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1 town
1) (a group of houses, shops, schools etc, that is bigger than a village but smaller than a city: I'm going into town to buy a dress; He's in town doing some shopping.) by2) (the people who live in such a group of houses etc: The whole town turned out to greet the heroes.) by(befolkning)3) (towns in general as opposed to the countryside: Do you live in the country or the town?) by•- town hall
- townsfolk
- townspeople
- go to townbysubst. \/taʊn\/1) by2) (by)sentrum3) (i England, ofte) Londonjeg reiser inn til byen (dvs. London) én gang i uken4) by-5) (amer.) (by)kommune, (by)områdearms of a town se ➢ armsbe out of town være bortreistbetween towns mellombysgo (out) on the town ( slang) gjøre byen, gå ut (for å more seg)go to town ( slang) overgå seg selv, legge ned sin sjel lykkes helt, ha hellet med seg, skyte gullfuglen flotte seg, slå stort på gå ut på byen, (gå ut og) more seg, ranglego (up) to town dra (inn) til byenin town i byenleave town reise (bort) fra byen, forlate byenlive on the town være på forsorgen, leve på trygdpaint the town red ( overført) sette byen på ende (ved å feste og more seg)the talk of the town det vanlige samtaleemnet det hele byen snakker omtown and gown ( i universitetsby) folk og studenterthe town of London London by -
2 on
on 1. preposition1) (touching, fixed to, covering etc the upper or outer side of: The book was lying on the table; He was standing on the floor; She wore a hat on her head.) på2) (in or into (a vehicle, train etc): We were sitting on the bus; I got on the wrong bus.) (inn) i, på, oppå3) (at or during a certain day, time etc: on Monday; On his arrival, he went straight to bed.) på, ved, per/pr.4) (about: a book on the theatre.) om5) (in the state or process of: He's on holiday.) på6) (supported by: She was standing on one leg.) på7) (receiving, taking: on drugs; on a diet.) på8) (taking part in: He is on the committee; Which detective is working on this case?) på, i9) (towards: They marched on the town.) mot, til10) (near or beside: a shop on the main road.) ved, på11) (by means of: He played a tune on the violin; I spoke to him on the telephone.) på, i12) (being carried by: The thief had the stolen jewels on him.) på, med13) (when (something is, or has been, done): On investigation, there proved to be no need to panic.) ved, etter14) (followed by: disaster on disaster.) etter2. adverb1) ((especially of something being worn) so as to be touching, fixed to, covering etc the upper or outer side of: She put her hat on.) på2) (used to show a continuing state etc, onwards: She kept on asking questions; They moved on.) (holde) på, videre, etter3) (( also adjective) (of electric light, machines etc) working: The television is on; Turn/Switch the light on.) på, i gang4) (( also adjective) (of films etc) able to be seen: There's a good film on at the cinema this week.) som går på teater/kino5) (( also adjective) in or into a vehicle, train etc: The bus stopped and we got on.) på, om bord3. adjective1) (in progress: The game was on.) i gang2) (not cancelled: Is the party on tonight?) på gang; på trappene•- oncoming- ongoing
- onwards
- onward
- be on to someone
- be on to
- on and on
- on time
- on to / ontooverfor--------påIadj. \/ɒn\/bare i uttrykkon side ( fotball e.l.) ikke offside ( i cricket) den del av banen som ligger bak og til venstre for en (høyrehendt) slagmannIIadv. \/ɒn\/1) på, på seg• shall I help you on with your coat?• keep your hat on!• put the kettle on!2) videre• pass it on!• work onjobbe videre \/ fortsette å jobbe3) frem, fremover4) fore5) igjen6) på (påkoblet e.l.), til (på instrumenttavle e.l.)• is the gas on?vannet er avstengt \/ vannet er ikke på7) avbe neither on nor off vite verken ut eller innbe on være i gang, pågå• is lunch still on?spilles, oppføres, gis, gå• what's on tonight?opptre (på scenen)komme med, følge med, være med• are you on?• I'm on!( hverdagslig) være muligdet går bare ikke \/ det er simpelthen ikke mulig• what's he on about?on and off eller off and on av og på, opp og ned, fra og til av og til, nå og da, med avbrudd, med mellomromon and on uten opphold, i ett, i det uendeligeon to (opp) på, over til, ut på, ned påbe on to someone ( hverdagslig) vite hva noen pønsker på, vite hva noen har fore ( hverdagslig) ha en mistanke til noenIIIprep. \/ɒn\/1) ( i fysisk kontakt med eller støttet av) på, opp på, oppe på, i, over2) ( om geografisk posisjon eller plassering) på, ved, i, mot, over• you should have seen the look on his face!4) ( om emne eller grunnlag) på, av, om, i, ifølge, etter, ut fra5) ( om komité eller instans) i• are you on the jury?6) ( om mål og fokusering) mot, til, over, overfor, hos, for• a curse on him!7) ( om reise eller transportmåte) på, tilnår du er i London, bør du handle på Harrod's8) (om dag eller periode, av og til uten oversettelse på norsk) på, om, under, i, etter, ved, dahan døde (om morgenen) 1. mai• come here on the minute!da jeg kom frem til Hull, drog jeg på handletur9) (om noen som holder på med noe, av og til uten oversettelse på norsk) på, da, vedda han åpnet boksen, så han en firfirsle10) ( om penger eller økonomi) på, av, mot• what's the tax on income in Norway?