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121 Brotscheibe
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122 Jammern
I v/iII v/t geh., altm.: es jammert mich zu sehen... it breaks my heart to see...; er jammert mich I feel sorry for him* * *to whine; to yammer; to moan; to wail; to lament* * *jạm|mern ['jamɐn]1. vito wail ( über +acc over); (= sich beklagen auch) to moan, to yammer (inf)nach jdm/etw jammern — to whine or yammer (inf) for sb/sth
2. vt (old)to move to pityer jammert mich — I feel sorry for him, I pity him
* * *1) (to utter sorrowful or complaining cries: The child is wailing over its broken toy.) wail3) (to complain unnecessarily: Stop whining about how difficult this job is!) whine* * *jam·mern[ˈjamɐn]I. vi1. (lamentieren)warum musst du wegen jeder Kleinigkeit immer so \jammern! why do you have to moan about every little thing!lass das J\jammern! stop moaning2. (wimmernd verlangen)▪ nach jdm/etw \jammern to beg [or moan] [or plead] for sb/sth▪ jdn \jammern to distress sbso etwas kann einen wirklich \jammern something like that can be really distressing* * *intransitives Verb1) wailohne zu jammern — without so much as a groan
2) (sich beklagen) moan; grumble3) (verlangen) cry [out]die Kinder jammerten nach einem Stück Brot — the children were crying out for or crying after a piece of bread
* * ** * *intransitives Verb1) wail2) (sich beklagen) moan; grumble3) (verlangen) cry [out]die Kinder jammerten nach einem Stück Brot — the children were crying out for or crying after a piece of bread
* * *v.to lament v.to wail v.to yammer v. -
123 jammern
I v/iII v/t geh., altm.: es jammert mich zu sehen... it breaks my heart to see...; er jammert mich I feel sorry for him* * *to whine; to yammer; to moan; to wail; to lament* * *jạm|mern ['jamɐn]1. vito wail ( über +acc over); (= sich beklagen auch) to moan, to yammer (inf)nach jdm/etw jammern — to whine or yammer (inf) for sb/sth
2. vt (old)to move to pityer jammert mich — I feel sorry for him, I pity him
* * *1) (to utter sorrowful or complaining cries: The child is wailing over its broken toy.) wail3) (to complain unnecessarily: Stop whining about how difficult this job is!) whine* * *jam·mern[ˈjamɐn]I. vi1. (lamentieren)warum musst du wegen jeder Kleinigkeit immer so \jammern! why do you have to moan about every little thing!lass das J\jammern! stop moaning2. (wimmernd verlangen)▪ nach jdm/etw \jammern to beg [or moan] [or plead] for sb/sth▪ jdn \jammern to distress sbso etwas kann einen wirklich \jammern something like that can be really distressing* * *intransitives Verb1) wailohne zu jammern — without so much as a groan
2) (sich beklagen) moan; grumble3) (verlangen) cry [out]die Kinder jammerten nach einem Stück Brot — the children were crying out for or crying after a piece of bread
* * *A. v/ijammern nach der Mutter etc: cry forB. v/t geh, obs:es jammert mich zu sehen … it breaks my heart to see …;er jammert mich I feel sorry for him* * *intransitives Verb1) wail2) (sich beklagen) moan; grumble3) (verlangen) cry [out]die Kinder jammerten nach einem Stück Brot — the children were crying out for or crying after a piece of bread
* * *v.to lament v.to wail v.to yammer v. -
124 Schinkenbrot
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125 tunken
v/t dip; sein Hörnchen in den Kaffee tunken dip one’s croissant in one’s coffee* * *to dunk; to dip; to plunge; to immerse* * *tụn|ken ['tʊŋkn]vtto dip; (= stippen auch) to dunk (inf); jdn to duck* * *tun·ken[ˈtʊŋkən]vt* * ** * *tunken v/t dip;sein Hörnchen in den Kaffee tunken dip one’s croissant in one’s coffee* * * -
126 rebojo
m.piece of bread.* * *SM crust, piece of bread -
127 regojo
m.1 crumb or piece of bread left on the table after meals.2 a puny boy.* * *SM1) (=pan) piece of left-over bread2) * (=persona) tich *, titch * -
128 μυστίλας
μυστί̱λᾱς, μυστίληpiece of bread scooped out as a spoon: fem acc plμυστί̱λᾱς, μυστίληpiece of bread scooped out as a spoon: fem gen sg (doric aeolic)
См. также в других словарях:
BREAD — (Heb. לֶחֶם, leḥem), a baked commodity from a cereal flour. The primary sense of leḥem is food in general (Gen. 37:25; Num. 28:2; I Kings 5:2; etc.). The Ugaritic lḥm has the same general sense and the same particular sense, while the Arabic… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
Bread roll — Bread rolls at a bakery German style bread rolls A … Wikipedia
bread — W3S2 [bred] n [U] [: Old English;] 1.) a type of food made from flour and water that is mixed together and then baked ▪ Would you like some bread with your soup? ▪ the smell of fresh bread ▪ a loaf of bread ▪ Could you cut me a slice of bread… … Dictionary of contemporary English
bread stick — bread stick, a long, slender, cylindrical piece of bread dough baked until dry and crisp … Useful english dictionary
bread — /bred/ noun (U) 1 a common important food made from flour, water, and yeast: Would you like some bread with your soup? | a loaf of bread (=a large piece of bread that you buy and cut into pieces) | a slice of bread (=a thin piece of bread that… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
bread — [OE] The general Germanic word for ‘bread’ in prehistoric times was what we now know as loaf; bread probably originally meant simply ‘(piece of) food’, but as bread was among the commonest foods, the word bread gradually became more specialized,… … The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins
bread — [OE] The general Germanic word for ‘bread’ in prehistoric times was what we now know as loaf; bread probably originally meant simply ‘(piece of) food’, but as bread was among the commonest foods, the word bread gradually became more specialized,… … Word origins
piece — piece1 W1S1 [pi:s] n ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(amount)¦ 2¦(part)¦ 3¦(single item)¦ 4¦(small amount)¦ 5¦(land)¦ 6 fall to pieces 7 go to pieces 8 smash/rip/tear something to pieces 9 pull/rip/tear somebody/something to pieces … Dictionary of contemporary English
piece — noun 1 separate amount; parts of sth ADJECTIVE ▪ big, huge, large, long ▪ little, short, small, tiny ▪ … Collocations dictionary
bread roll — noun A small round piece of bread. Syn: bun, roll … Wiktionary
Bread and salt — is a Slavic welcome greeting ceremony.Known by its local names;* * * * * * * * *Two non Slavic nations also have this tradition: Lithuanians (Baltic) and Romanians (Latin), both of them being culturally and historically close to their Slavic… … Wikipedia