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21 brandend
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22 kokend
2 [zeer heet] boiling/piping/scalding hot♦voorbeelden:〈 figuurlijk〉 kokend van woede • boiling/seething with anger -
23 горячая вода для ошпаривания
Engineering: scalding hot waterУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > горячая вода для ошпаривания
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24 skoldhed
adj scalding (hot). -
25 chutar
v.1 to kick the ball (lanzar la pelota).2 to work (informal) (funcionar). (peninsular Spanish)esto va que chuta it's going greatcon eso va que chuta that's plenty o more than enough3 to shoot.* * *1 DEPORTE to shoot, kick\ir alguien que chuta familiar to be plenty, be more than enough■ toma 5 euros, ¡y vas que chutas! here, take 5 euros, and that's your lot!* * *verb* * *1. VI1) (Dep) to shoot ( at goal)2)está que chuta — * [persona] he's hopping mad *; [comida] it's scalding hot
3) * (=ir bien) to go well2.See:* * *1.verbo intransitivo (Dep) to shoot2.chutarse v pron (refl) (Esp arg) ( inyectarse) to shoot up (sl)* * *1.verbo intransitivo (Dep) to shoot2.chutarse v pron (refl) (Esp arg) ( inyectarse) to shoot up (sl)* * *chutar [A1 ]viA ( Dep) to shootva que chuta ( Esp fam): dale 6 euros, y con eso va que chuta give him 6 euros and that should be more than enough o that should be plenty■ chutarse* * *
chutar ( conjugate chutar) verbo intransitivo (Dep) to shoot
chutar vi Dep (el balón) to shoot
♦ Locuciones: familiar ¡y va que chuta!, she should think herself lucky!
' chutar' also found in these entries:
English:
boot
- shoot
* * *♦ vi1. [lanzar la pelota] to kick the ball;[a puerta] to shootesto va que chuta it's going great;con eso va que chuta that's more than enough* * *v/i1 DEP shoot2:esto va que chuta fam this is working out fine;y vas que chutas fam and that’s your lot! fam* * *chutar vi: to shoot (in soccer)* * * -
26 skåldhet
subst. scalding (hot) -
27 cehennem gibi
adj. hellish, infernal, scalding hot* * *1. hellish 2. like hell -
28 fokur fokur
adj. scalding hot -
29 hamam gibi
adj. scalding hot -
30 kaynar
adj. scalding hot -
31 þvara
f. pot-stick, stirrer.* * *u, f. a stick with a scraper at the end used to stir up a cauldron; Arnbjörn hélt á þvörunni ok laust með henni til Þorleifs ok kom á hálsinn, en með því at grautrinn var heitr brann Þorleifr á hálsinum, Eb. 198; varat af vöru sleikti um þvöru, Fs. 159 (183), proverbial of burning oneself by licking the scalding hot þvara, cp. Engl. ‘to burn one’s fingers.’ -
32 sieden
vito boil;etw zum S\sieden bringen to bring sth to the boilWENDUNGEN: -
33 kokendheet
1 piping/boiling/scalding hot -
34 zieden
1 boil♦voorbeelden: -
35 ziedend heet
ziedend heetpiping/ 〈 vocht ook〉 scalding hot -
36 Owen, Robert
SUBJECT AREA: Textiles[br]b. 14 May 1771 Newtown, Montgomeryshire, Walesd. 17 November 1858 Newtown, Montgomeryshire, Wales[br]Welsh cotton spinner and social reformer.[br]Robert Owen's father was also called Robert and was a saddler, ironmonger and postmaster of Newtown in Montgomeryshire. Robert, the younger, injured his digestion as a child by drinking some scalding hot "flummery", which affected him for the rest of his life. He developed a passion for reading and through this visited London when he was 10 years old. He started work as a pedlar for someone in Stamford and then went to a haberdasher's shop on old London Bridge in London. Although he found the work there too hard, he stayed in the same type of employment when he moved to Manchester.In Manchester Owen soon set up a partnership for making bonnet frames, employing forty workers, but he sold the business and bought a spinning machine. This led him in 1790 into another partnership, with James M'Connel and John Kennedy in a spinning mill, but he moved once again to become Manager of Peter Drink-water's mill. These were all involved in fine spinning, and Drinkwater employed 500 people in one of the best mills in the city. In spite of his youth, Owen claims in his autobiography (1857) that he mastered the job within six weeks and soon improved the spinning. This mill was one of the first to use Sea Island cotton from the West Indies. To have managed such an enterprise so well Owen must have had both managerial and technical ability. Through his spinning connections Owen visited Glasgow, where he met both David Dale and his daughter Anne Caroline, whom he married in 1799. It was this connection which brought him to Dale's New Lanark mills, which he persuaded Dale to sell to a Manchester consortium for £60,000. Owen took over the management of the mills on 1 January 1800. Although he had tried to carry out social reforms in the manner of working at Manchester, it was at New Lanark that Owen acquired fame for the way in which he improved both working and living conditions for the 1,500-strong workforce. He started by seeing that adequate food and groceries were available in that remote site and then built both the school and the New Institution for the Formation of Character, which opened in January 1816. To the pauper children from the Glasgow and Edinburgh slums he gave a good education, while he tried to help the rest of the workforce through activities at the Institution. The "silent monitors" hanging on the textile machines, showing the performance of their operatives, are famous, and many came to see his social experiments. Owen was soon to buy out his original partners for £84,000.Among his social reforms were his efforts to limit child labour in mills, resulting in the Factory Act of 1819. He attempted to establish an ideal community in the USA, to which he sailed in 1824. He was to return to his village of "Harmony" twice more, but broke his connection in 1828. The following year he finally withdrew from New Lanark, where some of his social reforms had been abandoned.[br]Bibliography1857, The Life of Robert Owen, Written by Himself, London.Further ReadingG.D.H.Cole, 1965, Life of Robert Owen (biography).J.Butt (ed.), 1971, Robert Owen, Prince of Cotton Spinners, Newton Abbot; S.Pollard and J.Salt (eds), 1971, Robert Owen, Prophet of the Poor. Essays in Honour of theTwo-Hundredth Anniversary of His Birth, London (both describe Owen's work at New Lanark).RLH -
37 горещ
hotscaldingtorrid -
38 forró
hot, fervid, scalding, burning, fervent, ebullient -
39 ardiente
adj.1 burning.2 ardent, burning, hot, aflame.* * *► adjetivo1 (encendido) burning, hot, scalding* * *adj.1) ardent, passionate2) burning* * *ADJ1) (=que quema) burning; (=que brilla) [color] blazing; [flor] bright red2) [deseo, interés] burning; [amor] ardent, passionate; [aficionado] passionate; [partidario] fervent, ardent* * ** * *= ardent, burning, fiery [fierier -comp., fieriest -sup.], baking hot, piping hot, red-blooded, torrid.Ex. Significantly, however, Panizzi's rules did not prove as viable as did his ideology, and they were promptly and materially changed and recast by his most ardent admirers and followers.Ex. A choking emotion, partly made up of incredulity and in part a burning resentment filled Drew Pope.Ex. In the end, his crude language and fiery personality limited him to the role of redneck poltergeist.Ex. He slept on a camp bed in the baking hot room between 12-hour shifts and survived on leftovers brought to him by friendly chefs.Ex. The monks then add milk and salt to taste and piping hot Tibetan tea is ready to serve.Ex. What's the ordinary response if you're a red-blooded American consumer? I mean, you scream like hell and run to the store and demand your money back.Ex. He says he wants to have a torrid affair because he's too busy to commit to a proper relationship!.----* capilla ardiente = funeral chapel, chapel of rest.* zarza ardiente, la = burning bush, the.* * ** * *= ardent, burning, fiery [fierier -comp., fieriest -sup.], baking hot, piping hot, red-blooded, torrid.Ex: Significantly, however, Panizzi's rules did not prove as viable as did his ideology, and they were promptly and materially changed and recast by his most ardent admirers and followers.
