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121 chemise
chemise [∫(ə)miz]feminine nouna. [d'homme] shirtb. ( = dossier) folder* * *ʃ(ə)miz1) ( pour hommes) shirt2) ( lingerie) vest GB, undershirt US3) ( en papeterie) folder5) Construction, Bâtiment facing•Phrasal Verbs:••j'y ai laissé ma chemise — (colloq) it broke the bank
je m'en moque comme de ma première chemise — (colloq) I don't give two hoots (colloq) GB ou a hoot (colloq) US
changer d'avis comme de chemise — (colloq) to change one's mind at the drop of a hat
mouiller sa chemise — (colloq) to work hard
* * *ʃ(ə)miz nf1) (= vêtement) shirt2) (= dossier) folderJ'ai classé mes cours dans des chemises de couleurs différentes. — I've sorted my notes into different-coloured folders.
* * *chemise nf1 ( pour hommes) shirt; chemise à manches longues/courtes long-/short-sleeved shirt; une chemise à carreaux a checked shirt; être en bras de chemise to be in one's shirtsleeves;3 ( en papeterie) folder;5 Constr facing.chemise américaine envelope-neck vest; chemise de nuit ( pour femme) nightgown, nightdress GB; ( pour homme) nightshirt; Chemises bleues Hist Blue Shirts; Chemises brunes Hist Brown Shirts; Chemises noires Hist Blackshirts.j'y ai laissé ma chemise○ it broke the bank; je m'en moque comme de ma première chemise○ I don't give two hoots○ GB ou a hoot○ US; changer d'avis comme de chemise○ to change one's mind at the drop of a hat; être (comme) cul et chemise◑ to be inseparable, to be as thick as thieves; mouiller sa chemise○ to work hard.[ʃ(ə)miz] nom féminin1. [vêtement] shirta. [de femme] nightgown, nightdressb. [d'homme] nightshirten (bras ou manches de) chemise in shirt-sleevesje m'en fiche (familier) ou soucie ou moque comme de ma première chemise I couldn't care less about it2. HISTOIRE3. [de carton] folder -
122 manica sf
['manika] manica (-che)1) sleeveessere di manica larga — (prodigo) to be free with one's money, (indulgente) to be easy-going
essere di manica stretta — (tirchio) to be stingy, be tight fam, (rigoroso) to be strict
2) (fig : banda) gang3) Geogla Manica; il Canale della Manica — the (English) Channel
4)manica a vento Aer — wind sock, Naut ventilator
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123 puff
1. noun1) Stoß, der2) (sound of escaping vapour) Zischen, das3) (quantity)puff of smoke — Rauchstoß, der
puff of steam — Dampfwolke, die
4) (pastry) Blätterteigteilchen, das5)2. intransitive verbsomebody runs out of puff — (lit. or fig. coll.) jemandem geht die Puste aus (ugs.)
1) [Blasebalg:] blasenpuff [and blow] — pusten (ugs.) od. schnaufen [und keuchen]
2) (puff cigarette smoke etc.) paffen (ugs.) (at an + Dat.)3) (move with puffing) [Person:] keuchen; [Zug, Lokomotive, Dampfer:] schnaufend fahren3. transitive verb1) (blow) pusten (ugs.), blasen [Rauch]; stäuben [Puder]3) (put out of breath) see academic.ru/58916/puff_out">puff out 1. 2)4) (utter pantingly) keuchenPhrasal Verbs:- puff out- puff up* * *1. noun1) (a small blast of air, wind etc; a gust: A puff of wind moved the branches.) der Hauch2) (any of various kinds of soft, round, light or hollow objects: a powder puff; ( also adjective) puff sleeves.) die Quaste, Puff-...2. verb1) (to blow in small blasts: Stop puffing cigarette smoke into my face!; He puffed at his pipe.) pusten2) (to breathe quickly, after running etc: He was puffing as he climbed the stairs.) schnaufen•- puffed- puffy
- puff pastry
- puff out
- puff up* * *[pʌf]I. na \puff of air/wind ein Luft-/Windstoß ma \puff of dust/smoke eine Staub-/Rauchwolke▪ to be out of \puff außer Puste seinto take \puffs on [or at] a cigar/cigarette an einer Zigarre/Zigarette ziehenII. vi1. (breathe heavily) schnaufenhe was \puffing after his jog nach seinem Dauerlauf war er außer Atem2. (smoke)to \puff at [or on] a cigar/cigarette eine Zigarre/Zigarette paffen famIII. vt1. (smoke)to \puff a cigar/cigarette eine Zigarre/Zigarette paffen▪ to \puff sth etw aufbauschen* * *[pʌf]1. n1) (of breathing, of engine) Schnaufen nt no pl; (of horse) Schnauben nt no pl; (inf = breath) Puste f (inf); (on cigarette etc) Zug m (at, of an +dat)a puff of air/wind — ein Luft-/Windstoß m
to be out of puff ( Brit inf ) — außer Puste sein (inf)
2) (= powder puff) Quaste f3) (COOK)cream puff — Windbeutel m
jam puff — Blätterteigteilchen nt mit Marmelade
2. vtstop puffing smoke in my face — blas mir nicht dauernd den Rauch ins Gesicht
puffed sleeves — Puffärmel pl
3) (COOK)to puff rice — Puffreis m herstellen
