-
141 hook
1. noun1) Haken, der; (Fishing) [Angel]haken, derswallow something hook, line, and sinker — (fig.) etwas blind glauben
get somebody off the hook — (fig. coll.) jemanden herauspauken (ugs.)
that lets me/him off the hook — (fig. coll.) da bin ich/ist er noch einmal davongekommen
by hook or by crook — mit allen Mitteln
2) (telephone cradle) Gabel, die3) (Boxing) Haken, der2. transitive verb1) (grasp) mit Haken/mit einem Haken greifen2) (fasten) mit Haken/mit einem Haken befestigen (to an + Dat.); festhaken [Tor] (to an + Akk.); haken [Bein, Finger] ( over über + Akk., in in + Akk.)3)be hooked [on something/somebody] — (coll.) (addicted harmfully) [von etwas/jemandem] abhängig sein; (addicted harmlessly) [auf etwas/jemanden] stehen (ugs., bes. Jugendspr.); (captivated) [von etwas/jemandem] fasziniert sein
4) (catch) an die Angel bekommen [Fisch]; (fig.) sich (Dat.) angelnPhrasal Verbs:- academic.ru/35521/hook_on">hook on- hook up* * *[huk] 1. noun1) (a small piece of metal shaped like a J fixed at the end of a fishing-line used for catching fish etc: a fish-hook.) der Angelhaken2) (a bent piece of metal etc used for hanging coats, cups etc on, or a smaller one sewn on to a garment, for fastening it: Hang your jacket on that hook behind the door; hooks and eyes.) der Haken3) (in boxing, a kind of punch with the elbow bent: a left hook.) der Haken2. verb1) (to catch (a fish etc) with a hook: He hooked a large salmon.) angeln2) (to fasten or to be fastened by a hook or hooks: He hooked the ladder on (to the branch); This bit hooks on to that bit; Could you hook my dress up down the back?) (fest-, zu)haken3) (in golf, to hit (the ball) far to the left of where it should be (or to the right if one is left-handed).) den Ball mit einem Hook spielen•- hooked- by hook or by crook
- off the hook* * *[hʊk]I. ncoat \hook Kleiderhaken mcrochet \hook Häkelnadel f\hook and eye Haken und Ösefish \hook Angelhaken m3. (in cricket) Schlag beim Cricketto leave the phone off the \hook den Telefonhörer nicht auflegen6.▶ to get one's \hooks into [or on] sb jdn unter Kontrolle habenthis product has really got its \hooks into the American market dieses Produkt hat auf dem amerikanischen Markt wirklich eingeschlagen▶ to be off the \hook aus dem Schneider seinII. vt1. (fish)to \hook a fish einen Fisch an die Angel bekommen2. (fasten)▪ to \hook sth somewhere etw irgendwo befestigenhe \hooked the trailer to his car er hängte den Anhänger an seinem Auto an3. (fetch with hook)▪ to \hook sth out of sth:she \hooked the shoe out of the water sie angelte den Schuh aus dem Wasserthe lifeguard \hooked the troublemaker out of the swimming pool der Rettungsschwimmer fischte den Störenfried aus dem Schwimmbeckento \hook it wegrennen* * *[hʊk]1. n1) Haken m4)(fig uses)
he swallowed the story hook, line and sinker — er hat die Geschichte tatsächlich mit Stumpf und Stiel geschluckt (inf)he fell for it hook, line and sinker — er ging auf den Leim
he fell for her hook, line and sinker — er war ihr mit Haut und Haaren verfallen
to leave the phone off the hook — den Hörer neben das Telefon legen; (unintentionally) nicht auflegen
2. vt1)(= fasten with hook)
he hooked the door back —the old man hooks the rowing boats and pulls them in — der alte Mann zieht die Ruderboote mit einem Haken ans Ufer
2)to hook one's arm/feet around sth — seinen Arm/seine Füße um etw schlingen
the trapeze artist hooks his legs over the bar — der Trapezkünstler hängt sich mit den Beinen an der Stange ein
to be hooked —
the helicopter hooked him out of the water — der Hubschrauber zog or angelte (inf) ihn aus dem Wasser
5)8) (inf= clear off)
to hook it — die Fliege machen (sl)3. vi(dress etc) zugehakt werden* * *hook [hʊk]A s1. Haken m:hang one’s coat on the hook seinen Mantel an den Haken hängen;hook and eye Haken und Öse;by hook or (by) crook unter allen Umständen, mit allen Mitteln;on one’s own hook umg auf eigene Faust2. TECHa) Klammer-, Drehhaken mb) Nase f (am Dachziegel)c) Türangel f, Haspe fget off the hook umg sich aus der Patsche ziehen;get sb off the hook umg jemandem aus der Patsche helfen;have sb on the hook umg jemanden zappeln lassen;fall for sb (sth) hook, line and sinker umg sich rettungslos in jemanden verlieben (voll auf etwas reinfallen);swallow sth hook, line and sinker umg etwas voll und ganz schlucken;sling one’s hook → B 94. MEDa) (Knochen-, Wund- etc) Haken m5. AGR Sichel f6. etwas Hakenförmiges, besondersa) scharfe Krümmungb) gekrümmte Landspitze7. pl sl Griffel pl (Finger):just let me get my hooks on him! wenn ich den in die Finger bekomme!8. MUS Notenfähnchen n9. SPORThook to the body (liver) Körperhaken (Leberhaken)B v/t1. an-, ein-, fest-, zuhaken3. fangen, angeln (auch fig umg):hook a husband sich einen Mann angeln;he is hooked umg er zappelt im Netz, er ist geliefert4. umg klauen5. biegen, krümmen6. auf die Hörner nehmen, aufspießen7. tamburieren, mit Kettenstich besticken8. a) Boxen: jemandem einen Haken versetzenc) Eishockey etc: einen Gegenspieler hakenC v/i1. sich krümmen2. sich (zu)haken lassen3. sich festhaken (to an dat)4. → B 9* * *1. noun1) Haken, der; (Fishing) [Angel]haken, derswallow something hook, line, and sinker — (fig.) etwas blind glauben
get somebody off the hook — (fig. coll.) jemanden herauspauken (ugs.)