• you will receive the book on payment of £5du vil motta boken mot betaling av 5£11) ( om besittelse) på• have you got your ID card on you?14) ( om radio eller TV) på15) (om alkohol, narkotika eller medisin, av og til uten oversettelse på norsk) på, av16) (om noe som er betalt av noe\/noen, av og til uten oversettelse på norsk) på• this is on me!• have one on me!17) ( om spesiell anledning) med, i anledning (av)18) ( om sammenligning) i forhold til19) ( ved gjentagelse) på, etterbe on fire brenne, stå i brannbe on something holde på med noe( hverdagslig) begynne på noe, bli med på noefall on somebody\/something kaste seg over noen\/noe, falle om noen\/noeon and after fra og medon or before senestsvar senest 1. maispit on one's hand spytte seg i nevene -
3 skip
skip 1. past tense, past participle - skipped; verb1) (to go along with a hop on each foot in turn: The little girl skipped up the path.) hoppe2) (to jump over a rope that is being turned under the feet and over the head (as a children's game).) hoppe tau3) (to miss out (a meal, part of a book etc): I skipped lunch and went shopping instead; Skip chapter two.) hoppe over2. noun(a hop on one foot in skipping.) hopphopp--------sprettIsubst. \/skɪp\/1) hopp, sprang2) forklaring: det at man hopper over noe når man leser3) ( maling) helligdagsflekk (område eller flekk man utilsiktet hopper over når man maler)4) ( edb) papirkast, sprangIIsubst. \/skɪp\/1) gruvedrift, kullheis, malmheis2) ( bygg) søppelcontainer, transportbeholder3) kjerre, tralleIIIsubst. \/skɪp\/( i curling og bowling) (lag)kaptein, skipIVsubst. \/skɪp\/austr., nedsettende, forkortelse for skippy)forklaring: australier av britisk opprinnelseVverb \/skɪp\/1) ( også overført) hoppe, springe• do you have to skip from one subject to another?2) hoppe tau3) ( hverdagslig) stikke, reise4) ( hverdagslig) stikke av, fordufte5) ( overført) hoppe over (noe)6) hoppe over, springe over7) ikke møte opp, gå glipp av8) kaste smutt9) ( elektronikk) hoppe overskip about hoppe omkringskip a class in school (amer.) hoppe over en klasseskip a school class (amer.) skulke en timeskip over hoppe over, springe overskip through bla gjennom
См. также в других словарях:
out-of-town shopping — Patterns of retailing have been changing in Britain over the last three or four decades. Although convenience stores offering limited ranges of food and domestic products and, particularly, newsagents that also sell tobacco and confectionery… … Encyclopedia of contemporary British culture
List of out-of-town shopping centres in the United Kingdom — There are only about nine out of town enclosed shopping centres in the UK (as opposed to open air retail parks, which do not count as shopping centres in British English) even though they do in American English. Under current policy, no more will … Wikipedia
out-of-town — ˌout of ˈtown adjective [only before a noun] 1. to, from, or in another town: • out of town visitors 2. on the edge of a town: • the trend towards out of town shopping centres * * * out of town UK US /ˌaʊtəvˈtaʊn/ adjective [before noun] ► … Financial and business terms
out-of-town — adj [only before noun] 1.) to, from, or in another town ▪ out of town visitors 2.) BrE on the edge of a town ▪ out of town shopping centres … Dictionary of contemporary English
out-of-town — UK / US adjective [only before noun] built in the countryside outside a town or city, but intended to be used by the people who live in that town or city out of town shopping … English dictionary
ˌout-of-ˈtown — adj in the countryside outside a town or city, but intended to be used by the people who live in that town or city out of town shopping[/ex] … Dictionary for writing and speaking English
out-of-town — 1) ADJ: ADJ n Out of town shops or facilities are situated away from the centre of a town or city. ...shopping at cheaper, out of town supermarkets. 2) ADJ: ADJ n Out of town is used to describe people who do not live in a particular town or city … English dictionary
out-of-town — adj. Out of town is used with these nouns: ↑guest, ↑shopping centre, ↑supermarket … Collocations dictionary
shopping centre — ➔ centre * * * shopping centre UK US UK (US shopping center) noun [C] (US also shopping mall) COMMERCE ► a large building or a group of buildings containing a lot of different stores: »out of town shopping centres … Financial and business terms
Shopping mall — Interior of the Toronto Eaton Centre in Toronto, Ontario, Canada … Wikipedia
Town centre — The town centre is the term used in the United Kingdom, Ireland and mainland Europe to refer to the commercial or geographical centre of a town. In some areas of Canada particularly large, urban areas town centres refer to alternate commercial… … Wikipedia