Перевод: с английского на латышский

с латышского на английский

smell+up

  • 61 sweet

    [swi:t] 1. adjective
    1) (tasting like sugar; not sour, salty or bitter: as sweet as honey; Children eat too many sweet foods.) salds
    2) (tasting fresh and pleasant: young, sweet vegetables.) svaigs
    3) ((of smells) pleasant or fragrant: the sweet smell of flowers.) salds; patīkams
    4) ((of sounds) agreeable or delightful to hear: the sweet song of the nightingale.) melodisks; patīkams
    5) (attractive or charming: What a sweet little baby!; a sweet face/smile; You look sweet in that dress.) mīļš; jauks; burvīgs
    6) (kindly and agreeable: She's a sweet girl; The child has a sweet nature.) mīļš; jauks; patīkams
    2. noun
    1) ((American candy) a small piece of sweet food eg chocolate, toffee etc: a packet of sweets; Have a sweet.) konfekte
    2) ((a dish or course of) sweet food near or at the end of a meal; (a) pudding or dessert: The waiter served the sweet.) saldais ēdiens
    3) (dear; darling: Hallo, my sweet!) mīļā; mīļais
    - sweetener
    - sweetly
    - sweetness
    - sweetheart
    - sweet potato
    - sweet-smelling
    - sweet-tempered
    * * *
    konfekte; saldais ēdiens; bauda; mīļotais, mīļotā; aromāts; salds; smaržīgs; svaigs; melodisks; mīļš, jauks; patīkams, jauks

    English-Latvian dictionary > sweet

  • 62 tang

    [tæŋ]
    (a strong or sharp taste, flavour or smell: The air had a salty tang.) asa smarža
    * * *
    spalga skaņa; asa piegarša; asa smarža; īpatnība, iezīme; piešķirt garšu; spalgi skanēt; runāt spalgā balsī

    English-Latvian dictionary > tang

  • 63 unpleasant

    (disagreeable: an unpleasant task/smell.) nepatīkams
    * * *
    nepatīkams

    English-Latvian dictionary > unpleasant

  • 64 water

    ['wo:tə] 1. noun
    (a colourless, transparent liquid compound of hydrogen and oxygen, having no taste or smell, which turns to steam when boiled and to ice when frozen: She drank two glasses of water; `Are you going swimming in the sea?' `No, the water's too cold'; Each bedroom in the hotel is supplied with hot and cold running water; ( also adjective) The plumber had to turn off the water supply in order to repair the pipe; transport by land and water.) ūdens
    2. verb
    1) (to supply with water: He watered the plants.) []laistīt
    2) ((of the mouth) to produce saliva: His mouth watered at the sight of all the food.) (par siekalām) saskriet mutē
    3) ((of the eyes) to fill with tears: The dense smoke made his eyes water.) asarot
    - watery
    - wateriness
    - waterborne
    - water-closet
    - water-colour
    - watercress
    - waterfall
    - waterfowl
    - waterfront
    - waterhole
    - watering-can
    - water level
    - waterlily
    - waterlogged
    - water main
    - water-melon
    - waterproof
    3. noun
    (a coat made of waterproof material: She was wearing a waterproof.) (impregnēts) lietusmētelis
    4. verb
    (to make (material) waterproof.) impregnēt
    - water-skiing
    - water-ski
    - watertight
    - water vapour
    - waterway
    - waterwheel
    - waterworks
    - hold water
    - into deep water
    - in deep water
    - water down
    * * *
    ūdens; kvalitāte; šķidrie izdalījumi; laistīt; aplaistīt; apūdeņot; dzirdināt; peldināt; atšķaidīt; atšķaidīt ar ūdeni; izdalīties

    English-Latvian dictionary > water

  • 65 whiff

    [wif]
    (a sudden puff (of air, smoke, smell etc): a whiff of petrol; a whiff of cigar smoke.) dvesma; pūsma
    * * *
    dvesma, plūsma; mazs cigārs; kūpināt, smakot, pūst; smirdēt; smirdēt mazliet