that lets me/him off the hook — (fig. coll.) da bin ich/ist er noch einmal davongekommen
2) (telephone cradle) Gabel, die3) (Boxing) Haken, der2. transitive verb1) (grasp) mit Haken/mit einem Haken greifen2) (fasten) mit Haken/mit einem Haken befestigen (to an + Dat.); festhaken [Tor] (to an + Akk.); haken [Bein, Finger] ( over über + Akk., in in + Akk.)3)be hooked [on something/somebody] — (coll.) (addicted harmfully) [von etwas/jemandem] abhängig sein; (addicted harmlessly) [auf etwas/jemanden] stehen (ugs., bes. Jugendspr.); (captivated) [von etwas/jemandem] fasziniert sein
4) (catch) an die Angel bekommen [Fisch]; (fig.) sich (Dat.) angelnPhrasal Verbs:- hook on- hook up* * *n.Aufhänger m.haken v.
См. также в других словарях:
stave off something — stave off (something) to keep something away or keep something from happening. The Federal Reserve lowered interest rates to boost the economy and stave off a recession. Death is natural and inevitable we can t stave it off forever. Related… … New idioms dictionary
write off (something) — 1. to accept that a debt will not be paid. Last year the bank wrote off $17 million in bad loans. I ll probably never see the money I loaned my brother, so I guess I ll write it off. 2. to decide that something will not be successful. For a long… … New idioms dictionary
fight off something — fight off (something) 1. to get rid of something, esp. an illness. Her body couldn t fight the infection off. 2. to keep yourself from doing something you should not do. I was trying to fight off the urge to sneak into the kitchen for something… … New idioms dictionary
rattle off something — rattle off (something) to say something quickly. She rattled something off in French that I didn t understand. Usage notes: often used when someone gives a list of facts or other related information from memory: Walter could rattle off the… … New idioms dictionary
set off (something) — 1. to cause an explosion. The investigation determined that he probably did not set off the blast deliberately. Apparently the bomb was placed in a locker and someone set it off with a cell phone. 2. to cause something to be noticed or make it… … New idioms dictionary
ward off something — ward off (someone/something) to try to keep away someone or something that would hurt you. He raised his arm at the elbow to ward off the blow. They have a “No Trespassing” sign out front to ward off anyone who happens by. She often gets… … New idioms dictionary
blow off something — blow off (something) 1. to get rid of something. The old millionaire blew off one marriage to wed his new partner. Your average worker can t just blow off his credit card debt. 2. to consider something to be unimportant. Some students will simply … New idioms dictionary
head off something — head off (something) to avoid something bad by doing something now. The UN Security Council is hoping to head off further violence. Etymology: based on the literal meaning of head someone or something off (= to stop the movement of people or… … New idioms dictionary
palm off something — palm off (something) to trick or persuade someone to take something. They palmed off cheap wine at high prices by putting it in fancy bottles. She produced fake stamps and palmed them off as genuine. Related vocabulary: fob something off on… … New idioms dictionary
polish off something — polish off (something) to finish something quickly and easily. He polished off two burgers and a mountain of French fries. He was nearly finished with the report, and said he could polish it off in another hour or two. Usage notes: most often… … New idioms dictionary
siphon off something — siphon off (something) to take something that was intended for someone or something else. The dictator and his close friends siphoned off up to 20 percent of the annual budget. The donated food was mostly siphoned off and sold, while the needy… … New idioms dictionary