-
21 hold one's ground
(to refuse to move back or retreat when attacked: Although many were killed, the soldiers held their ground.) laikytis savo pozicijų -
22 inhospitable
[inhə'spitəbl](not welcoming guests; not friendly towards strangers: She could not refuse to invite them in without seeming inhospitable.) nesvetingas -
23 invitation
[invi'teiʃən]1) (a (written) request to come or go somewhere: Have you received an invitation to their party?; We had to refuse the invitation to the wedding.) (pa)kvietimas2) (the act of inviting: He attended the committee meeting on the invitation of the chairman.) (pa)kvietimas -
24 mutiny
['mju:tini] 1. plural - mutinies; noun((a) refusal to obey one's senior officers in the navy or other armed services: There has been a mutiny on HMS Tigress; The sailors were found guilty of mutiny.) maištas2. verb((of sailors etc) to refuse to obey commands from those in authority: The sailors mutinied because they did not have enough food.) sukelti maištą- mutineer- mutinous -
25 once and for all
(once and finally: Once and for all, I refuse!) visiems laikams -
26 ostracise
(to refuse to accept (someone) in society or a group: His former friends ostracized him because of his rudeness.) atsisakyti priimti į savo tarpą, atstumti -
27 ostracize
(to refuse to accept (someone) in society or a group: His former friends ostracized him because of his rudeness.) atsisakyti priimti į savo tarpą, atstumti -
28 rebuff
-
29 reject
-
30 repulse
1. verb1) (to repel (an enemy).) atremti2) (to refuse to accept eg help from, or be friendly to.) atmesti, atstumti2. noun((an) act of repulsing.) atrėmimas, atstūmimas- repulsive
- repulsively
- repulsiveness -
31 rightly
1) (justly, justifiably; it is right, good or just that (something is the case): He was punished for his stupidity and rightly: Rightly or wrongly she refused to speak to him.) gerai2) (correctly; accurately: They rightly assumed that he would refuse to help.) teisingai, tiksliai -
32 save one's face
(to avoid appearing stupid or wrong: I refuse to accept the reponsibility for that error just to save your face - it's your fault.) gelbėti kieno nors prestižą/reputaciją -
33 stand fast/firm
(to refuse to yield.) laikytis, nepasiduoti -
34 stand out
1) (to be noticeable: She stood out as one of the prettiest girls in the school.) išsiskirti2) (to go on resisting or to refuse to yield: The garrison stood out (against the besieging army) as long as possible.) priešintis -
35 submit
[səb'mit]past tense, past participle - submitted; verb1) (to yield to control or to a particular kind of treatment by another person etc: I refuse to submit to his control; The rebels were ordered to submit.) pasiduoti2) (to offer (a plan, suggestion, proposal, entry etc): Competitors for the painting competition must submit their entries by Friday.) pateikti•- submissive
- submissively
- submissiveness -
36 tip
I 1. [tip] noun(the small or thin end, point or top of something: the tips of my fingers.) galiukas, smaigalys, viršūnė2. verb(to put, or form, a tip on: The spear was tipped with an iron point.) uždėti galiuką, nusmailinti- tipped- tip-top
- be on the tip of one's tongue II 1. [tip] past tense, past participle - tipped; verb1) (to (make something) slant: The boat tipped to one side.) pasvirti, nusverti2) (to empty (something) from a container, or remove (something) from a surface, with this kind of motion: He tipped the water out of the bucket.) išpilti3) (to dump (rubbish): People have been tipping their rubbish in this field.) pilti, versti2. noun(a place where rubbish is thrown: a refuse/rubbish tip.) krūva, sąvartynas- tip overIII 1. [tip] noun(a gift of money given to a waiter etc, for personal service: I gave him a generous tip.) arbatpinigiai2. verb(to give such a gift to.) duoti arbatpinigiųIV [tip] noun(a piece of useful information; a hint: He gave me some good tips on/about gardening.) patarimas, informacija- tip off -
37 turn down
1) (to say `no' to; to refuse: He turned down her offer/request.) atmesti2) (to reduce (the level of light, noise etc) produced by (something): Please turn down (the volume on) the radio - it's far too loud!) pritildyti, sumažinti, susilpninti -
38 ungracious
(rude; impolite: It was rather ungracious of you to refuse his invitation.) nemandagus -
39 withhold
[wið'həuld]past tense, past participle - withheld; verb(to refuse to give: to withhold permission.) neduoti, atsakyti -
40 worthwhile
adjective (deserving attention, time and effort etc: a worthwhile cause; It isn't worthwhile to ask him - he'll only refuse.) vertas, prasmingas
- 1
- 2
См. также в других словарях:
refuse — vb *decline, reject, repudiate, spurn Analogous words: *deny, gainsay: balk, baffle, *frustrate, thwart, foil: debar, *exclude, shut out refuse n Refuse, waste, rubbish, trash, debris, garbage, offal can all mean matter that is regarded as… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
Refuse — Re*fuse (r?*f?z ), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Refused} ( f?zd ); p. pr. & vb. n. {Refusing}.] [F. refuser, either from (assumed) LL. refusare to refuse, v. freq. of L. refundere to pour back, give back, restore (see {Refund} to repay), or. fr. L.… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
refuse — UK US /rɪˈfjuːz/ verb [I or T] ► to say that you will not do or accept something: refuse an offer/request/invitation »The government proposes to cut unemployment benefits to those who refuse job offers. refuse sb sth »The company was forced to… … Financial and business terms
refuse — Ⅰ. refuse [1] ► VERB 1) state that one is unwilling to do something. 2) state that one is unwilling to grant or accept (something offered or requested). 3) (of a horse) decline to jump (a fence or other obstacle). DERIVATIVES refusal noun refuser … English terms dictionary
Refuse — Re*fuse , v. i. To deny compliance; not to comply. [1913 Webster] Too proud to ask, too humble to refuse. Garth. [1913 Webster] If ye refuse . . . ye shall be devoured with the sword. Isa. i. 20. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
refuse — [n] garbage debris, dregs, dross, dump, dust, hogwash*, junk, leavings, litter, muck, offal, rejectamenta*, remains, residue, rubbish, scraps, scum*, sediment, slop*, sweepings, swill, trash, waste, waste matter; concept 260 Ant. assets,… … New thesaurus
Refuse — Ref use (r?f ?s;277), n. [F. refus refusal, also, that which is refused. See {Refuse} to deny.] That which is refused or rejected as useless; waste or worthless matter. [1913 Webster] Syn: Dregs; sediment; scum; recrement; dross. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Refuse — Ref use, a. Refused; rejected; hence; left as unworthy of acceptance; of no value; worthless. [1913 Webster] Everything that was vile and refuse, that they destroyed utterly. 1. Sam. xv. 9. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
refuse — I verb abjure, abnegate, abstain, balk, bar, be obstinate, be unwilling, beg to be excused, cast aside, debar, decline, demur, deny, disaccord with, disallow, disapprove, disavow, disclaim, discountenance, discredit, dismiss, disown, dispense… … Law dictionary
refusé — ● refusé, refusée nom Candidat non admis à un examen. ● refusé, refusée (synonymes) nom Candidat non admis à un examen. Synonymes : ajourné collé (familier) recalé (familier) Contraires … Encyclopédie Universelle
refuse — refuse1 [ri fyo͞oz′] vt. refused, refusing [ME refusen < OFr refuser < LL * refusare < L refusus, pp. of refundere: see REFUND1] 1. to decline to accept; reject 2. a) to decline to do, give, or grant … English World dictionary