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on+stomach

  • 1 stomach

    1) (the bag-like organ in the body into which food passes when swallowed, and where most of it is digested.) skrandis
    2) (the part of the body between the chest and thighs; the belly: a pain in the stomach.) pilvas

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > stomach

  • 2 stomach-ache

    noun (a pain in the belly.) pilvo skausmas

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > stomach-ache

  • 3 vomit

    ['vomit] 1. verb
    (to throw out (the contents of the stomach or other matter) through the mouth; to be sick: Whenever the ship started to move she felt like vomiting.) vemti
    2. noun
    (food etc ejected from the stomach.) vėmalai

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > vomit

  • 4 wind

    I 1. [wind] noun
    1) ((an) outdoor current of air: The wind is strong today; There wasn't much wind yesterday; Cold winds blow across the desert.) vėjas
    2) (breath: Climbing these stairs takes all the wind out of me.) kvapas
    3) (air or gas in the stomach or intestines: His stomach pains were due to wind.) dujos
    2. verb
    (to cause to be out of breath: The heavy blow winded him.) užgniaužti kvapą
    3. adjective
    ((of a musical instrument) operated or played using air pressure, especially a person's breath.) pučiamasis
    - windiness
    - windfall
    - windmill
    - windpipe
    - windsurf
    - windsurfer
    - windsurfing
    - windscreen
    - windsock
    - windsurf
    - windsurfer
    - windsurfing
    - windswept
    - get the wind up
    - get wind of
    - get one's second wind
    - in the wind
    - like the wind
    II past tense, past participle - wound; verb
    1) (to wrap round in coils: He wound the rope around his waist and began to climb.) vynioti, sukti
    2) (to make into a ball or coil: to wind wool.) vynioti
    3) ((of a road etc) to twist and turn: The road winds up the mountain.) vingiuoti
    4) (to tighten the spring of (a clock, watch etc) by turning a knob, handle etc: I forgot to wind my watch.) prisukti
    - winding
    - wind up
    - be/get wound up

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > wind

  • 5 ache

    [eik] 1. noun
    (a continuous pain: I have an ache in my stomach.) skausmas
    2. verb
    1) (to be in continuous pain: My tooth aches.) skaudėti
    2) (to have a great desire: I was aching to tell him the news.) trokšti

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > ache

  • 6 alimentary canal

    (the passage for the digestion of food in animals, including the gullet, stomach and intestines.) virškinimo traktas

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > alimentary canal

  • 7 belch

    [bel ] 1. verb
    1) (to give out air noisily from the stomach through the mouth: He belched after eating too much.) atsirūgti, raugėti
    2) ((often with out) (of a chimney etc) to throw (out) violently: factory chimneys belching (out) smoke.) mesti, versti
    2. noun
    (an act of belching.) raugėjimas

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > belch

  • 8 bellyache

    I noun
    (stomach pain.) pilvo skausmas
    II verb
    ((informal) to complain a lot without a good reason; to grumble: Stop bellyaching, we're all doing our share!) zysti, inkšti

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > bellyache

  • 9 bowel

    1) ((usually in plural) the part of the digestive system below the stomach; the intestines: The surgeon removed part of her bowel.) žarnos
    2) ((in plural) the inside of something, especially when deep: the bowels of the earth.) gelmės

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > bowel

  • 10 bug

    1. noun
    1) (an insect that lives in dirty houses and beds: a bedbug.) blakė
    2) (an insect: There's a bug crawling up your arm.) vabalas
    3) (a germ or infection: a stomach bug.) bakterija, infekcija
    4) (a small hidden microphone.) paslėptas mikrofonas
    2. verb
    1) (to place small hidden microphones in (a room etc): The spy's bedroom was bugged.) įrengti paslėptus mikrofonus
    2) (to annoy: What's bugging him?) erzinti, nervinti

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > bug

  • 11 cancer

    ['kænsə]
    1) (a diseased growth in the body, often fatal: The cancer has spread to her stomach.) auglys, piktybinis navikas
    2) (the (often fatal) condition caused by such diseased growth(s): He is dying of cancer.) vėžys

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > cancer

  • 12 chew the cud

    ((of cows etc) to bring food from the stomach back into the mouth and chew it again.) atrajoti

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > chew the cud

  • 13 crop

    [krop] 1. noun
    1) (a plant which is farmed and harvested: a fine crop of rice; We grow a variety of crops, including cabbages, wheat and barley.) derlius, kultūra, pasėlis
    2) (a short whip used when horse-riding.) rimbas
    3) (a (short) haircut: a crop of red hair.) trumpai pakirpti plaukai, ežiukas
    4) ((of certain birds) the first stomach, which hangs like a bag from the neck.) gurklys
    2. verb
    (to cut or nibble short: The sheep crop the grass.) trumpai nukirpti, skabyti

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > crop

  • 14 digest

    1. verb
    1) (to break up (food) in the stomach etc and turn it into a form which the body can use: The invalid had to have food that was easy to digest.) virškinti
    2) (to take in and think over (information etc): It took me some minutes to digest what he had said.) suvokti, suvirškinti
    2. noun
    (summary; brief account: a digest of the week's news.) santrauka
    - digestion
    - digestive

