Перевод: с английского на литовский

с литовского на английский

open+up

  • 61 handle

    ['hændl] 1. noun
    (the part of an object by which it may be held or grasped: I've broken the handle off this cup; You've got to turn the handle in order to open the door.) rankena, rankenėlė
    2. verb
    1) (to touch or hold with the hand: Please wash your hands before handling food.) liesti, imti
    2) (to control, manage or deal with: He'll never make a good teacher - he doesn't know how to handle children.) susitvarkyti su
    3) (to buy or sell; to deal in: I'm afraid we do not handle such goods in this shop.) prekiauti
    4) (to treat in a particular way: Never handle animals roughly.) elgtis su
    - handler
    - handlebars

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > handle

  • 62 heart

    1. noun
    1) (the organ which pumps blood through the body: How fast does a person's heart beat?; ( also adjective) heart disease; a heart specialist.) širdis
    2) (the central part: I live in the heart of the city; in the heart of the forest; the heart of a lettuce; Let's get straight to the heart of the matter/problem.) centras, šerdis
    3) (the part of the body where one's feelings, especially of love, conscience etc are imagined to arise: She has a kind heart; You know in your heart that you ought to go; She has no heart (= She is not kind).) širdis
    4) (courage and enthusiasm: The soldiers were beginning to lose heart.) ryžtas
    5) (a symbol supposed to represent the shape of the heart; a white dress with little pink hearts on it; heart-shaped.) širdelė
    6) (one of the playing-cards of the suit hearts, which have red symbols of this shape on them.) čirvas, širdis
    - hearten
    - heartless
    - heartlessly
    - heartlessness
    - hearts
    - hearty
    - heartily
    - heartiness
    - heartache
    - heart attack
    - heartbeat
    - heartbreak
    - heartbroken
    - heartburn
    - heart failure
    - heartfelt
    - heart-to-heart
    2. noun
    (an open and sincere talk, usually in private: After our heart-to-heart I felt more cheerful.) nuoširdus, atviras pokalbis
    - at heart
    - break someone's heart
    - by heart
    - from the bottom of one's heart
    - have a change of heart
    - have a heart!
    - have at heart
    - heart and soul
    - lose heart
    - not have the heart to
    - set one's heart on / have one's heart set on
    - take heart
    - take to heart
    - to one's heart's content
    - with all one's heart

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > heart

  • 63 heart-to-heart

    adjective (open and sincere, usually in private: I'm going to have a heart-to-heart talk with him.) nuoširdus, atviras

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > heart-to-heart

  • 64 hutch

    1) (a box with a wire front in which rabbits are kept.) narvas
    2) ((American) a cupboard with open shelves above for dishes.) indauja

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > hutch

  • 65 in vain

    (with no success: He tried in vain to open the locked door.) veltui

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > in vain

  • 66 inaugurate

    [i'no:ɡjureit]
    1) (to place (a person) in an official position with great ceremony: to inaugurate a president.) inauguruoti, iškilmingai priimti į pareigas
    2) (to make a ceremonial start to: This meeting is to inaugurate our new Social Work scheme.) iškilmingai pradėti
    3) (to open (a building, exhibition etc) formally to the public: The Queen inaugurated the new university buildings.) iškilmingai atidaryti
    - inaugural

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > inaugurate

  • 67 inhibited

    adjective (unable to relax and express one's feelings in an open and natural way.) uþsidaræs

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > inhibited

  • 68 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

  • 69 itself

    1) (used as the object of a verb or preposition when an object, animal etc is the object of an action it performs: The cat looked at itself in the mirror; The cat stretched itself by the fire.) save
    2) (used to emphasize it or the name of an object, animal etc: The house itself is quite small, but the garden is big.) pats
    3) (without help etc: `How did the dog get in?' `Oh, it can open the gate itself.') pats

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > itself

  • 70 kayak

    (an open canoe, especially an Eskimo canoe made of sealskins stretched over a frame.) kajakas

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > kayak

  • 71 kick

    [kik] 1. verb
    1) (to hit or strike out with the foot: The child kicked his brother; He kicked the ball into the next garden; He kicked at the locked door; He kicked open the gate.) (į)spirti
    2) ((of a gun) to jerk or spring back violently when fired.) atšokti atgal
    2. noun
    1) (a blow with the foot: The boy gave him a kick on the ankle; He was injured by a kick from a horse.) spyris
    2) (the springing back of a gun after it has been fired.) atatranka
    3) (a pleasant thrill: She gets a kick out of making people happy.) malonumas
    - kick off
    - kick up