Ex: A choking emotion, partly made up of incredulity and in part a burning resentment filled Drew Pope.Ex: In the end, his crude language and fiery personality limited him to the role of redneck poltergeist.Ex: He slept on a camp bed in the baking hot room between 12-hour shifts and survived on leftovers brought to him by friendly chefs.Ex: The monks then add milk and salt to taste and piping hot Tibetan tea is ready to serve.Ex: What's the ordinary response if you're a red-blooded American consumer? I mean, you scream like hell and run to the store and demand your money back.Ex: He says he wants to have a torrid affair because he's too busy to commit to a proper relationship!.* capilla ardiente = funeral chapel, chapel of rest.* zarza ardiente, la = burning bush, the.* * *‹defensor/partidario› ardent; ‹deseo› ardent, burning; ‹amante› passionate, ardent ( liter)una ardiente defensa de los derechos humanos an impassioned defense of human rights* * *
ardiente adjetivo ‹ defensor› ardent;
‹ deseo› ardent, burning;
‹ amante› passionate
ardiente adjetivo
1 (encendido, vivo) burning
capilla ardiente, chapel of rest, funeral chapel
2 fig (apasionado, fervoroso) passionate
' ardiente' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
capilla
English:
ardent
- dedicated
- fervent
- fiery
- intense
- red-hot
- state
- burning
- passionate
- spirited
* * *ardiente adj1. [en llamas] burning;[líquido] scalding2. [ferviente] [deseo] burning;[admirador, defensor] ardent;un ardiente discurso a passionate speech* * *adj2 bebida scalding* * *ardiente adj1) : burning2) : ardent, passionate♦ ardientemente adv -
40 Kochen
I v/i1. cook; für die Familie etc.: do the cooking; Speise: be cooking, er kocht gut he’s a good cook; sie kocht zu fett she uses too much fat (in her cooking)2. (sieden) boil; gerade: be boiling; 10 Minuten kochen lassen boil for 10 minutes; kochend heiß boiling hot, scaldingII v/t (Gemüse, Fleisch) cook; im Ggs. zu braten etc.: boil; (Eier, Wasser, Wäsche) boil; (Kaffee, Tee, Suppe) make; ich koche mir Kaffee I’m going to make myself some coffee; das Essen kochen get ( oder cook) the meal; gekocht* * *das Kochencookery; cooking* * *kọ|chen ['kɔxn]1. vi1) (Flüssigkeit, Speise) to boiletw langsam or auf kleiner Flamme kochen lassen — to let sth simmer or to simmer sth ( over a low heat)
der Kühler/das Auto kocht (inf) — the cooling system/car is overheating
er kochte vor Wut (inf) — he was boiling or seething with rage
2) (= Speisen zubereiten) to cook; (= als Koch fungieren) to do the cooking; (= als Koch arbeiten) to work as a cooker kocht gut — he's a good cook, he is good at cooking
er kocht pikant — his cooking is (always) highly seasoned
2. vt1) Flüssigkeit, Teer, Nahrungsmittel, Wäsche to boiletw gar/weich kochen — to cook sth through/until (it is) soft
Eier weich/hart kochen — to soft-boil/hard-boil eggs
3. vi impers (fig)to be boiling4. vrsich gut/schlecht kochen — to cook/not to cook well
* * *1) (to turn rapidly from liquid to vapour when heated: I'm boiling the water; The water's boiling.) boil2) (to cook by boiling in water etc: I've boiled the potatoes.) boil3) (to prepare (food) or become ready by heating: She cooked the chicken; The chicken is cooking in the oven.) cook4) (the art or practice of cooking food: She was taught cookery at school; ( also adjective) cookery classes.) cookery5) (to be very angry whilst trying not to show it: He was fuming (with rage).) fume* * *ko·chen[ˈkɔxn̩]I. vi1. (Speisen zubereiten) to cookdort kocht man sehr scharf/pikant the food there is very hot/spicy2. (brodeln) to boiletw zum K\kochen bringen to bring sth to the boil\kochend heiß boiling hoteine \kochend heiße Suppe a piping hot soup3. (in Aufruhr befinden) to seethevor Wut \kochen to seethe [or boil] with rageII. vt1. (heiß zubereiten)▪ [jdm/sich] etw \kochen to cook [sb/oneself] sthSuppe/Kaffee \kochen to make [some] soup/coffee2. (als Kochwäsche waschen)▪ etw \kochen to boil sth* * *1.transitives Verb1) boil; (zubereiten) cook < meal>; make <purée, jam>Tee kochen/sich (Dat.) einen Tee kochen — make some tea
die Eier hart/weich kochen — hard-/soft-boil the eggs
etwas weich/gar kochen — cook something until it is soft/[properly] done
