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81 farmyard
noun (the open area surrounded by the farm buildings: There were several hens loose in the farmyard; ( also adjective) farmyard animals.) sodybos kiemas -
82 fat
[fæt] 1. noun1) (an oily substance made by the bodies of animals and by some plants: This meat has got a lot of fat on it.) riebalai2) (a kind of such substance, used especially for cooking: There are several good cooking fats on the market.) riebalai2. adjective1) (having a lot of fat on one's body; large, heavy and round in shape: He was a very fat child.) riebus, storas2) (large or abundant: Her business made a fat profit; A fat lot of good that is! (= That is no good at all)) didžiulis•- fatness- fatten
- fatty
- fattiness
- fat-head -
83 figure of speech
(one of several devices (eg metaphor, simile) for using words not with their ordinary meanings but to make a striking effect.) stilistinė priemonė -
84 fill in
1) (to add or put in (whatever is needed to make something complete): to fill in the details.) užpildyti2) (to complete (forms, application etc) by putting in the information required: Have you filled in your tax form yet?) užpildyti3) (to give (someone) all the necessary information: I've been away - can you fill me in on what has happened?) informuoti, supažindinti4) (to occupy (time): She had several cups of coffee at the cafeteria to fill in the time until the train left.) užimti5) (to do another person's job temporarily: I'm filling in for her secretary.) pavaduoti, pakeisti -
85 finch
[fin ](one of several kinds of small bird: a greenfinch.) kikilis -
86 fire
1. noun1) (anything that is burning, whether accidentally or not: a warm fire in the kitchen; Several houses were destroyed in a fire.) ugnis, gaisras2) (an apparatus for heating: a gas fire; an electric fire.) reflektorius, krosnis, židinys3) (the heat and light produced by burning: Fire is one of man's greatest benefits.) ugnis4) (enthusiasm: with fire in his heart.) užsidegimas, liepsna5) (attack by gunfire: The soldiers were under fire.) ugnis, šaudymas2. verb1) ((of china, pottery etc) to heat in an oven, or kiln, in order to harden and strengthen: The ceramic pots must be fired.) išdegti2) (to make (someone) enthusiastic; to inspire: The story fired his imagination.) uždegti, sužadinti3) (to operate (a gun etc) by discharging a bullet etc from it: He fired his revolver three times.) (iš)šauti iš4) (to send out or discharge (a bullet etc) from a gun etc: He fired three bullets at the target.) iššauti5) ((often with at or on) to aim and operate a gun at; to shoot at: They suddenly fired on us; She fired at the target.) šauti6) (to send away someone from his/her job; to dismiss: He was fired from his last job for being late.) išmesti (iš darbo)•- firearm
- fire-brigade
- fire-cracker
- fire-engine
- fire-escape
- fire-extinguisher
- fire-guard
- fireman
- fireplace
- fireproof
- fireside
- fire-station
- firewood
- firework
- firing-squad
- catch fire
- on fire
- open fire
- play with fire
- set fire to something / set something on fire
- set fire to / set something on fire
- set fire to something / set on fire
- set fire to / set on fire
- under fire -
87 fluoride
(any of several substances containing fluorine, especially one which helps to prevent tooth decay.) floridas- fluorine -
88 for example
(often abbreviated to eg [i:'‹i:]) (for instance; as an example: Several European countries have no sea-coast - for example, Switzerland and Austria.) pavyzdžiui -
89 franc
[fræŋk](the standard unit of currency in France, Belgium, Switzerland and several other countries, eg in some parts of Africa where French is spoken.) frankas -
90 fungus
plurals - fungi; noun(any of several kinds of soft spongy plants without any leaves or green part: A mushroom is one type of fungus; That tree has a fungus growing on it.) grybas -
91 generic
[‹ə'nerik]((of a name, term etc) referring to several similar objects etc: `Furniture' is a generic term for chairs, tables etc.) bendras, apibendrinantis -
92 give out
1) (to give, usually to several people: The headmaster's wife gave out the school prizes.) išdalinti2) (to come to an end: My patience gave out.) baigtis, išsisemti3) (to produce: The fire gave out a lot of heat.) skleisti, duoti -
93 grade
[ɡreid] 1. noun1) (one level in a scale of qualities, sizes etc: several grades of sandpaper; a high-grade ore.) rūšis, kokybė, numeris2) ((American) (the pupils in) a class or year at school: We're in the fifth grade now.) klasė3) (a mark for, or level in, an examination etc: He always got good grades at school.) pažymys4) ((especially American) the slope of a railway etc; gradient.) nuolydis, gradientas2. verb1) (to sort into grades: to grade eggs.) rūšiuoti2) (to move through different stages: Red grades into purple as blue is added.) laipsniškai pereiti•- grader
