Перевод: с английского на литовский

с литовского на английский

run+up+against

  • 1 race

    I 1. [reis] noun
    (a competition to find who or which is the fastest: a horse race.) lenktynės, varžybos
    2. verb
    1) (to (cause to) run in a race: I'm racing my horse on Saturday; The horse is racing against five others.) (leisti) lenktyniauti, dalyvauti varžybose
    2) (to have a competition with (someone) to find out who is the fastest: I'll race you to that tree.) eiti lenktynių su
    3) (to go etc quickly: He raced along the road on his bike.) lėkti, dumti
    - racecourse
    - racehorse
    - racetrack
    - racing-car
    - a race against time
    - the races
    II [reis]
    1) (any one section of mankind, having a particular set of characteristics which make it different from other sections: the Negro race; the white races; ( also adjective) race relations.) rasė
    2) (the fact of belonging to any of these various sections: the problem of race.) rasė
    3) (a group of people who share the same culture, language etc; the Anglo-Saxon race.) rasė
    - racialism
    - racialist
    - the human race
    - of mixed race

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > race

  • 2 grain

    [ɡrein]
    1) (a seed of wheat, oats etc.) grūdas
    2) (corn in general: Grain is ground into flour.) grūdai
    3) (a very small, hard particle: a grain of sand.) grūdelis, kruopelė
    4) (the way in which the lines of fibre run in wood, leather etc.) rievės, skaidulos
    5) (a very small amount: There isn't a grain of truth in that story.) kruopelytė, trupučiukas

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > grain

  • 3 hit

    [hit] 1. present participle - hitting; verb
    1) (to (cause or allow to) come into hard contact with: The ball hit him on the head; He hit his head on/against a low branch; The car hit a lamp-post; He hit me on the head with a bottle; He was hit by a bullet; That boxer can certainly hit hard!) trenkti, suduoti
    2) (to make hard contact with (something), and force or cause it to move in some direction: The batsman hit the ball (over the wall).) smogti
    3) (to cause to suffer: The farmers were badly hit by the lack of rain; Her husband's death hit her hard.) padaryti nuostolių, sukelti skausmą
    4) (to find; to succeed in reaching: His second arrow hit the bull's-eye; Take the path across the fields and you'll hit the road; She used to be a famous soprano but she cannot hit the high notes now.) pataikyti
    2. noun
    1) (the act of hitting: That was a good hit.) smūgis
    2) (a point scored by hitting a target etc: He scored five hits.) pataikymas
    3) (something which is popular or successful: The play/record is a hit; ( also adjective) a hit song.) hitas
    - hit-or-miss
    - hit back
    - hit below the belt
    - hit it off
    - hit on
    - hit out
    - make a hit with

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > hit

  • 4 lap

    I [læp] past tense, past participle - lapped; verb
    1) (to drink by licking with the tongue: The cat lapped milk from a saucer.) lakti
    2) ((of a liquid) to wash or flow (against): Water lapped the side of the boat.) pliaukšėti, tekšenti
    II [læp] noun
    1) (the part from waist to knees of a person who is sitting: The baby was lying in its mother's lap.) sterblė
    2) (one round of a racecourse or other competition track: The runners have completed five laps, with three still to run.) ratas
    - the lap of luxury

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > lap

  • 5 ram

    [ræm] 1. noun
    1) (a male sheep.) avinas
    2) (something heavy, especially a part of a machine, used for ramming.) taranas
    2. verb
    1) ((of ships, cars etc) to run into, and cause damage to: The destroyer rammed the submarine; His car rammed into/against the car in front of it.) taranuoti, trenktis
    2) (to push down, into, on to etc with great force: We rammed the fence-posts into the ground.) įvaryti

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > ram

См. также в других словарях:

  • run up against — To be faced with (a challenge, difficulty, etc) • • • Main Entry: ↑run * * * ˌrun ˈup a ˌgainst [transitive] [present tense I/you/we/they run up against he/s …   Useful english dictionary

  • run up against — (someone/something) to experience difficulty with someone or something. Sometimes you run up against a colleague who just doesn t want you to succeed. I ran up against some regulations that were incredibly stupid …   New idioms dictionary

  • run up against — • run up against • come up against • be up against (smth) encounter They ran up against many problems when they were building the freeway. to be, or arrive, at a position where positive progress or forward movement is, or may be, blocked …   Idioms and examples

  • run up against — ► run up against experience or meet (a difficulty or problem). Main Entry: ↑run …   English terms dictionary

  • run up against — phrasal verb [transitive] Word forms run up against : present tense I/you/we/they run up against he/she/it runs up against present participle running up against past tense ran up against past participle run up against run up against… …   English dictionary

  • run\ up\ against — • (to) be up against • (to) run up against • (to) come up against See: up against •• to be, or arrive, at a position where positive progress or forward movement is, or may be, blocked …   Словарь американских идиом

  • run up against — PHRASAL VERB If you run up against problems, you suddenly begin to experience them. [V P P n] I ran up against the problem of getting taken seriously long before I became a writer... [V P P n] He ran up against a solid wall of opposition when it… …   English dictionary

  • run up against — verb Begin to encounter problems with someone or something. The latest model has run up against the limits of its technical capacity …   Wiktionary

  • run up against — phr verb Run up against is used with these nouns as the object: ↑opposition …   Collocations dictionary

  • run up against someone — run up against (someone/something) to experience difficulty with someone or something. Sometimes you run up against a colleague who just doesn t want you to succeed. I ran up against some regulations that were incredibly stupid …   New idioms dictionary

  • run up against something — run up against (someone/something) to experience difficulty with someone or something. Sometimes you run up against a colleague who just doesn t want you to succeed. I ran up against some regulations that were incredibly stupid …   New idioms dictionary

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