Thesaurus: clean and tidy in appearancesynonym Main entry: hair * * * not have a hair out of place informal : to have a very neat appearance a politician who never has a hair out of place • … Useful english dictionary
not a hair out of place — (not) a hair out of place if someone does not have a hair out of place, their appearance is very tidy. She was immaculate as ever, not a hair out of place … New idioms dictionary
Out of place — Place Place (pl[=a]s), n. [F., fr. L. platea a street, an area, a courtyard, from Gr. platei^a a street, properly fem. of platy s, flat, broad; akin to Skr. p[.r]thu, Lith. platus. Cf. {Flawn}, {Piazza}, {Plate}, {Plaza}.] 1. Any portion of space … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Out of Place (2009 film) — Out of Place is a surfing documentary directed by Scott Ditzenberger and Darrin McDonald that follows the lives of several surfers in Cleveland, Ohio. While Lake Erie does not offer the quality of waves they would prefer, business commitments,… … Wikipedia
out of place — not comfortable or suitable for a particular situation. He is worried about his job and feels out of place in a large organization. The tree lined streets of this city wouldn t be out of place in a small town … New idioms dictionary
out of place — ► out of place 1) not in the proper position. 2) in a setting where one is or feels incongruous. Main Entry: ↑place … English terms dictionary
out of place — index disordered, disproportionate, immaterial, impertinent (irrelevant), improper, inapplicable, inappropriate … Law dictionary
out\ of\ place — I. adv. phr. Not in the right or usual place or position. Harry fell and knocked one of his teeth out of place. The teacher lined up the class and told them not to get out of place. Compare: out of order Contrast: in place II. adj. phr. In the… … Словарь американских идиом
out of place — 1) if someone feels out of place or is out of place, they feel uncomfortable in a particular situation or place, or they do not belong there Kieran felt very out of place among Helen s solicitor friends. 2) in the wrong position Mel looked… … English dictionary