- grade school
- make the grade -
94 grand total
(the final total; the total of several smaller totals.) bendroji suma -
95 grandiose
['ɡrændiəus](impressive to an excessive or foolish degree: He produced several grandiose schemes for a holiday resort but no resort was ever built.) grandiozinis -
96 gross
[ɡrəus] 1. adjective1) (very bad: gross errors/indecency.) grubus2) (vulgar: gross behaviour/language.) grubus, nepadorus3) (too fat: a large, gross woman.) apkūnus, nutukęs4) (total: The gross weight of a parcel is the total weight of the contents, the box, the wrapping etc.) bendras, bruto2. noun(the total amount (of several things added together).) bendras kiekis- grossly -
97 hand out
(to give to several people; to distribute: The teacher handed out books to all the pupils; They were handing out leaflets in the street.) (iš)dalinti -
98 helper
noun We need several helpers for this job.) padėjėjas, pagalbininkas -
99 hire-purchase
noun ((also abbreviated to HP [ei 'pi:]) a way of buying an article by paying the price in several weekly or monthly parts: I got this television on hire-purchase; ( also adjective) a hire-purchase agreement.) pirkimas išsimokėtinai -
100 hundred
1. noun1) ((plural hundred) the number 100: Ten times ten is a hundred; more than one/a hundred; There must be at least six hundred of them here.) šimtas2) (the figure 100.) šimtas3) (the age of 100: She's over a hundred; a man of a hundred.) šimtas metų4) ((plural hundred) a hundred pounds or dollars: I lost several hundred at the casino last night.) šimtas, šimtinė2. adjective1) (100 in number: six hundred people; a few hundred pounds.) šimtas2) (aged 100: He is a hundred today.) šimto metų•- hundred-- hundredfold
- hundredth
- hundreds of
См. также в других словарях:
several — sev·er·al adj [Anglo French, from Medieval Latin separalis, from Latin separ separate] 1 a: of or relating separately to each individual involved; specif: enforceable separately against each party each promisor owed a several duty see also… … Law dictionary
Several — Sev er*al, a. [OF., fr. LL. separalis, fr. L. separ separate, different. See {Sever}, {Separate}.] 1. Separate; distinct; particular; single. [1913 Webster] Each several ship a victory did gain. Dryden. [1913 Webster] Each might his several… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Several — Sev er*al, n. 1. Each particular taken singly; an item; a detail; an individual. [Obs.] [1913 Webster] There was not time enough to hear . . . The severals. Shak. [1913 Webster] 2. Persons oe objects, more than two, but not very many. [1913… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
several — is an adjective and pronoun. As an adjective, it is only used with plural countable nouns (several people but not several furniture) and is more positive in implication than a few. However, unlike a few, several cannot be qualified by an adverb… … Modern English usage
several — [sev′ər əl, sev′rəl] adj. [ME < Anglo Fr < ML separalis < L separ, separate, back form. < separare: see SEPARATE] 1. existing apart; separate; distinct; individual 2. different; respective [parted and went their several ways] 3. more… … English World dictionary
Several — Sev er*al, adv. By itself; severally. [Obs.] [1913 Webster] Every kind of thing is laid up several in barns or storehoudses. Robynson (More s Utopia). [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
several — early 15c., existing apart, from Anglo Fr. several, from M.Fr. seperalis separate, from L. separe (ablative of *separ distinct ), back formation from separare to separate (see SEPARATE (Cf. separate)). Meaning various, diverse, different is… … Etymology dictionary
several — 1 *distinct, separate, discrete Analogous words: individual, particular, *special, especial 2 *many, sundry, various, divers, numerous, multifarious Analogous words: *single, separate, particular: detached, disengaged (see … New Dictionary of Synonyms
several — [adj] assorted, various a few, a lot, any, certain, considerable, definite, different, disparate, distinct, divers, diverse, handful, hardly any, indefinite, individual, infrequent, manifold, many, not many, numerous, only a few, particular,… … New thesaurus
several — ► DETERMINER & PRONOUN ▪ more than two but not many. ► ADJECTIVE ▪ separate or respective. DERIVATIVES severally adverb. ORIGIN Old French, from Latin separ separate, different … English terms dictionary
several — sev|er|al [ sev(ə)rəl ] function word, quantifier *** Several can be used in the following ways: as a determiner (followed by a plural noun): Several buildings were damaged by the explosion. as a pronoun: If you want to see Edward s paintings,… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English