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > digest

  • 15 disgorge

    [dis'ɡo:‹]
    (to bring up (eg from the stomach); to throw out or up: The chimney was disgorging clouds of black smoke.) išmesti, versti, vemti

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > disgorge

  • 16 double up

    1) (to (cause to) bend or collapse suddenly at the waist: We (were) doubled up with laughter; He received a blow in the stomach which doubled him up.) su(si)riesti
    2) (to join up in pairs: There weren't enough desks, so some pupils had to double up.) susėsti ir pan. po du

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > double up

  • 17 drug

    1. noun
    1) (any substance used in medicine: She has been prescribed a new drug for her stomach-pains.) vaistas
    2) (a substance, sometimes one used in medicine, taken by some people to achieve a certain effect, eg great happiness or excitement: I think she takes drugs; He behaves as though he is on drugs.) narkotikas
    2. verb
    (to make to lose consciousness by giving a drug: She drugged him and tied him up.) apsvaiginti narkotikais
    - drug-addict
    - drugstore

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > drug

  • 18 gastric

    ['ɡæstrik]
    (of the stomach: a gastric ulcer.) skrandžio

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > gastric

  • 19 gullet

    (the tube by which food passes from the mouth to the stomach.) stemplė

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > gullet

  • 20 inside

    1. noun
    1) (the inner side, or the part or space within: The inside of this apple is quite rotten.) vidus
    2) (the stomach and bowels: He ate too much and got a pain in his inside(s).) viduriai
    2. adjective
    (being on or in the inside: the inside pages of the newspaper; The inside traffic lane is the one nearest to the kerb.) vidinis
    3. adverb
    1) (to, in, or on, the inside: The door was open and he went inside; She shut the door but left her key inside by mistake.) į vidų, viduje
    2) (in a house or building: You should stay inside in such bad weather.) viduje
    4. preposition
    1) ((sometimes (especially American) with of) within; to or on the inside of: She is inside the house; He went inside the shop.) viduje, į (vidų)
    2) ((sometimes with of) in less than, or within, a certain time: He finished the work inside (of) two days.) (mažiau negu) per

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > inside

См. также в других словарях:

  • Stomach cancer — Stomach or gastric cancer can develop in any part of the stomach and may spread throughout the stomach and to other organs; particularly the esophagus and the small intestine. Stomach cancer causes nearly one million deaths worldwide per… …   Wikipedia

  • Stomach — Stom ach, n. [OE. stomak, F. estomac, L. stomachus, fr. Gr. sto machos stomach, throat, gullet, fr. sto ma a mouth, any outlet or entrance.] 1. (Anat.) An enlargement, or series of enlargements, in the anterior part of the alimentary canal, in… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Stomach pump — Stomach Stom ach, n. [OE. stomak, F. estomac, L. stomachus, fr. Gr. sto machos stomach, throat, gullet, fr. sto ma a mouth, any outlet or entrance.] 1. (Anat.) An enlargement, or series of enlargements, in the anterior part of the alimentary… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Stomach tube — Stomach Stom ach, n. [OE. stomak, F. estomac, L. stomachus, fr. Gr. sto machos stomach, throat, gullet, fr. sto ma a mouth, any outlet or entrance.] 1. (Anat.) An enlargement, or series of enlargements, in the anterior part of the alimentary… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Stomach worm — Stomach Stom ach, n. [OE. stomak, F. estomac, L. stomachus, fr. Gr. sto machos stomach, throat, gullet, fr. sto ma a mouth, any outlet or entrance.] 1. (Anat.) An enlargement, or series of enlargements, in the anterior part of the alimentary… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Stomach oil — is the light oil composed of neutral dietary lipids found in the fore gut or proventriculus of birds in the order Procellariiformes. All albatrosses, procellarids (gadfly petrels and shearwaters) and storm petrels use the oil. The only… …   Wikipedia

  • stomach — c.1300, internal pouch into which food is digested, from O.Fr. estomac, from L. stomachus stomach, throat, also pride, inclination, indignation (which were thought to have their origin in that organ), from Gk. stomachos throat, gullet, esophagus …   Etymology dictionary

  • stomach — ► NOUN 1) the internal organ in which the first part of digestion occurs. 2) the abdominal area of the body; the belly. 3) an appetite or desire for something: they had no stomach for a fight. ► VERB 1) consume (food or drink) without feeling or… …   English terms dictionary

  • stomach crunch — UK US noun [countable] [singular stomach crunch plural stomach crunches] an exercise to make your stomach flatter, done while lying on your back with your knees bent Thesaurus: physical exercise and exerciseshyponym …   Useful english dictionary

  • Stomach — Stom ach, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Stomached}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Stomaching}.] [Cf. L. stomachari, v.t. & i., to be angry or vexed at a thing.] 1. To resent; to remember with anger; to dislike. Shak. [1913 Webster] The lion began to show his teeth,… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • stomach pump — n a suction pump with a flexible tube for removing the contents of the stomach * * * a pump for removing the contents from the stomach …   Medical dictionary

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