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1 scowl
تَقْطيب \ scowl: an angry look. \ قَطَّبَ \ scowl: to look angry: The teacher scowled at the rude boy. \ See Also عبس (عَبَسَ)، كشر (كَشَّرَ) \ كَشَّرَ \ scowl: to look angry: The teacher scowled at the rude boy. -
2 scowl
[skaul]1. verbto wrinkle the brow in displeasure:يَعْبِس، يُقَطِّبُ حاجِبَيْهHe scowled furiously (at her).
2. nounangry expression on the face.عُبوس، تَقْطيبُ الحاجِبَيْن -
3 عبس
عَبَسَ \ frown: to draw the skin into folds above one’s eyes (when annoyed, when thinking deeply, etc.). scowl: to look angry: The teacher scowled at the rude boy. -
4 قطاعي
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5 كشر
كَشَّرَ \ scowl: to look angry: The teacher scowled at the rude boy. \ كَشَّرَ عن أسنَانِهِ \ snarl: (of a dog or other animal), to show its teeth and make an angry noise. -
6 frown
عَبَسَ \ frown: to draw the skin into folds above one’s eyes (when annoyed, when thinking deeply, etc.). scowl: to look angry: The teacher scowled at the rude boy. \ عُبُوس \ frown: an act of frowning. scowl: an angry look. -
7 scowl
عَبَسَ \ frown: to draw the skin into folds above one’s eyes (when annoyed, when thinking deeply, etc.). scowl: to look angry: The teacher scowled at the rude boy. \ عُبُوس \ frown: an act of frowning. scowl: an angry look.
См. также в других словарях:
Scowled — Scowl Scowl (skoul), v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Scowled} (skould); p. pr. & vb. n. {Scowling}.] [Akin to Dan. skule; cf. Icel. skolla to skulk, LG. schulen to hide one s self, D. schuilen, G. schielen to squint, Dan. skele, Sw. skela, AS. sceolh… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
scowled — skaÊŠl n. angry or gloomy facial expression; frown, glower v. contract the forehead in displeasure; frown, glower, have an angry or gloomy facial expression … English contemporary dictionary
scowled — … Useful english dictionary
scowl — [[t]ska͟ʊl[/t]] scowls, scowling, scowled VERB When someone scowls, an angry or hostile expression appears on their face. He scowled, and slammed the door behind him... [V at n] She scowled at the two men as they entered the room. Syn: frown,… … English dictionary
scowl — I UK [skaʊl] / US verb [intransitive] Word forms scowl : present tense I/you/we/they scowl he/she/it scowls present participle scowling past tense scowled past participle scowled to twist your face into an expression that shows you are angry Now… … English dictionary
Scowl — (skoul), v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Scowled} (skould); p. pr. & vb. n. {Scowling}.] [Akin to Dan. skule; cf. Icel. skolla to skulk, LG. schulen to hide one s self, D. schuilen, G. schielen to squint, Dan. skele, Sw. skela, AS. sceolh squinting. Cf.… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Scowling — Scowl Scowl (skoul), v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Scowled} (skould); p. pr. & vb. n. {Scowling}.] [Akin to Dan. skule; cf. Icel. skolla to skulk, LG. schulen to hide one s self, D. schuilen, G. schielen to squint, Dan. skele, Sw. skela, AS. sceolh… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
scowl — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun ADJECTIVE ▪ dark ▪ angry ▪ permanent ▪ slight VERB + SCOWL ▪ wear … Collocations dictionary
scowl — scowl1 [skaul] v [Date: 1300 1400; Origin: Probably from a [i]Scandinavian language] to look at someone in an angry way →↑frown ▪ Patrick scowled, but did as he was told. scowl at ▪ Mum scowled at him and refused to say anything. scowl 2 scowl2 n … Dictionary of contemporary English
Michael Dorn — at the Galileo 7.9 Convention in 2005 in Neuss, Germany Born December 9, 1952 (1952 12 09) (age 58) Luling, Texas, U.S … Wikipedia
Zeugma — (from the Greek word ζεύγμα , meaning yoke ) is a figure of speech describing the joining of two or more parts of a sentence with a single common verb or noun. A zeugma employs both ellipsis, the omission of words which are easily understood, and … Wikipedia