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object

  • 21 be the pride and joy of

    (to be the object of the pride of: He was his parents' pride and joy.) būti (kieno) pasididžiavimu

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > be the pride and joy of

  • 22 bell

    [bel]
    1) (a hollow object, usually of metal, which gives a ringing sound when struck by the clapper inside: church bells.) varpas
    2) (any other mechanism for giving a ringing sound: Our doorbell is broken.) skambutis

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > bell

  • 23 belt

    [belt] 1. noun
    1) (a long (narrow) piece of leather, cloth etc worn round the waist: a trouser-belt; He tightened his belt.) diržas
    2) (a similar object used to set wheels in motion: the belt of a vacuum-cleaner.) dirželis
    3) (a zone of country etc: a belt of trees; an industrial belt.) juosta
    2. verb
    1) (to fasten with a belt: He belted his trousers on.) susijuosti
    2) (to strike (with or without a belt): He belted the disobedient dog.) prilupti

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > belt

  • 24 bias

    1. noun
    1) (favouring of one or other (side in an argument etc) rather than remaining neutral: a bias against people of other religions.) šališkumas
    2) (a weight on or in an object (eg a bowl for playing bowls) making it move in a particular direction.) svarstis, apkrova
    2. verb
    (to influence (usually unfairly): He was biased by the report in the newspapers.) paveikti
    - biassed
    - biased

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > bias

  • 25 booby trap

    1) (a bomb hidden in an object which explodes when it is touched.) padėta bomba
    2) (a simple trap that makes you fall or makes something fall on you etc.) spąstai

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > booby trap

  • 26 booby-trap

    past tense, past participle - booby-trapped; verb (to put a booby trap in an object: Don't touch that! It may be booby-trapped.) padėti bombą

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > booby-trap

  • 27 buffer

    (an apparatus for lessening the force with which a moving object strikes something.) buferis, amortizatorius

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > buffer

  • 28 card

    1) (thick paper or thin board: shapes cut out from card.) kartonas
    2) ((also playing card) a small piece of such paper etc with designs, used in playing certain games: a pack of cards.) korta
    3) (a similar object used for eg sending greetings, showing membership of an organization, storing information etc: a birthday card; a membership card; a business card.) kortelė, atvirukas, bilietas
    - cardboard

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > card

  • 29 concave

    [kon'keiv]
    ((of an object or surface) curved inwards: Spoons are concave.) įgaubtas, įdubęs

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > concave

  • 30 concrete

    ['koŋkri:t] 1. adjective
    1) (made of concrete: concrete slabs.) betoninis
    2) (able to be seen and felt; real or definite: A wooden table is a concrete object.) konkretus, realus
    2. noun
    (a mixture of cement with sand etc used in building.) betonas
    3. verb
    (to spread with concrete: We'll have to concrete the garden path.) (iš)betonuoti

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > concrete

  • 31 convex

    ['konveks]
    ((of an object or surface) curved outwards, like the surface of the eye: a convex lens.) išgaubtas

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > convex

  • 32 curler

    noun (an object round which hair is rolled to make it curl, fastened in the hair.) plaukų suktukas

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > curler

  • 33 cylinder

    ['silində]
    1) (a solid shape or object with a circular base and top and straight sides.) cilindras
    2) (any of several pieces of machinery of this shape, solid or hollow: The brake cylinder of his car is leaking.) cilindras
    3) (a container in the shape of a cylinder: two cylinders of oxygen.) balionas, cilindras

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > cylinder

  • 34 disc

    [disk]
    1) (a flat, thin, circular object: From the earth, the full moon looks like a silver disc.) diskas, skritulys
    2) (a gramophone/phonograph record or compact disc.) (kompaktinė) plokštelė
    3) (in computing, a disc-shaped file.) diskas

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > disc

  • 35 disk

    [disk]
    1) (a flat, thin, circular object: From the earth, the full moon looks like a silver disc.) diskas, skritulys
    2) (a gramophone/phonograph record or compact disc.) (kompaktinė) plokštelė
    3) (in computing, a disc-shaped file.) diskas

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > disk

  • 36 each other

    (used as the object when an action takes place between two (loosely, more than two) people etc: They wounded each other.) vienas kitą, vienas kitam

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > each other

  • 37 emblem

    ['embləm]
    (an object chosen to represent an idea, a quality, a country etc: The dove is the emblem of peace.) emblema, simbolis, herbas

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > emblem

  • 38 facet

    1) (a side of a many-sided object, especially a cut jewel: the facets of a diamond.) plokštuma
    2) (an aspect or view of a subject: There are several facets to this question.) aspektas

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > facet

  • 39 fetish

    ['fetiʃ]
    1) (an object worshipped, especially because a spirit is supposed to lodge in it.) fetišas
    2) (something which is regarded with too much reverence or given too much attention: It is good to dress well, but there is no need to make a fetish of it.) stabas, dievaitis

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > fetish

  • 40 flying saucer

    (a strange flying object thought possibly to come from another planet.) skraidančioji lėkštė

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > flying saucer

См. также в других словарях:

  • Object — may refer to: Object (philosophy), a thing, being or concept Entity, something that is tangible and within the grasp of the senses As used in object relations theories of psychoanalysis, that to which a subject relates. Object (grammar), a… …   Wikipedia

  • Object — Ob ject ([o^]b j[e^]kt), n. [L. objectus. See {Object}, v. t.] 1. That which is put, or which may be regarded as put, in the way of some of the senses; something visible or tangible and persists for an appreciable time; as, he observed an object… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • object — ob·ject 1 / äb jikt/ n 1: something toward which thought, feeling, or action is directed see also natural object 2: the purpose or goal of something; esp in the civil law of Louisiana: the purpose for which a contract or obligation is formed… …   Law dictionary

  • Object-Z — is an object oriented extension to the Z notation developed at the University of Queensland, Australia. Object Z extends Z by the addition of language constructs resembling the object oriented paradigm, most notably, classes. Other object… …   Wikipedia

  • Object 47 — Studio album by Wire Released July 7th 2008 …   Wikipedia

  • object — object, objective nouns. Both words have the meaning ‘something sought or aimed at’ and in practice they are often interchangeable, although object is more common when followed by a qualifying construction, e.g. one with in or of (and is… …   Modern English usage

  • object — [äb′jikt, äbjekt; ] for v. [ əb jekt′, äbjekt′] n. [ME < ML objectum, something thrown in the way < L objectus, a casting before, that which appears, orig. pp. of objicere < ob (see OB ) + jacere, to throw: see JET1] 1. a thing that can… …   English World dictionary

  • Object — Ob*ject ([o^]b*j[e^]kt ), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Objected}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Objecting}.] [L. objectus, p. p. of objicere, obicere, to throw or put before, to oppose; ob (see {Ob }) + jacere to throw: cf. objecter. See {Jet} a shooting forth.] 1.… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • object# — object n 1 *thing, article Analogous words: *affair, concern, matter, thing: *form, figure, shape, configuration 2 objective, goal, end, aim, design, purpose, *intention, intent Analogous words: * …   New Dictionary of Synonyms

  • Object V — EP by Leaether Strip Released 1991 …   Wikipedia

  • object — the noun [14] and object the verb [15] have diverged considerably over the centuries, but they come from the same ultimate source: Latin obicere. This was a compound verb formed from the prefix ob ‘towards’ and jacere ‘throw’ (source of English… …   The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins

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