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1 skænde
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2 skælde
* scold;[ skælde og smælde] storm and rage, rant and rave,( stadig småskænde) nag;[ skælde én huden fuld, skælde én hæder og ære fra] blow somebody up, curse somebody up and down, give somebody a jolly good telling-off;[ skælde én ud]( bruge skældsord) call somebody names;( irettesætte) scold somebody,T tell (el. tick) somebody off ( fx for being lazy);[ skælde én ud for en tyv] call somebody a thief;[ skælde ud over] grumble about ( fx the food),(T: tvært) grouse about. -
3 korrekse
vb scold, reprimand;( slå ned på ubetydelige fejl) nitpick. -
4 mund
sg - munden, pl - mundeрот м, уста́ мн; мо́рда ж ( у животных)brúge mund — крича́ть, руга́ть(ся)
stóppe munden på én — зажа́ть кому́-л. рот
* * ** * *(en -e) mouth;[ bruge mund] shout ( over for at),( skælde ud) scold;[ holde mund]( holde op med at tale) shut one's mouth,( forholde sig tavs også) keep one's mouth shut;[ hold mund!]T shut up! dry up! belt up!( børnesprog) shut your face![ holde ren mund] keep a secret;F silence somebody,( med magt) gag somebody, muzzle somebody ( fx critics,newspapers);( overdrive) exaggerate, draw the long bow,( love for meget) bite off more than one can chew;[ det er at tage munden for fuld] that is saying too much;(se også II. løbe, segl);[ med præp:][ af hans egen mund] from his own mouth;(se også tygge);[ snakke ham efter munden] echo him, play up to him,( om en der er urimelig) humour him;[ beholde noget for sin egen mund] keep something for oneself;[ sætte glasset for munden] put the glass to one's lips;(se også holde (sig for));[ tage bladet fra munden] speak one's mind;[ han har det mest i munden] his bark is worse than his bite;(fig) watch one's step; tread carefully;[ lægge én ordene i munden] put the words into somebody's mouth;[ tage det ord i sin mund] use that word;[ tale med mad i munden] speak with one's mouth full;[ snakke i munden på hinanden] speak all at once;[ med én mund] with one voice;(se også åben);[ pas på din mund!] mind what you are saying!(fig) contradict oneself;(se også I. brød, næse). -
5 skamme
vb:[ skamme én ud] scold somebody, tell somebody to be ashamed of himself, take somebody to task;[ skamme sig] be ashamed (of oneself);[ du skulle skamme dig! skam dig!] you ought to be ashamed of yourself![ skamme sig for at] be ashamed to ( fx he is ashamed to tell);[ skamme sig over] be ashamed of;[ skamme sig over at] be ashamed that ( fx I am ashamed that you should see this).
См. также в других словарях:
scold — n shrew, vixen, termagant, *virago, amazon scold vb Scold, upbraid, rate, berate, tongue lash, jaw, bawl, chew out, wig, rail, revile, vituperate can all mean to reprove, reproach, or censure angrily, harshly, and more or less abusively. Scold,… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
scold´er — scold «skohld», verb, noun. –v.t. to find fault with; blame with angry words: »His brother scolded him for breaking the baseball bat. –v.i. 1. to find fault; talk angrily: »Don t scold so much. 2. Obsolete. to quarrel noisily; brawl. ╂[< noun] … Useful english dictionary
Scold — Scold, v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Scolded}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Scolding}.] [Akin to D. schelden, G. schelten, OHG. sceltan, Dan. skielde.] To find fault or rail with rude clamor; to brawl; to utter harsh, rude, boisterous rebuke; to chide sharply or… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Scold — Scold, n. 1. One who scolds, or makes a practice of scolding; esp., a rude, clamorous woman; a shrew. [1913 Webster] She is an irksome, brawling scold. Shak. [1913 Webster] 2. A scolding; a brawl. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
scold — [skəuld US skould] v [T] [Date: 1200 1300; Origin: Probably from a Scandinavian language] to angrily criticize someone, especially a child, about something they have done = ↑tell off ▪ Do not scold the puppy, but simply and firmly say no. scold… … Dictionary of contemporary English
scold — scold·er; scold·ing·ly; scold; … English syllables
Scold — Scold, v. t. To chide with rudeness and clamor; to rate; also, to rebuke or reprove with severity. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
scold — [skōld] n. [ME scolde < ON skald, poet (prob. of satirical verses)] a person, esp. a woman, who habitually uses abusive language vt. [ME scolden < the n.] to find fault with angrily; rebuke or chide severely vi. 1. to find fault angrily 2.… … English World dictionary
scold — index castigate, denounce (condemn), disapprove (condemn), fault, inveigh, rebuke, remonstrate … Law dictionary
scold — (n.) mid 12c., person of ribald speech, also person fond of abusive language, from O.N. skald poet (see SKALD (Cf. skald)). The sense evolution may reflect the fact that Germanic poets (like their Celtic counterparts) were famously feared for… … Etymology dictionary
scold — [v] find fault with abuse, admonish, asperse, berate, blame, castigate, cavil, censure, chasten, chide, criticize, denounce, disparage, dress down*, expostulate, give a talking to*, jump on*, keep aft*, lay down the law*, lecture, light into*,… … New thesaurus