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1 sack
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2 contrive
1) (to manage (to do something): He contrived to remove the money from her bag.) takast; finna ráð2) (to make in a clever way: He contrived a tent from an old sack.) gera á hugvitssamlegan hátt• -
3 hoist
[hoist] 1. verb1) (to lift (something heavy): he hoisted the sack on to his back; He hoisted the child up on to his shoulders.) hífa, lyfta2) (to raise or lift by means of some apparatus, a rope etc: The cargo was hoisted on to the ship: They hoisted the flag.) hífa, lyfta2. noun1) (an apparatus for lifting usually heavy objects: a luggage hoist.) lyfta, lyftibúnaður, krani2) (a lift or push up: Give me a hoist over this wall, will you!) ÿta á eftir, draga upp
См. также в других словарях:
sack — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun 1 large bag ADJECTIVE ▪ bulging, heavy ▪ bulging sacks of toys ▪ burlap (AmE), gunny (AmE), hessian (esp. BrE) … Collocations dictionary
sack out — verb prepare for sleep I usually turn in at midnight He goes to bed at the crack of dawn • Syn: ↑go to bed, ↑turn in, ↑bed, ↑crawl in, ↑kip down, ↑hit the hay, ↑ … Useful english dictionary
sack — Ⅰ. sack [1] ► NOUN 1) a large bag made of a material such as hessian or thick paper, used for storing and carrying goods. 2) (the sack) informal dismissal from employment. 3) (the sack) informal bed. ► VERB informal … English terms dictionary
Sack — Sack: Das altgerm. Substantiv mhd., ahd. sac, got. sakkus (»Trauer , Bußgewand aus grobem Stoff«), niederl. zak, aengl. sacc > engl. sack (daneben aengl. sæcc, das die nord. Sippe von entsprechend schwed. säck lieferte) beruht auf einer sehr… … Das Herkunftswörterbuch
Sack — Sm std. (8. Jh.), mhd. sac m./n., ahd. sac, as. sakk Entlehnung. Wie gt. sakkus, ae. sacc früh entlehnt aus l. saccus, das über gr. sákkos auf assyr. šak̇k̇u Sack, Büßergewand zurückgeht. Auf eine Nebenform mit j führen anord. sekkr, ae. sæcc.… … Etymologisches Wörterbuch der deutschen sprache
sack up — verb make as a net profit The company cleared $1 million • Syn: ↑net, ↑sack, ↑clear • Hypernyms: ↑profit, ↑gain, ↑benefit • Verb … Useful english dictionary
sack — index depredation, despoil, devastate, foray, harry (plunder), havoc, hold up (rob) … Law dictionary
sack out — verb To fall asleep, usually from implied exhaustion. The kids sacked out in the back seat before we made it home … Wiktionary
sack (something) off — Verb. To put an end to something. E.g. I sacked the relationship off at the end of last year. She was sleeping around and spending all my money … English slang and colloquialisms
sack (something) off — Verb. To put an end to something. E.g. I sacked the relationship off at the end of last year. She was sleeping around and spending all my money … English slang and colloquialisms
sack-it — Verb. Stop it, put an end to something … English slang and colloquialisms