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1 quick
kwik 1. adjective1) (done, said, finished etc in a short time: a quick trip into town.) rask, kjapp, hurtig2) (moving, or able to move, with speed: He's a very quick walker; I made a grab at the dog, but it was too quick for me.) rask, fort, snar3) (doing something, able to do something, or done, without delay; prompt; lively: He is always quick to help; a quick answer; He's very quick at arithmetic.) kvikk, kjapp, oppvakt2. adverb(quickly: quick-frozen food.) fort deg!; skynd deg!; rask på!- quickly- quicken
- quickness
- quicklime
- quicksands
- quicksilver
- quick-tempered
- quick-witted
- quick-wittedly
- quick-wittednesshurtig--------rask--------snøggIthe subst. \/kwɪk\/1) negleroten2) ( overført) det ømme punkt3) (de) levende4) levende hekk, levende planteto the quick til negleroten( overført) med hele sin sjel, til fingerspissene, inn i hjerterotenIIadj. \/kwɪk\/1) ( bevegelse) rask, snar, hurtig2) kjapp, rask3) kvikk, rapp, kjapp, oppvakt4) heftig, hissig, oppfarende5) ( om sanser) skarp, fin6) (om sving, kurve) skarp7) (gammeldags, om planter) levende8) ( gammeldags) livlig, kvikka quick mind et lett hodeas quick as a flash rask som lynetbe quick (about it)! skynd deg!, få opp farten!be quick to være rask til (å), ha lett for åbe quick with child (gammeldags, om svangerskap) kjenne livquick at rask iquick of foot lett til beinsquick off the mark rask, på banenquick of thought snartenkt, rask i oppfattelsenquick on the draw ( også overført) rask på avtrekkerenIIIadv. \/kwɪk\/( hverdagslig) fort, rask• come quick!
См. также в других словарях:
Quickness — Quick ness, n. 1. The condition or quality of being quick or living; life. [Obs.] [1913 Webster] Touch it with thy celestial quickness. Herbert. [1913 Webster] 2. Activity; briskness; especially, rapidity of motion; speed; celerity; as, quickness … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
mind — n 1. intellect, intellectual or mental faculty or powers, cognitive function; psyche, ego, subconscious, Psychoanal. the conscious, Metaphys.I, Philos. self; soul, spirit, inner being, inner man, psychic or spiritual being. 2. genius,… … A Note on the Style of the synonym finder
mind — /muynd/, n. 1. (in a human or other conscious being) the element, part, substance, or process that reasons, thinks, feels, wills, perceives, judges, etc.: the processes of the human mind. 2. Psychol. the totality of conscious and unconscious… … Universalium
quickness — Synonyms and related words: ability, abruptness, acuity, acuteness, address, adeptness, adroitness, agility, air speed, airmanship, alacrity, alertness, animation, anxiety, anxiousness, appetite, aptitude, aptness, artfulness, artisanship,… … Moby Thesaurus
speed — speedful, adj. speedfully, adv. speedfulness, n. speedingly, adv. speedingness, n. speedless, adj. /speed/, n., v., sped or speeded, speeding. n. 1. rapidity in moving, going, traveling, proceeding, or performing; swiftness; celerity: the … Universalium
Jerry Fodor — Jerry Alan Fodor Full name Jerry Alan Fodor Born 1935 New York City, New York Era 20th / 21st century philosophy Region … Wikipedia
Plato — For other uses, see Plato (disambiguation) and Platon (disambiguation). Plato (Πλάτων) … Wikipedia
Early life of Plato — Plato (ancient Greek: Polytonic|Πλάτων , Plátōn , wide, broad shouldered ) (c. 428/427 BC ndash;c. 348/347 BC) was an ancient Greek philosopher, the second of the great trio of ancient Greeks ndash;Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle ndash;who between … Wikipedia
fearful — 1 Fearful, apprehensive, afraid are comparable when they mean inspired or moved by fear. In such use they are normally followed by of, that, or lest, afraid being never and fearful and apprehensive infrequently used attributively in this sense.… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
equal to — {adj. phr.} Able to meet, do, or control; able to do something about. * /The situation took quick thinking, but John was equal to it./ * /When a guest upset the coffee pot, Mrs. Smith s tact and quickness of mind were equal to the occasion./ … Dictionary of American idioms
equal to — {adj. phr.} Able to meet, do, or control; able to do something about. * /The situation took quick thinking, but John was equal to it./ * /When a guest upset the coffee pot, Mrs. Smith s tact and quickness of mind were equal to the occasion./ … Dictionary of American idioms