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1 lap
I noun(part of body) Schoß, derlive in the lap of luxury — (fig.) im Überfluss leben
II 1. nounfall into somebody's lap — (fig.) jemandem in den Schoß fallen; see also academic.ru/31573/god">god 1)
(Sport) Runde, die2. transitive verb,on the last lap — (fig. coll.) auf der Zielgeraden (fig.)
- pp-1) (Sport) überrunden2) (cause to overlap) überlappenIII 1. intransitive verb, 2. transitive verb,- pp-1) (drink)lap [up] — [auf]schlappen; [auf]schlecken
Phrasal Verbs:- lap up* * *I [læp] past tense, past participle - lapped; verb1) (to drink by licking with the tongue: The cat lapped milk from a saucer.) auflecken•- lap upII [læp] noun1) (the part from waist to knees of a person who is sitting: The baby was lying in its mother's lap.) der Schoß2) (one round of a racecourse or other competition track: The runners have completed five laps, with three still to run.) die Runde•- lap dog- the lap of luxury* * *[ˌeleɪˈpi:]* * *I [lp]nSchoß min or on her lap — auf dem/ihrem Schoß
his opponent's mistake dropped victory into his lap — durch den Fehler seines Gegners fiel ihm der Sieg in den Schoß
IIit's in the lap of the gods — es liegt im Schoß der Götter
1. nÜberlappung f2. vt(= overlap) überlappen3. visich überlappen IIIvt(= wrap) wickeln IV (SPORT)1. n(= round) Runde f; (fig = stage) Etappe f, Strecke f, Abschnitt mhis time for the first lap —
lap of honour (esp Brit) — Ehrenrunde f
we're on the last lap now (fig) — wir haben es bald geschafft
2. vtüberrunden3. vito lap at 90 mph —
Vhe's lapping at 58 seconds (athlete) — er läuft die Runde in einer Zeit von 58 Sekunden
1. n(= lick) Schlecken nt, Lecken nt; (of waves) Klatschen nt, Schlagen nt, Plätschern nt2. vt1) (= lick) lecken, schlecken2)3. vi(waves, water) plätschern (against an +acc), klatschen (against gegen)* * *lap1 [læp] ssit on sb’s lap;be in the lap of the gods im Schoß der Götter liegen;live in the lap of luxury ein Luxusleben führen, wie die Made im Speck leben umg2. (Kleider- etc) Zipfel mlap2 [læp]A v/t1. wickeln, falten ( beide:about, [a]round um)2. einhüllen, -schlagen, -wickeln ( alle:in in akk):lapped insulation Bandisolierung f3. fig einhüllen, umhüllen:be lapped in luxury von Luxus umgeben sein4. fig hegen, pflegen5. a) sich überlappend legen über (akk)b) Dachziegel etc überlappt anordnen6. hinausragen über (akk)7. Zimmerei: überlappen8. polieren, schleifen9. SPORTa) einen Gegner überrundenb) eine Strecke zurücklegen:B v/i1. sich winden, sich legen ( beide:about, [a]round um)3. sich überlappen4. SPORT die Runde zurücklegen:C s1. (einzelne) Windung, Lage f, Wick(e)lung f (einer Spule etc)2. Überlappung f3. übergreifende Kante, überstehender Teil, besondersa) Vorstoß m4. Überlappungsbreite f oder -länge f5. TECH Polier-, Schleifscheibe f6. TECHa) überwalzte Nahtb) Falte f (Oberflächenfehler)7. SPORT Runde f:lap of hono(u)r Ehrenrunde;a) in der letzten Runde sein,b) fig kurz vor dem Ziel stehen8. Abschnitt m, Etappe f (beide auch fig)lap3 [læp]A v/t2. lecken, schlecken:a) auflecken, -schlecken,she lapped it up es ging ihr runter wie ÖlB v/i plätschern:lap against → A 1C s1. Lecken n, Schlecken n:2. Plätschern n3. umg labb(e)riges Zeug* * *I noun(part of body) Schoß, derlive in the lap of luxury — (fig.) im Überfluss leben
II 1. nounfall into somebody's lap — (fig.) jemandem in den Schoß fallen; see also god 1)
(Sport) Runde, die2. transitive verb,on the last lap — (fig. coll.) auf der Zielgeraden (fig.)
- pp-1) (Sport) überrunden2) (cause to overlap) überlappenIII 1. intransitive verb, 2. transitive verb,- pp-1) (drink)lap [up] — [auf]schlappen; [auf]schlecken
Phrasal Verbs:- lap up* * *n.Schoß ¨-e m. -
2 lap up
transitive verb1) (drink) see academic.ru/41732/lap">lap 2. 1)2) (consume greedily) hinunterschütten* * *(to drink eagerly by lapping: The dog lapped up the water.) auflecken* * *◆ lap upvt▪ to \lap up sth ⇆ upshoppers have been \lap upping up the bargains since Monday seit Montag stürzen sich die Einkäufer auf die Sonderangebotehe \lap upped up the praise er sonnte sich im Lob, das Lob ging ihm runter wie Öl fam* * *vt sep2) praise, compliments, sunshine genießenthe media are lapping up this latest scandal — die Medien haben sich gierig auf diesen neuesten Skandal gestürzt
* * *transitive verb2) (consume greedily) hinunterschütten* * *v.aufschlecken v.schlecken v. -
3 lap ***
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4 lap
[læp]nThe mother had her son on her lap. — Мать держала сына на коленях.
