Перевод: с английского на греческий

с греческого на английский

shot+of

  • 1 Shot

    subs.
    Mark aimed at: P. and V. σκοπός, ὁ.
    Range of a missile P. and V. βολή, ἡ, P. φορά, ἡ; see Range.
    Within bowshot: P. and V. ἐντὸς τοξεύματος.
    Out of bowshot: P. and V. ἔξω τοξεύματος.
    Take without firing a shot: use P. αὐτοβοεὶ αἱρεῖν (acc.).
    ——————
    adj.
    Variegated: P. and V. ποικλος; see Variegated.

    Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Shot

  • 2 shot

    [ʃot]
    past tense, past participle; = shoot

    English-Greek dictionary > shot

  • 3 shot

    1) πυροβόλησα
    2) πυροβολισμός
    3) πυροβολώ
    4) σκάγια

    English-Greek new dictionary > shot

  • 4 pot-shot

    noun (an easy or casual shot that doesn't need careful aim: He took a pot-shot at a bird on the fence.) βολή στα τυφλά

    English-Greek dictionary > pot-shot

  • 5 a shot in the dark

    (a guess based on little or no information: The detective admitted that his decision to check the factory had just been a shot in the dark.) τολμηρή εικασία

    English-Greek dictionary > a shot in the dark

  • 6 like a shot

    (very quickly; eagerly: He accepted my invitation like a shot.) στο άψε-σβήσε,χωρίς δισταγμό

    English-Greek dictionary > like a shot

  • 7 shoot

    [ʃu:t] 1. past tense, past participle - shot; verb
    1) ((often with at) to send or fire (bullets, arrows etc) from a gun, bow etc: The enemy were shooting at us; He shot an arrow through the air.) βάλλω,ρίχνω,πυροβολώ
    2) (to hit or kill with a bullet, arrow etc: He went out to shoot pigeons; He was sentenced to be shot at dawn.) χτυπώ (με όπλο),σκοτώνω,κυνηγώ
    3) (to direct swiftly and suddenly: She shot them an angry glance.) ρίχνω
    4) (to move swiftly: He shot out of the room; The pain shot up his leg; The force of the explosion shot him across the room.) εκσφενδονίζω,πετώ,πετάγομαι
    5) (to take (usually moving) photographs (for a film): That film was shot in Spain; We will start shooting next week.) γυρίζω(ταινία)
    6) (to kick or hit at a goal in order to try to score.) σουτάρω
    7) (to kill (game birds etc) for sport.) κυνηγώ
    2. noun
    (a new growth on a plant: The deer were eating the young shoots on the trees.) βλαστάρι
    - shoot down
    - shoot rapids
    - shoot up

    English-Greek dictionary > shoot

  • 8 Shoot

    v. trans.
    Discharge: P. and V. φιέναι, μεθιέναι (rare P.), βάλλειν, ῥίπτειν, Ar. and V. ἱέναι, V. ἰάπτειν,
    Hit with a missile: P. and V. βάλλειν, κοντίζειν.
    Hit with an arrow: P. and V. τοξεύειν.
    Shoot down ( with a javelin): P. κατακοντίζειν; ( with an arrow): Ar. and P. κατατοξεύειν.
    absol., shoot with the bow: P. and V. τοξεύειν; with the javelin: P. and V. κοντίζειν, V. ἐξακοντίζειν (Eur., Supp. 456, in met. sense).
    Your wisdom has shot its mind's bolt: καί σου τὸ σῶφρον ἐξετόξευσεν φρενός (Eur., And. 365).
    Shot by an arrow: V. τοξευτός.
    Shoot at, aim at: P. and V. στοχάζεσθαι (gen.).
    With an arrow: P. and V. τοξεύειν (P. εἰς, acc., V. acc. alone or gen.).
    Shoot out: Ar. and V. προβάλλειν.
    met., of words: see Utter.
    Shoot up: P. and V. νιέναι, ναδιδόναι (Eur., frag.); see emit; v. intrans. dart: P. and V. ὁρμᾶν, ὁρμᾶσθαι, εσθαι (rare P.), φέρεσθαι, Ar. and V. ᾄσσειν (rare P.), V. ἀΐσσειν; see Rush.
    Of a star: V. ᾄσσειν (Plat., Rep. 621B), Ar. θεῖν (Pax. 839); see Shooting.
    Bud: P. and V. βλαστνειν (rare P.), P. ἐκβλαστάνειν (Plat.).
    Shoot ahead: P. προτρέχειν, P. and V. φθνειν.
    Shoot down, swoop down, v. intrans.: P. and V. κατασκήπτειν (rare P.); see Swoop.
    Shoot out, dart out: P. and V. ἐξορμᾶσθαι.
    Jut out: P. and V. προὔχειν.
    Shoot through: Ar. and V. διᾴσσειν (gen.) (Soph., Trach. 1083, Ar. absol.).
    Shoot up, grow: P. and V. βλαστνειν (rare P.), P. ἐκβλαστάνειν (Plat.), ἀναφύεσθαι (Plat.).
    ——————
    subs.
    P. and V. πτόρθος, ὁ (Plat.), βλάστη, ἡ (Plat.), βλάστημα, τό (Isoc.), V. ἔρνος, τό (Eur., Med. 1213), P. φυτευτήριον, τό.
    met., offsring: see Offspring.

    Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Shoot

  • 9 backhand

    1) (in tennis etc, a stroke or shot with the back of one's hand turned towards the ball: a clever backhand; His backhand is very strong.) ανάποδο χτύπημα
    2) (writing with the letters sloping backwards: I can always recognize her backhand.) γράψιμο με κλίση στα αριστερά

    English-Greek dictionary > backhand

  • 10 be

    present tense am [ʌm], are [a:], is [ɪz]; past tense was [woz], were [w†:]; present participle 'being; past participle been [bi:n, (·meriцan) bɪn]; subjunctive were [w†:]; short forms I'm [aim] (I am), you're [ju†] (you are), he's [hi:z] (he is), she's [ʃi:z] (she is), it's [ɪ ] (it is), we're [wi†] (we are), they're [Ɵe†] (they are); negative short forms isn't (is not), aren't [a:nt] (are not), wasn't (was not), weren't [w†:nt] (were not)
    1) (used with a present participle to form the progressive or continuous tenses: I'm reading; I am being followed; What were you saying?.) είμαι
    2) (used with a present participle to form a type of future tense: I'm going to London.)
    3) (used with a past participle to form the passive voice: He was shot.) ήμουν
    4) (used with an infinitive to express several ideas, eg necessity (When am I to leave?), purpose (The letter is to tell us he's coming), a possible future happening (If he were to lose, I'd win) etc.) είναι να...πρόκειται
    5) (used in giving or asking for information about something or someone: I am Mr Smith; Is he alive?; She wants to be an actress; The money will be ours; They are being silly.) είμαι
    - the be-all and end-all

    English-Greek dictionary > be

  • 11 bow

    I 1. verb
    1) (to bend (the head and often also the upper part of the body) forwards in greeting a person etc: He bowed to the ladies; They bowed their heads in prayer.) κλίνω (το κεφάλι)
    2) ((with to) to accept: I bow to your superior knowledge.) υποκλίνομαι
    2. noun
    (a bowing movement: He made a bow to the ladies.) υπόκλιση
    II 1. [bəu] noun
    1) (a springy curved rod bent by a string, by which arrows are shot.) τόξο
    2) (a rod with horsehair stretched along it, by which the strings of a violin etc are sounded.) δοξάρι
    3) (a looped knot of material: Her dress is decorated with bows.) φιόγκος
    2. noun
    ((often in plural) the front of a ship or boat: The waves broke over the bows.) πλώρη

    English-Greek dictionary > bow

  • 12 cannonball

    noun (a ball of iron, shot from a cannon.) μπάλα κανονιού, βλήμα

    English-Greek dictionary > cannonball

  • 13 desert

    I [di'zə:t] verb
    1) (to go away from and leave without help etc; to leave or abandon: Why did you desert us?) εγκαταλείπω
    2) (to run away, usually from the army: He was shot for trying to desert.) λιποτακτώ
    - deserter
    - desertion
    II ['dezət] noun
    (an area of barren country, usually hot, dry and sandy, where there is very little rain: Parts of the country are like a desert; ( also adjective) desert plants.) έρημος

    English-Greek dictionary > desert

  • 14 forehand

    ['fo:hænd]
    (in tennis etc, (the ability to make) a stroke or shot with the palm of one's hand turned towards the ball: a strong forehand; ( also adjective) a forehand stroke.) (στην αντισφαίριση:) κτύπημα με την παλάμη στραμμένη προς το μέρος του αντιπάλου, `σερβίς`

    English-Greek dictionary > forehand

  • 15 kill off

    (to destroy completely: So many deer have been shot that the species has almost been killed off.) εξολοθρεύω

