Перевод: с английского на исландский

с исландского на английский

pull+into

  • 1 pull

    [pul] 1. verb
    1) (to (try to) move something especially towards oneself usually by using force: He pulled the chair towards the fire; She pulled at the door but couldn't open it; He kept pulling the girls' hair for fun; Help me to pull my boots off; This railway engine can pull twelve carriages.) toga
    2) ((with at or on) in eg smoking, to suck at: He pulled at his cigarette.) sjúga
    3) (to row: He pulled towards the shore.) róa
    4) ((of a driver or vehicle) to steer or move in a certain direction: The car pulled in at the garage; I pulled into the side of the road; The train pulled out of the station; The motorbike pulled out to overtake; He pulled off the road.) beygja (útaf); renna af stað
    2. noun
    1) (an act of pulling: I felt a pull at my sleeve; He took a pull at his beer/pipe.) kippur; teygur; sog
    2) (a pulling or attracting force: magnetic pull; the pull (=attraction) of the sea.) tog-/aðdráttarkraftur
    3) (influence: He thinks he has some pull with the headmaster.) áhrif, ítök
    - pull down
    - pull a face / faces at
    - pull a face / faces
    - pull a gun on
    - pull off
    - pull on
    - pull oneself together
    - pull through
    - pull up
    - pull one's weight
    - pull someone's leg

    English-Icelandic dictionary > pull

  • 2 make/pull a face

    (to twist one's face into a strange expression: She pulled faces at the baby to make it laugh.) gretta sig

    English-Icelandic dictionary > make/pull a face

  • 3 wool

    [wul] 1. noun, adjective
    ((of) the soft hair of sheep and some other animals, often made into yarn etc for knitting or into fabric for making clothes etc: I wear wool in winter; knitting-wool; a wool blanket.) ull
    - woollens
    - woolly
    2. noun
    (a knitted garment.) ullar(nær)föt
    - pull the wool over someone's eyes

    English-Icelandic dictionary > wool

  • 4 blind

    1. adjective
    1) (not able to see: a blind man.) blindur
    2) ((with to) unable to notice: She is blind to his faults.) blindur á/fyrir
    3) (hiding what is beyond: a blind corner.) blind-
    4) (of or for blind people: a blind school.) blindra-
    2. noun
    1) ((often in plural) a screen to prevent light coming through a window etc: The sunlight is too bright - pull down the blinds!) gluggatjald
    2) (something intended to mislead or deceive: He did that as a blind.) yfirskin; blása ryki í augun á, villa
    3. verb
    (to make blind: He was blinded in the war.) blinda
    - blindly
    - blindness
    - blind alley
    - blindfold
    4. verb
    (to put a blindfold on (some person or animal).) binda fyrir augun á
    5. adjective, adverb
    (with the eyes covered by a cloth etc: She came blindfold into the room.) með bundið fyrir augun
    - the blind leading the blind

    English-Icelandic dictionary > blind

  • 5 gather

    ['ɡæðə] 1. verb
    1) (to (cause to) come together in one place: A crowd of people gathered near the accident.) safnast saman
    2) (to learn (from what has been seen, heard etc): I gather you are leaving tomorrow.) álykta
    3) (to collect or get: He gathered strawberries from the garden; to gather information.) tína
    4) (to pull (material) into small folds and stitch together: She gathered the skirt at the waist.) rykkja
    2. noun
    (a fold in material, a piece of clothing etc.) rykking
    - gather round
    - gather together

    English-Icelandic dictionary > gather

  • 6 retract

    [ri'trækt]
    (to pull, or be pulled, into the body etc: A cat can retract its claws; A cat's claws can retract.) draga inn
    - retractable

    English-Icelandic dictionary > retract

  • 7 suck

    1. verb
    1) (to draw liquid etc into the mouth: As soon as they are born, young animals learn to suck (milk from their mothers); She sucked up the lemonade through a straw.) sjúga
    2) (to hold something between the lips or inside the mouth, as though drawing liquid from it: I told him to take the sweet out of his mouth, but he just went on sucking; He sucked the end of his pencil.) sjúga
    3) (to pull or draw in a particular direction with a sucking or similar action: The vacuum cleaner sucked up all the dirt from the carpet; A plant sucks up moisture from the soil.) soga, sjúga
    4) ((American) (slang) to be awful, boring, disgusting etc: Her singing sucks; This job sucks.)
    2. noun
    (an act of sucking: I gave him a suck of my lollipop.) sog; tott
    - suck up to

    English-Icelandic dictionary > suck

  • 8 weightless

    adjective (not affected by the earth's gravity pull: The astronauts became weightless on going into orbit round the earth.) þyngdarlaus

    English-Icelandic dictionary > weightless

См. также в других словарях:

  • pull into — ˌpull ˈinto [transitive] [present tense I/you/we/they pull into he/she/it pulls into present participle pulling into past tense …   Useful english dictionary

  • pull into — phrasal verb [transitive] Word forms pull into : present tense I/you/we/they pull into he/she/it pulls into present participle pulling into past tense pulled into past participle pulled into pull (something) into something if a vehicle or driver… …   English dictionary

  • pull into — phr verb Pull into is used with these nouns as the subject: ↑train Pull into is used with these nouns as the object: ↑kerb, ↑lay by, ↑road …   Collocations dictionary

  • pull into shape — index frame (formulate) Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …   Law dictionary

  • pull into — PHRASAL VERB When a vehicle or driver pulls into a place, the vehicle moves into the place and stops there. [V P n] He pulled into the driveway in front of her garage... [V n P n] She pulled the car into a tight parking space on a side street …   English dictionary

  • ˌpull ˈinto sth — phrasal verb if a vehicle pulls into a place, it stops there The train pulled into Central Station.[/ex] …   Dictionary for writing and speaking English

  • pull into — (Roget s IV) v. Syn. come in, land, make a landing; see arrive 1 …   English dictionary for students

  • pull — pull1 [ pul ] verb *** ▸ 1 move someone/something toward you ▸ 2 remove something attached ▸ 3 move body with force ▸ 4 injure muscle ▸ 5 take gun/knife out ▸ 6 move window cover ▸ 7 make someone want to do something ▸ 8 get votes ▸ 9 suck smoke… …   Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • pull — I UK [pʊl] / US verb Word forms pull : present tense I/you/we/they pull he/she/it pulls present participle pulling past tense pulled past participle pulled *** 1) [intransitive/transitive] to move someone or something towards you using your hands …   English dictionary

  • pull — I n. force 1) gravitational pull influence (colloq.) 2) to use one s pull 3) the pull to + inf. (she had enough pull to avoid paying the fine) II v. 1) to pull hard 2)(AE; colloq.) (d; intr.) to pull for ( to support ) (we were pulling for the… …   Combinatory dictionary

  • pull — [[t]p ʊl[/t]] ♦♦ pulls, pulling, pulled 1) VERB When you pull something, you hold it firmly and use force in order to move it towards you or away from its previous position. [V n with adv] They have pulled out patients teeth unnecessarily... [V n …   English dictionary

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