The little boy was sitting on/in his mother's lap. — Мальчик сидел на коленях у матери.
There was a book on his lap. — У него на коленях лежала книга.
Everything is in the lap of gods. — ◊ Все в руках божьих, все дело случая.
- keep smb, smth in one's lapTo be in the lap of the fortune. — ◊ Будущее покажет. /Дело будущего. /Одному богу известно.
- sit in smb's lap
- smth lies in smb's lapUSAGE: -
5 Lap
subs.Use P. and V. γόνατα, τά, lit., knees.Bosom: Ar. and V. κόλπος, ὁ.In a race: Ar. and V. δρόμος, ὁ.More quickly than a horse racer ever covered two laps: V. θᾶσσον... ἢ δρομεύς δισσοὺς διαύλους ἵππιος διήνυσεν (Eur., El. 824).——————v. trans.Of waves lapping the shore: see Wash.Lick up: Ar. and V. λείχειν, ῥοφεῖν (also Xen.), Ar. ἐκλάπτειν, ἀπολάπτειν.Lap over: see Overlap.Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Lap
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6 lap
لَعَقَ \ lap: (of animals) to drink sth. by taking it up with the tongue: The cat lapped up the milk. lick: to pass the tongue over: The cat licked its fur, the act of licking He gave the stamp a lick and stuck it on the letter. \ See Also لحس (لَحَسَ) -
7 lap
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8 lap
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9 lap joint
Iமடிமூட்டுIIதரங்கு இணைப்புஅணை மூட்டுIVமடிப்பிணைப்புVsee: jointVIமேல் படிவு இணைப்புதழுவு இணைப்புதழுவு இணைப்பு -
10 rain-lap
сущ.рекл. противодождевое перекрытие (принцип крепления многолистовых рекламных плакатов, когда нижний обрез верхнего листа накрывает верхний обрез листа, расположенного ниже, что предотвращает затекание воды в стыки при дожде)See: -
11 lapped
past tense, past participle; see lap I* * *past tense, past participle; see lap I -
12 lapped
past tense, past participle; see lap I -
13 lapped
past tense, past participle; see lap I -
14 lapped
past tense, past participle; see lap I -
15 lapped
past tense, past participle; see lap I -
16 lapped
past tense, past participle; see lap I -
17 lapped
past tense, past participle; see lap I -
18 lapped
• limitetty* * *past tense, past participle; see lap I -
19 lapped
past tense, past participle; see lap I -
20 lapped
past tense, past participle; see lap I
См. также в других словарях:
Lap — (l[a^]p), n. [OE. lappe, AS. l[ae]ppa; akin to D. lap patch, piece, G. lappen, OHG. lappa, Dan. lap, Sw. lapp.] 1. The loose part of a coat; the lower part of a garment that plays loosely; a skirt; an apron. Chaucer. [1913 Webster] 2. An edge; a… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Lap joint — Lap Lap (l[a^]p), n. [OE. lappe, AS. l[ae]ppa; akin to D. lap patch, piece, G. lappen, OHG. lappa, Dan. lap, Sw. lapp.] 1. The loose part of a coat; the lower part of a garment that plays loosely; a skirt; an apron. Chaucer. [1913 Webster] 2. An… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Lap weld — Lap Lap (l[a^]p), n. [OE. lappe, AS. l[ae]ppa; akin to D. lap patch, piece, G. lappen, OHG. lappa, Dan. lap, Sw. lapp.] 1. The loose part of a coat; the lower part of a garment that plays loosely; a skirt; an apron. Chaucer. [1913 Webster] 2. An… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Lap — Lap, v. t. [OE. lappen to fold (see {Lap}, n.); cf. also OE. wlappen, perh. another form of wrappen, E, wrap.] 1. To fold; to bend and lay over or on something; as, to lap a piece of cloth. [1913 Webster] 2. To wrap or wind around something.… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
lap up — lap up, v. t. [See {lap}, v. i.] 1. To take up (drink or food) with the tongue; to drink by licking up. [1913 Webster] 2. (fig.) To accept or enjoy enthusiatically and uncritically. [PJC] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
lap dancer — n. a nude or nearly nude exotic dancer who moves about erotically on the lap of a clothed customer * * * See lap dance. * * * … Universalium
lap-dance — See lap dance. * * * … Universalium
lap — I UK [læp] / US noun Word forms lap : singular lap plural laps ** 1) [countable] the top half of your legs above your knees when you sit down on/in someone s lap: The cat settled on Christine s lap. He sat with his hands clasped in his lap. 2)… … English dictionary
lap dance — noun see lap dancing * * * lap dance, v.i. lap dancing. an erotic dance by a stripteaser performed mostly in the lap of a customer. [1990 95] * * * lap dance noun • • • Main Entry: ↑lap * * * lap dance … Useful english dictionary
Lap — This article concerns the area at the top of a person s legs; for other similarly named articles, see Lap (disambiguation). A lap is a surface created between the knee and hips of a bipedal being when it is in a seated position. A lap only exists … Wikipedia
lap of honour — noun a lap by the winning person or team run to celebrate the victory • Syn: ↑victory lap • Hypernyms: ↑lap, ↑circle, ↑circuit * * * lap of honour noun A ceremonial circuit of a field, track or show ring, made by the victor or victors in a… … Useful english dictionary