-
1 shyness
-
2 reserve
rə'zə:v 1. verb1) (to ask for or order to be kept for the use of a particular person, often oneself: The restaurant is busy on Saturdays, so I'll phone up today and reserve a table.) reservere, holde av2) (to keep for the use of a particular person or group of people, or for a particular use: These seats are reserved for the committee members.) forhåndsbestille, reservere2. noun1) (something which is kept for later use or for use when needed: The farmer kept a reserve of food in case he was cut off by floods.) forråd, lager2) (a piece of land used for a special purpose eg for the protection of animals: a wild-life reserve; a nature reserve.) naturreservat3) (the habit of not saying very much, not showing what one is feeling, thinking etc; shyness.) tilbakeholdenhet4) ((often in plural) soldiers, sailors etc who do not belong to the regular full-time army, navy etc but who are called into action when needed eg during a war.) reservesoldat(er), reserven•- reserved
- have
- keep in reservereservat--------reserve--------reservereIsubst. \/rɪˈzɜːv\/1) reserve, reservelager, forråd2) ( militærvesen) reserve, reserveoffiser, reservist3) ( sport) reserve, innbytter4) reservat5) reservasjon, forbehold, unntakelse, betingelse6) reserverthet, forbeholdenhet, tilbakeholdenhet7) (samferdsel, også central reserve) sperrelinje (på vei)8) ( botanikk) opplagsnæringhave\/hold in reserve ha i reserveplay a reserve sette inn en innbytterreserves reservetropperwithout reserve uten reservasjon, uten forbehold, reservasjonsløst, betingelsesløstIIverb \/rɪˈzɜːv\/1) reservere, legge til side, spare, holde av, forbeholde seg2) forskyve, utsette3) reservere, forhåndsbestille, bestille, booke• due to Easter traffic, Sheila reserved two seats on the trainall seats reserved bare reserverte plasserreserve for\/to oneself legge til side til seg selv, beholde for seg selvreserve for spare til, reservere tilreserve oneself for spare seg for -
3 rub
1. past tense, past participle - rubbed; verb(to move against the surface of something else, pressing at the same time: He rubbed his eyes; The horse rubbed its head against my shoulder; The back of the shoe is rubbing against my heel.) gni; skubbe; gnage2. noun(an act of rubbing: He gave the teapot a rub with a polishing cloth.) gniing, frottering- rub down- rub it in
- rub out
- rub shoulders with
- rub up
- rub up the wrong wayskrubbeIsubst. \/rʌb\/1) skrubb, skrubbing, frottering• give the silver a rub!hun frotterte\/tørket ham på ryggen2) hinder, hake, vanskelighet3) ujevnhet, hump, kul4) spydighet, finte, hipp5) noe ergerlig, noe irriterende• the rub is that...det ergerlige er at...6) (forkortelse for rubber) gummiget the rub fatte, skjønne, henge med• do you get the rub?the rub on\/of the green (britisk, hverdagslig) (plutselig) hindringIIverb \/rʌb\/1) gni, skrubbe, smøre utover2) frottere, massere3) viske ut, gni bort4) pusse, polere5) gnage, gnisse, skrape6) gjøre avtrykk fra noe (ved hjelp av skravering)rub along\/by\/on humpe og gå, gå på et vis• we manage to rub along somehow, although we're short of moneydet går på et vis, selv om vi mangler penger klare segrub along together komme overens, være på god fotrub at something gni på noe, stryke på noeetter rideturen striglet han hesten sin pusse, pusse nedgni, tørke, frotterevisitererub in smøre inninnprente, mase omrub it in mase om, gni inn, minne om noe pinlig• don't rub it in!trenger du å gni det inn? \/ må du drive og minne meg på det der!rub noses gni nese(ne mot hverandre)( vulgært) runkerub off (on) smitte over på, smitte av pårub on\/against something skrape mot noerub one's hands gni seg i hendene ( overført) godte segrub (something) out viske bort (noe), stryke ut (noe), fjerne (noe)rub salt into someone's wounds strø salt i sårene til noenrub shoulders\/elbows with gå arm i arm med, omgås ha kontakt med, ha omgang medrub somebody out (amer., slang) kverke noen, myrde noen, gjøre av med noenrub somebody (up) the right\/wrong way stryke noen etter\/mot hårene, føye\/irritere noenrub someone's nose in it\/in the dirt gni det inn, trø noen ned i dritten, minne noen på deres feil\/tabber, tråkke på noenrub through greie segrub to a powder pulverisererub up pusse, polere friske opp• I'm going to St. Tropez this summer, so I have to rub up my Frenchjeg skal til St. Tropez i sommer, så jeg må friske opp fransken minblande sammen ( vulgært) kåte opp, runkerub up against komme borti noen egle seg innpå noen
См. также в других словарях:
shyness — Ⅰ. shy [1] ► ADJECTIVE (shyer, shyest) 1) nervous or timid in the company of other people. 2) (shy of/about) slow or reluctant to do. 3) (in combination ) having a specified dislike or aversion: camera shy. 4) … English terms dictionary
shyness — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ natural ▪ extreme, paralysing/paralyzing ▪ initial VERB + SHYNESS ▪ be overcome with, have … Collocations dictionary
shyness — noun The quality of being shy; a fear of social interactions. His shyness kept him from asking her to the prom, he wasnt outgoing enough even though he had a crush on her … Wiktionary
shyness — noun Gerald s shyness was often mistaken for disinterest Syn: bashfulness, diffidence, sheepishness, reserve, reservedness, introversion, reticence, timidity, timidness, timorousness, mousiness, lack of confidence, self consciousness,… … Thesaurus of popular words
shyness — noun see shy I … New Collegiate Dictionary
shyness — noun a feeling of fear of embarrassment • Derivationally related forms: ↑shy • Hypernyms: ↑timidity, ↑timidness, ↑timorousness … Useful english dictionary
shyness — I (Roget s IV) n. Syn. bashfulness, reserve, timidity, modesty, timorousness, timidness, coyness, demureness, sheepishness, diffidence, apprehension, backwardness, nervousness, insecurity, reticence, stage fright, mike fright*; see also restraint … English dictionary for students
shy — I. adjective (shier or shyer; shiest or shyest) Etymology: Middle English schey, from Old English scēoh; akin to Old High German sciuhen to frighten off Date: before 12th century 1. easily frightened ; timid 2. disposed to avoid a person or thi … New Collegiate Dictionary
shy — I. /ʃaɪ / (say shuy) adjective (shyer or shier, shyest or shiest) 1. bashful; retiring. 2. easily frightened away; timid. 3. suspicious; distrustful: once bitten, twice shy. 4. reluctant; wary. 5. short: shy of funds. 6. Colloquial failing to pay …
shy — shy1 adjective (shyer, shyest) 1》 nervous or timid in the company of other people. ↘(shy of/about) slow or reluctant to do. ↘[in combination] having a specified dislike or aversion: camera shy. ↘(of a wild animal) reluctant to remain… … English new terms dictionary
shy — 1 (I) adjective 1 nervous and embarrassed about talking to other people, especially people you do not know: Billy s very shy with adults, but he s fine with other children. | a shy smile | painfully shy (=extremely shy): At 15, I was painfully… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English