3. vi(person, train) schnaufen; (horse) schnauben; (wind) blasen; (chimney, smoke) qualmenthe train puffed into the station — der Zug fuhr schnaufend in den Bahnhof ein
* * *puff [pʌf]A s1. a) kurzer Atemzug, Schnaufer m umgb) Atem m:out of puff außer Atem2. leichter Windstoß, Hauch m3. Zug m (beim Rauchen):have a puff at einen Zug machen an (dat)4. Paffen n (der Pfeife etc)5. leichter Knall7. Schwellung f, Beule f8. a) marktschreierische Anpreisung, aufdringliche Reklameb) lobhudelnde Kritik:puff is part of the trade (Sprichwort) Klappern gehört zum Handwerk;give sb a puff jemanden hochjubeln9. besonders Br sl pej Schwule(r) m (Homosexueller)11. Puderquaste f12. Bausch m, Puffe f (an Kleidern)13. Steppdecke fB v/i1. paffen (at an einer Zigarre etc):puff at one’s pipe auch seine Pfeife paffen2. Rauch ausstoßen3. blasen, pusten4. schnauben, schnaufen, keuchen, pusten:puff and blow keuchen und schnaufen5. (dahin- etc)keuchen:the train puffed out of the station der Zug dampfte aus dem Bahnhofhis face puffed out sein Gesicht wurde aufgedunsenC v/t1. blasen, pusten2. eine Zigarre etc paffen3. (auf)blähen, aufblasen:puffed eyes verschwollene Augen;puffed sleeve Puffärmel mpuffed außer Atem5. übertrieben loben6. marktschreierisch anpreisen7. pudern* * *1. noun1) Stoß, derpuff of breath/wind — Atem-/Windstoß, der
2) (sound of escaping vapour) Zischen, das3) (quantity)puff of smoke — Rauchstoß, der
puff of steam — Dampfwolke, die
4) (pastry) Blätterteigteilchen, das5)2. intransitive verbsomebody runs out of puff — (lit. or fig. coll.) jemandem geht die Puste aus (ugs.)
1) [Blasebalg:] blasenpuff [and blow] — pusten (ugs.) od. schnaufen [und keuchen]
2) (puff cigarette smoke etc.) paffen (ugs.) (at an + Dat.)3) (move with puffing) [Person:] keuchen; [Zug, Lokomotive, Dampfer:] schnaufend fahren3. transitive verb1) (blow) pusten (ugs.), blasen [Rauch]; stäuben [Puder]2) (smoke in puffs) paffen (ugs.)3) (put out of breath) see puff out 1. 2)4) (utter pantingly) keuchenPhrasal Verbs:- puff out- puff up* * *n.Hauch -e m. -
124 shirt
[ʃəːt]nin (one's) shirt sleeves — w samej koszuli, bez marynarki
* * *[ʃə:t](a kind of garment worn on the upper part of the body: a casual shirt; a short-sleeved shirt; She wore black jeans and a white shirt.) koszula -
125 sleeve
[sli:v] nwith short/long \sleeves mit kurzen/langen Ärmeln;to roll up one's \sleeves seine Ärmel hochkrempeln;(fig: for hard work) die Ärmel hochkrempeln2) (for rod, tube) Muffe f, Manschette fPHRASES:to have sth up one's \sleeve etw im Ärmel [o auf Lager] haben -
126 sleeve
[sliːv] 1. сущ.1) рукавto turn / roll up one's sleeves — закатать, засучить рукава; приготовиться к борьбе, к работе
to seize smb. by the sleeve — схватить кого-л. за рукав
2) тех.а) рукавб) втулка, гильза, стаканв) муфтаг) ниппель••2. гл.to laugh in / up one's sleeve — смеяться в кулак, исподтишка; радоваться втихомолку
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127 manica
sf ['manika] manica (-che)1) sleeveessere di manica larga — (prodigo) to be free with one's money, (indulgente) to be easy-going
essere di manica stretta — (tirchio) to be stingy, be tight fam, (rigoroso) to be strict
2) (fig : banda) gang3) Geogla Manica; il Canale della Manica — the (English) Channel
4)manica a vento Aer — wind sock, Naut ventilator
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128 Coat
Very strong and coarse jute or hemp plain weave fabric, which is usually tarred and used on ships. ———————— The garment so called at present was not seen in its original shape previous to the second half of the 17th century, but the word was applied to articles of costume for both sexes both here and on the Continent as early as the 13th century. About this time the " Cote " in France was a close body-garment, over which, as its name implies, the " Surcote " was worn at pleasure, in or out of doors. Henry VIII wore long coats, demi coats, short coats, riding coats, coats with shirts, with loose sleeves and without any-Most of these coats were composed of bright coloured materials, cloth of gold and damask silver, striped with purple velvet, white satin, purple and black velvet. In the reign of Charles II was first seen what in these days would be popularly termed a coat. During the reigns of James II and William III the coat only altered in having sleeves looser, longer, and with heavy cuffs.
См. также в других словарях:
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short-sleeved — adj. having sleeves that do not reach below the elbow a short sleeved silk top … Useful english dictionary
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