    English-Greek dictionary > kill off

  • 16 kiss

    [kis] 1. verb
    (to touch with the lips as a sign of affection: She kissed him when he arrived home; The child kissed his parents goodnight; The film ended with a shot of the lovers kissing.) φιλώ
    2. noun
    (an act of kissing: He gave her a kiss.) φιλί

    English-Greek dictionary > kiss

  • 17 pheasant

    ['feznt]
    plurals - pheasants, pheasant; noun
    1) (a type of long-tailed bird, the male of which has brightly-coloured feathers and certain types of which are often shot for sport: a brace of pheasant(s); two pheasants.) φασιανός
    2) ((the flesh of) the bird as food: We had roast pheasant for dinner.) (το κρέας)φασιανός

    English-Greek dictionary > pheasant

  • 18 pistol

    ['pistl]
    (a small gun, held in one hand when fired: He shot himself with a pistol.) πιστόλι

    English-Greek dictionary > pistol

  • 19 pot

    [pot] 1. noun
    (any one of many kinds of deep container used in cooking, for holding food, liquids etc or for growing plants: a cooking-pot; a plant-pot; a jam-pot; The waiter brought her a pot of tea.) βάζο,γλάστρα
    2. verb
    (to plant in a pot.) φυτεύω σε γλάστρα
    - pothole
    - pot-shot
    - take pot luck

    English-Greek dictionary > pot

  • 20 powder

    1. noun
    1) (any substance in the form of fine particles: soap powder; milk-powder.) σκόνη
    2) (a special kind of substance in this form, used as a cosmetic etc: face-powder; talcum powder.) πούδρα
    3) (formerly, gunpowder: powder and shot.) πυρίτιδα,μπαρούτι
    2. verb
    (to put powder on (one's face or body): She powdered her nose.) πουδράρω
    - powdery
    - powder puff
    - powder room

    English-Greek dictionary > powder

См. также в других словарях:

  • shot pt, pp — shot n …   English expressions

  • Shot — Shot, n.; pl. {Shot}or {Shots}. [OE. shot, schot, AS. gesceot a missile; akin to D. schot a shot, shoot, G. schuss, geschoss a missile, Icel. skot a throwing, a javelin, and E. shoot, v.t. [root]159. See {Shoot}, and cf. {Shot} a share.] 1. The… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Shot — Shot, n.; pl. {Shot}or {Shots}. [OE. shot, schot, AS. gesceot a missile; akin to D. schot a shot, shoot, G. schuss, geschoss a missile, Icel. skot a throwing, a javelin, and E. shoot, v.t. [root]159. See {Shoot}, and cf. {Shot} a share.] 1. The… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • shot — Ⅰ. shot [1] ► NOUN 1) the firing of a gun or cannon. 2) a person with a specified level of ability in shooting: he was an excellent shot. 3) a hit, stroke, or kick of the ball in sports, in particular an attempt to score. 4) informal an attempt… …   English terms dictionary

  • shot — shot1 [shät] n. [ME < OE sceot < sceotan (akin to ON skot, Ger schuss): see SHOOT] 1. the act of shooting; discharge of a missile, esp. from a gun 2. a) the distance over which a missile travels b) range; reach; scope 3 …   English World dictionary

  • shot — (n.) O.E. scot, sceot an act of shooting, that which is discharged in shooting, from P.Gmc. *skutan (Cf. O.N. skutr, O.Fris. skete, M.Du. scote, Ger. Schuß a shot ), related to sceotan to shoot (see SHOOT (Cf. shoot)). Meaning …   Etymology dictionary

  • Shot — Shot, n. [AS. scot, sceot, fr. sce[ o]tan to shoot; akin to D. sschot, Icel. skot. [root]159. See {Scot} a share, {Shoot}, v. t., and cf. {Shot} a shooting.] A share or proportion; a reckoning; a scot. [1913 Webster] Here no shots are where all… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Shot — «Shot» Canción de The Rasmus álbum Hide from the Sun Publicación 30 de marzo de 2006 …   Wikipedia Español

  • shot of — Brit informal : no longer having someone or something that you do not want I m ready to get/be shot of [=rid of] this job. The band wants to be shot of its manager. • • • Main Entry: ↑shot …   Useful english dictionary

  • Shot — Shot, a. Woven in such a way as to produce an effect of variegation, of changeable tints, or of being figured; as, shot silks. See {Shoot}, v. t., 8. [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Shot — Shot, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Shotted}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Shotting}.] To load with shot, as a gun. Totten. [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

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