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > kick

  • 72 lance

    1. noun
    (a weapon of former times with a long shaft or handle of wood, a spearhead and often a small flag.) ietis
    2. verb
    (to cut open (a boil etc) with a knife: The doctor lanced the boil on my neck.) prapjauti, atverti

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > lance

  • 73 market-place

    noun (the open space or square in a town in which a market is held.) turgavietė, prekyvietė

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > market-place

  • 74 market-square

    noun (the open space or square in a town in which a market is held.) turgavietė, prekyvietė

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > market-square

  • 75 moor

    I [muə] noun
    (a large stretch of open, unfarmed land with poor soil often covered with heather, coarse grass etc.) viržynė, viržiais apaugusi dykynė
    II [muə] verb
    (to fasten (a ship etc) by a rope, cable or anchor: We moored (the yacht) in the bay.) švartuoti(s), pritvirtinti
    - moorings

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > moor

  • 76 muzzle

    1. noun
    1) (the jaws and nose of an animal such as a dog.) snukis, nasrai
    2) (an arrangement of straps etc round the muzzle of an animal to prevent it from biting.) antsnukis
    3) (the open end of the barrel of a gun etc.) (vamzdžio) žiotys
    2. verb
    (to put a muzzle on (a dog etc).) uždėti antsnukį, priversti tylėti

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > muzzle

  • 77 net

    I 1. [net] noun
    ((any of various devices for catching creatures, eg fish, or for any of a number of other purposes, consisting of) a loose open material made of knotted string, thread, wire etc: a fishing-net; a hair-net; a tennis-net; ( also adjective) a net curtain.) tinklas, tinklelis; tinklinis
    2. verb
    (to catch in a net: They netted several tons of fish.) gaudyti, sugauti (tinklais)
    - netball
    - network

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > net

  • 78 night-club

    noun (a club open at night for drinking, dancing, entertainment etc.) naktinis restoranas

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > night-club

  • 79 no wonder

    (it isn't surprising: No wonder you couldn't open the door - it was locked!) nenuostabu

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > no wonder

  • 80 nutcracker

    noun ((usually in plural) an instrument for cracking nuts open: a pair of nutcrackers.) riešutų spaustukai

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > nutcracker

См. также в других словарях:

  • open — open …   Dictionnaire des rimes

  • open — open …   The Old English to English

  • open — open …   English to the Old English

  • OPEN — Period (OPEN) The period that defines when the trading service is opened. London Stock Exchange Glossary * * * ▪ I. open open 1 [ˈəʊpən ǁ ˈoʊ ] adjective [not before a noun] 1. COMMERCE if a shop, bank, restaurant etc is open, it is allowing… …   Financial and business terms

  • Open — O pen, a. [AS. open; akin to D. open, OS. opan, G. offan, Icel. opinn, Sw. [ o]ppen, Dan. aaben, and perh. to E. up. Cf. {Up}, and {Ope}.] 1. Free of access; not shut up; not closed; affording unobstructed ingress or egress; not impeding or… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • open — [ō′pən] adj. [ME < OE, akin to Ger offen < PGmc * upana: for IE base see UP1] 1. a) in a state which permits access, entrance, or exit; not closed, covered, clogged, or shut [open doors] b) closed, but unlocked [the car is open] 2 …   English World dictionary

  • Open AT OS — is an operating system provided by Wavecom together with its CPUs.It basically provides what some other operating systems do, with the particularity to natively provide GSM related functions such as GSM voice calls or data transfer related APIs…… …   Wikipedia

  • open — [ ɔpɛn ] adj. inv. • 1929; mot angl. « ouvert » ♦ Anglic. 1 ♦ Sport Se dit d une compétition ouverte aux professionnels et aux amateurs. Tournoi open. N. m. Un open de tennis. 2 ♦ Billet open : billet d avion non daté à l achat et utilisable à la …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • Open — may refer to: Contents 1 Philosophy 2 Mathematics 3 Music and media …   Wikipedia

  • open — 1 adj 1: exposed to general view or knowledge: free from concealment an open, notorious, continuous, and adverse use of the property an open and obvious danger ◇ When a defect, hazard, or condition is open such that a reasonable person under the… …   Law dictionary

  • open — ► ADJECTIVE 1) allowing access, passage, or view; not closed, fastened, or restricted. 2) exposed to view or attack; not covered or protected. 3) (open to) vulnerable or subject to. 4) spread out, expanded, or unfolded. 5) officially admitting… …   English terms dictionary

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