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61 shred
nounFetzen, dernot a shred of evidence — keine Spur eines Beweises
tear a theory/an argument to shreds — eine Theorie/eine Argumentation zerpflücken
our clothes were in shreds — unsere Kleidung war zerfetzt
* * *[ʃred] 1. noun(a long, narrow strip (especially very small) torn or cut off: The lion tore his coat to shreds; a tiny shred of material.) der Fetzen2. verb(to cut or tear into shreds: to shred paper.) zerfetzen- academic.ru/66978/shredder">shredder* * *[ʃred]I. nto leave sb's reputation in \shreds jds Ruf ruinierento be in \shreds zerfetzt seinto tear sb to \shreds ( fig) jdn in Stücke reißenthere isn't a \shred of evidence es gibt nicht den geringsten Beweiswithout a \shred of clothing on splitter[faser]nacktevery \shred of credibility jedes bisschen GlaubwürdigkeitII. vt<- dd->▪ to \shred sth etw zerkleinernto \shred a document ein Dokument vernichten [o shredden]to \shred vegetables Gemüse hacken* * *[ʃred]1. n(= scrap) Fetzen m; (of paper also) Schnipsel m, Schnippel m (inf); (of vegetable, meat) Stückchen nt; (fig) Spur f; (of truth) Fünkchen ntto tear sth to shreds — etw total zerreißen, etw in Stücke reißen; (fig) etw verreißen; argument etw total zerpflücken
to tear sb to shreds (fig) — keinen guten Faden an jdm lassen
2. vt1) food zerkleinern, schnitzeln; (= grate) carrots raspeln; cabbage hobeln; paper zerstückeln, schnitzeln; (in shredder) schreddern; piece of clothing zerkleinern2) (= tear) in kleine Stücke reißen; (with claws) zerfetzen* * *shred [ʃred]A s1. Fetzen m (auch fig), Lappen m:in shreds in Fetzen;a) → B 1 a,b) fig ein Argument etc zerpflücken, -reißen;shreds of clouds Wolkenfetzen2. Schnitzel n/m, Stückchen n3. Spur f, Fünkchen n:not a shred of doubt nicht der leiseste Zweifel;without a shred of pay ohne auch nur einen Pfennig dafür zu bekommenB v/t prät und pperf shredded, shred1. a) zerfetzen, in Fetzen reißenb) in den Reißwolf geben* * *nounFetzen, dertear etc. something to shreds — etwas in Fetzen reißen usw.
tear a theory/an argument to shreds — eine Theorie/eine Argumentation zerpflücken
* * *n.Schnitzel n.Stückchen n. v.fetzen v.zerfetzen v. -
62 tabac
n. m.1. (abbr. bureau de tabac): Tobacconist's. (In France the licence to sell tobacco nearly always goes with that of selling alcoholic drinks, and the Café-Tabac with its distinctive red diamond-shaped sign is part of the typical French scenery.)2. Fumer du tabac de Chine (joc. & iron.): To smoke 'o.p.'s', to cadge 'smokes' from other people. (The jocularity of the expression stems from the pun on Chine with the meaning of 'cadging', not 'China'.)3. Un mauvais tabac. A 'bad business', a bad state of affairs. C'est un mauvais tabac d'être à court de fric le 20 du mois! It's a sorry thing to have run out of housekeeping money after only three weeks!4. 'Rocket', 'roasting', telling-off. Passer un tabac à quelqu'un: To tear a strip off someone.5. Faire tout un tabac: To 'make a song- and-dance about something', to kick up a fuss.6. Passer quelqu'un à tabac: To give someone 'the third degree', to beat someone up. (The passage à tabac is always associated with alleged police brutality.)7. Coup de tabac (Naval slang): 'Spot of rough weather', storm.8. Se donner un tabac terrible: To give oneself no end of trouble, to spare oneself no effort.9. Faire un tabac terrible (th.): To have a rip-roaring success in a stage production.10. C'est du même tabac! It's six of one, half a dozen of the other! — It's much of a muchness! — It's the same thing! -
63 social engineer
1) Общая лексика: прикладной социолог, социальный инженер -
64 сорвать завесу
General subject: rip the trappings (off something - с чего-л.) -
65 plyndre
loot, plunder, raid* * *vb(i krig el. ved gadeoptøjer) loot,( i krig også, F) plunder,( plyndre og ødelægge) sack;( ved røveri) rob ( fx a bank; rob him of his money);( træ) strip;(fig: plyndre for penge) fleece,( om kunde: ved at tage ublu pris) rip off;[ plyndre en for noget] rob somebody of something.
См. также в других словарях:
rip something off — rip (something) off to steal something. Two students ripped off a fund for leukemia patients. I ripped off the idea from an old friend … New idioms dictionary
rip something off — informal steal they have ripped off $6.7 billion ■ copy; plagiarize the film is a shameless collection of ideas ripped off from other movies * * * ˌrip sthˈoff derived (info … Useful english dictionary
rip something off — informal steal or plagiarize something. → rip … English new terms dictionary
rip something off — tv. to steal something. □ They ripped them all off. CD The crooks ripped off the hubcaps of my car … Dictionary of American slang and colloquial expressions
rip sb off — UK US rip sb off Phrasal Verb with rip({{}}/rɪp/ verb [T] ( pp ) INFORMAL ► COMMERCE to make someone pay more for something than it is worth: »Large organizations don t tend to rip people off. »The consumer is definitely being ripped off with… … Financial and business terms
ˌrip sb ˈoff — phrasal verb informal to cheat someone by charging them too much money for something … Dictionary for writing and speaking English
rip off — rip (something) off to steal something. Two students ripped off a fund for leukemia patients. I ripped off the idea from an old friend … New idioms dictionary
rip off — verb deprive somebody of something by deceit The con man beat me out of $50 This salesman ripped us off! we were cheated by their clever sounding scheme They chiseled me out of my money • Syn: ↑cheat, ↑chisel • … Useful english dictionary
rip — rip1 verb (rips, ripping, ripped) 1》 tear or pull forcibly away from something or someone. ↘tear. ↘(rip something up) tear something into small pieces. 2》 move forcefully and rapidly. 3》 (rip into) informal make a vehement verbal attack… … English new terms dictionary
rip — [rɪp] verb ripped PTandPPX ripping PRESPARTX rip somebody → off phrasal verb [transitive] informal to charge someone too much money for something, or sell someone a product that is faulty: • We all hate being ripped off. * * … Financial and business terms
rip — rip1 [ rıp ] verb ** 1. ) transitive to tear something quickly and with a lot of force: Jodie ripped the letter open. Stop pulling my shirt you ll rip it. rip something to shreds (=destroy something completely by tearing it): Her skirt was ripped … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English