3) (verflüssigen) heat <tar, glue, etc.>2.intransitives Verb1) (Speisen zubereiten) cook; (das Kochen übernehmen) do the cookinggerne/gut kochen — like cooking/be a good cook
fett/fettarm kochen — use a lot of fat/little fat in cooking
3) (gekocht werden) <meat, vegetables, washing, etc.> be boiled4) (ugs.): (wütend sein)vor Wut/innerlich kochen — be boiling or seething with rage/inwardly
* * *A. v/ier kocht gut he’s a good cook;sie kocht zu fett she uses too much fat (in her cooking)10 Minuten kochen lassen boil for 10 minutes;kochend heiß boiling hot, scalding3.(vor Wut) kochen umg, fig be seething with rage;es kochte in mir I was seething inwardlyB. v/t (Gemüse, Fleisch) cook; im Ggs zu braten etc: boil; (Eier, Wasser, Wäsche) boil; (Kaffee, Tee, Suppe) make;ich koche mir Kaffee I’m going to make myself some coffee;1. cooking, cookery, cuisine2. (Sieden)etwas/figjemanden zum Kochen bringen bring sth to the boil/fig make sb’s blood boil;* * *1.transitives Verb1) boil; (zubereiten) cook < meal>; make <purée, jam>Tee kochen/sich (Dat.) einen Tee kochen — make some tea
die Eier hart/weich kochen — hard-/soft-boil the eggs
etwas weich/gar kochen — cook something until it is soft/[properly] done
3) (verflüssigen) heat <tar, glue, etc.>2.intransitives Verb1) (Speisen zubereiten) cook; (das Kochen übernehmen) do the cookinggerne/gut kochen — like cooking/be a good cook
fett/fettarm kochen — use a lot of fat/little fat in cooking
3) (gekocht werden) <meat, vegetables, washing, etc.> be boiled4) (ugs.): (wütend sein)vor Wut/innerlich kochen — be boiling or seething with rage/inwardly
* * *v.to boil v.to brew v.to cook v.to seethe v.
См. также в других словарях:
scalding hot — … Useful english dictionary
hot — [ hat ] adjective *** ▸ 1 very high in temperature ▸ 2 food: with spices ▸ 3 involving strong emotion ▸ 4 exciting and interesting ▸ 5 very good/skillful/lucky ▸ 6 difficult/dangerous ▸ 7 involving sex ▸ 8 determined to do something ▸ 9 busy ▸ 10 … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
scalding — scald|ing [ˈsko:ldıŋ US ˈsko:l ] adj 1.) also scalding hot extremely hot ▪ a bowl of scalding water ▪ a cup of scalding hot tea 2.) literary scalding tears feel hot on your skin ▪ Scalding tears poured down her face … Dictionary of contemporary English
hot — I UK [hɒt] / US [hɑt] adjective Word forms hot : adjective hot comparative hotter superlative hottest *** Other ways of saying hot: tepid almost cold: used especially of liquids: a mouthful of tepid coffee lukewarm only slightly hot: used… … English dictionary
scalding — scald|ing [ skɔldıŋ ] adjective 1. ) very hot: scalding water/tea/coffee scalding hot: a scalding hot bath 2. ) FORMAL very severe: a scalding attack on the government s policies … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
scalding — [[t]skɔ͟ːldɪŋ[/t]] ADJ Scalding or scalding hot liquids are extremely hot. I tried to sip the tea but it was scalding. ...scalding hot water … English dictionary
scalding — UK [ˈskɔːldɪŋ] / US [ˈskɔldɪŋ] adjective 1) very hot scalding water/tea/coffee scalding hot: a scalding hot bath 2) formal very severe a scalding attack on the government s policies … English dictionary
hot — hot1 W2S1 [hɔt US ha:t] adj comparative hotter superlative hottest ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(high temperature)¦ 2¦(spicy)¦ 3¦(very popular/fashionable)¦ 4¦(good)¦ 5¦(sexy)¦ 6¦(difficult/dangerous)¦ 7 a hot issue/topic etc … Dictionary of contemporary English
hot — 1 adjective hotter, hottest HIGH TEMPERATURE 1 WEATHER/FOOD/LIQUID ETC having a high temperature: It s too hot in here shall I open a window? | a nice hot bath | How hot is the water? | the hottest summer I can remember | hot countries | red hot… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
hot*/*/*/ — [hɒt] adj I 1) very high in temperature Ant: cold Cook the fish under a hot grill for 5 minutes.[/ex] Take your jacket off if you re hot.[/ex] It s going to be hot again today.[/ex] hot countries such as India[/ex] 2) hot food contains a lot of… … Dictionary for writing and speaking English
hot-water ordeal — An ancient form of trial for crime in which the defendant s arms were plunged into scalding hot water … Ballentine's law dictionary