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1 smack
I 1. noun1) (sound) Klatsch, der2. transitive verbsmack somebody's face/bottom/hand — jemanden ohrfeigen/jemandem eins hintendrauf geben (ugs.) /jemandem eins auf die Hand geben (ugs.)
2)3. intransitive verbsmack one's lips — [mit den Lippen] schmatzen
4. adverbsmack into the net/wall — ins Netz/gegen die Mauer knallen (ugs.)
1) (coll.): (with a smack)2) (exactly) direktII intransitive verbsmack of — schmecken nach; (fig.) riechen nach (ugs.)
* * *I 1. [smæk] verb 2. noun((the sound of) a blow of this kind; a slap: He could hear the smack of the waves against the side of the ship.) der Klatsch3. adverb(directly and with force: He ran smack into the door.) geradewegs- academic.ru/114972/a_smack_on_the_cheek">a smack on the cheekII 1. [smæk] verb 2. nounThere's a smack of corruption about this affair.) der Beigeschmack* * *smack1[smæk]to be on \smack heroinabhängig seinsmack2[smæk]I. n1. (slap) [klatschender] Schlaga \smack on the bottom ein fester Klaps auf den Hinternto give sb a \smack on the jaw jdm eine knallen fam1. (exactly) direkthis shot landed \smack in the middle of the target sein Schuss landete haargenau im Zentrum der ZielscheibeI walked \smack into a lamp post ich lief voll gegen einen LaternenpfahlIII. vt1. (slap)to \smack sb's bottom jdm den Hintern versohlen2. (slap sth against sth)to \smack one's lips mit den Lippen schmatzenIV. vihe avoids anything that \smacks of commitment er geht allem aus dem Weg, was nach Bindung riecht* * *I [smk]1. n(= taste) (leichter) Geschmack (of nach), Spur f (of von); (= smell) (leichter) Geruch (of nach), Hauch m (of von); (fig) Spur f (of von)2. viII1. n1) (klatschender) Schlag; (= slap also) fester Klaps; (= sound) Klatschen ntto give a child a ( hard) smack — einem Kind eine knallen (inf)
you'll get a smack — du fängst gleich eine (inf)
a smack in the eye (fig) — ein Schlag m ins Gesicht
2) (inf= kiss)
to give sb a smack on the cheek — jdn einen Schmatz auf die Backe geben (inf)2. vt(= slap) knallen (inf)to smack one's hands ( together) — in die Hände klatschen
to smack one's thigh — sich (dat) auf den Schenkel klatschen
I'll smack your bottom, you'll get a smacked bottom — ich versohl dir gleich den Hintern! (inf)
See:→ lip3. adv (inf)direkthe kissed her smack on the lips — er gab ihr einen Schmatzer (inf)
smack in front of sth — genau vor etw (dat)
IIIthe office was smack in the middle of the building site — das Büro befand sich mitten auf der Baustelle
n(inf: heroin) Heroin nt IVn (NAUT)Schmack(e) f* * *smack1 [smæk]A s1. (Bei)Geschmack m (of von)of von)3. Prise f (Salz etc)4. Häppchen n, Bissen m5. besonders US sl Heroin nB v/i1. schmecken (of nach)smack2 [smæk]A s1. Klatsch m, Klaps m, klatschender Schlag:a) eine Ohrfeige,have a smack at sth es (einmal) mit etwas versuchen;have a smack at doing sth versuchen, etwas zu tun2. Schmatzen n4. Schmatz m (lauter Kuss) (on auf akk):B v/t1. mit einer Peitsche knallen2. etwas schmatzend genießen3. smack one’s lipsa) schmatzen,b) sich die Lippen lecken4. etwas hinklatschen5. klatschen(d schlagen) auf (akk)6. die Hände etc zusammenschlagen7. jemandem einen Klaps gebenC v/i1. schmatzen:smacking kiss → A 42. klatschen(d schlagen) (on auf akk)3. knallen (Peitsche)4. hinklatschen (on auf akk)D adv umg1. mit einem Klatsch2. genau, direkt:smack3 [smæk] s SCHIFF Schmack(e) f (voll gedecktes Fischerboot)* * *I 1. noun1) (sound) Klatsch, der2. transitive verbsmack somebody's face/bottom/hand — jemanden ohrfeigen/jemandem eins hintendrauf geben (ugs.) /jemandem eins auf die Hand geben (ugs.)
2)3. intransitive verbsmack one's lips — [mit den Lippen] schmatzen
4. adverbsmack into the net/wall — ins Netz/gegen die Mauer knallen (ugs.)
1) (coll.): (with a smack)2) (exactly) direktII intransitive verbsmack of — schmecken nach; (fig.) riechen nach (ugs.)
* * *adv.riechen nach adv.schmatzen adv.schmecken nach adv. n.Geschmack m.Klatsch -en m.
См. также в других словарях:
smack of — verb To seem like; to appear or give an impression or feeling of; to arouse suspicion of. This smacks of dishonesty, but I cant say why … Wiktionary
smack — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun ADJECTIVE ▪ firm (BrE), good, hard ▪ light ▪ loud, resounding ▪ He landed with a loud smack … Collocations dictionary
smack of — 1 the tea smacked of tannin: TASTE OF, have the flavour of. 2 the plan smacked of self promotion: SUGGEST, hint at, have overtones of, give the impression of, have the stamp of, seem like; smell of, reek of. → smack * * * ˈsmack of [transitive]… … Useful english dictionary
smack — [[t]smæ̱k[/t]] smacks, smacking, smacked 1) VERB If you smack someone, you hit them with your hand. [V n] She smacked me on the side of the head. N COUNT Smack is also a noun. Sometimes he just doesn t listen and I end up shouting at him or… … English dictionary
smack — 1 verb (T) 1 to hit a child with your hand in order to punish them: To bed now, or I ll smack your bottom! 2 to hit something against something else so that it makes a short loud noise: smack sth against/into etc: He smacked his fist against his… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
smack — I UK [smæk] / US verb Word forms smack : present tense I/you/we/they smack he/she/it smacks present participle smacking past tense smacked past participle smacked * [transitive] to hit someone with your flat hand or a flat object I don t believe… … English dictionary
smack of — phrasal verb [transitive] Word forms smack of : present tense I/you/we/they smack of he/she/it smacks of present participle smacking of past tense smacked of past participle smacked of smack of something to be a sign of something bad Going out… … English dictionary
smack — I. noun Etymology: Middle English, from Old English smæc; akin to Old High German smac taste and probably to Lithuanian smaguris sweet tooth Date: before 12th century 1. characteristic taste or flavor; also a perceptible taste or tincture 2. a… … New Collegiate Dictionary
smack — smack1 [ smæk ] verb 1. ) transitive to hit someone with your flat hand or a flat object: I don t believe it s right to smack children when they re being naughty. a ) transitive BRITISH INFORMAL to hit someone with your FIST (=closed hand): He… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
exaggerate — [[t]ɪgzæ̱ʤəreɪt[/t]] exaggerates, exaggerating, exaggerated 1) VERB If you exaggerate, you indicate that something is, for example, worse or more important than it really is. He thinks I m exaggerating... Don t exaggerate... [V n] Sheila admitted … English dictionary
Comma — For other uses, see Comma (disambiguation). , Comma Punctuation apostrophe … Wikipedia