    English-Latvian dictionary > whiff

  • 66 wood

    [wud]
    1) (( also adjective) (of) the material of which the trunk and branches of trees are composed: My desk is (made of) wood; She gathered some wood for the fire; I like the smell of a wood fire.) koks
    2) ((often in plural) a group of growing trees: They went for a walk in the woods.) mežs
    3) (a golf-club whose head is made of wood.)
    - wooden
    - woody
    - wood carving
    - woodcut
    - woodcutter
    - woodland
    - woodlouse
    - woodpecker
    - wood pulp
    - woodwind
    - woodwork
    - woodworm
    - out of the woods
    - out of the wood
    * * *
    koks, mežs; kokmateriāli; malka; koka nūja, koka bumba; muca; lete

    English-Latvian dictionary > wood

  • 67 woody

    1) (covered with trees: woody countryside.) mežains; mežiem klāts
    2) ((of a smell etc) of or like wood.) koka-; kokam līdzīgs
    * * *
    vējdēlis; mežains; kokains

    English-Latvian dictionary > woody

  • 68 -smelling

    (having a (particular kind of) smell: a nasty-smelling liquid; sweet-smelling roses.) smaržojošs; smaržīgs

    English-Latvian dictionary > -smelling

  • 69 appetising

    adjective (which increases the appetite: an appetizing smell.) ēstgribu rosinošs

    English-Latvian dictionary > appetising

  • 70 give away

    1) (to give etc (something) to someone (eg because one no longer wants it): I'm going to give all my money away.) atdot; atdāvināt
    2) (to cause or allow (information etc) to become known usually accidentally: He gave away our hiding-place (noun give-away: the lingering smell was a give-away).) izpļāpāt; izpļāpāties; izpļāpāšana

    English-Latvian dictionary > give away

  • 71 joss stick

    ['‹osstik]
    (a stick of incense used eg to give a sweet smell to a room.) vīraka nūjiņa

    English-Latvian dictionary > joss stick

  • 72 put off

    1) (to switch off (a light etc): Please put the light off!) izslēgt; nodzēst
    2) (to delay; to postpone: He put off leaving / his departure till Thursday.) atlikt; novilcināt
    3) (to cancel an arranged meeting etc with (a person): I had to put the Browns off because I had 'flu.) atcelt (tikšanos); atteikt (kādam)
    4) (to cause (a person) to feel disgust or dislike (for): The cheese looked nice but the smell put me off; The conversation about illness put me off my dinner.) šķebināt; bojāt apetīti

    English-Latvian dictionary > put off

  • 73 sniff out

    (to discover or detect (by using the sense of smell): The police used dogs to sniff out the explosives.) saost; uzost

    English-Latvian dictionary > sniff out

См. также в других словарях:

  • smell — smell,[/p] scent, odor, aroma all denote a property of a thing that makes it perceptible to the olfactory sense. Smell not only is the most general of these terms but tends to be the most colorless. It is the appropriate word when merely the… …   New Dictionary of Synonyms

  • Smell — (sm[e^]l), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Smelled}, {Smelt}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Smelling}.] [OE. smellen, smillen, smullen; cf. LG. smellen, smelen, sm[ o]len, schmelen, to smoke, to reek, D. smeulen to smolder, and E. smolder. Cf. {Smell}, n.] 1. To… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • smell — [smel] vt. smelled or [Chiefly Brit.] Brit. smelt, smelling [ME smellen < OE * smyllan < IE base * smel , to burn slowly > SMOLDER: basic sense “to give off smoke”] 1. to be or become aware of by means of the nose and the olfactory… …   English World dictionary

  • smell — smell; smell·able; smell·age; smell·er; smell·ful; smell·fun·gus; smell·ie; smell·i·ness; …   English syllables

  • Smell — Smell, n. [OE. smel, smil, smul, smeol. See {Smell}, v. t.] (Physiol.) 1. The sense or faculty by which certain qualities of bodies are perceived through the instrumentally of the olfactory nerves. See {Sense}. [1913 Webster] 2. The quality of… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Smell — Smell, v. i. 1. To affect the olfactory nerves; to have an odor or scent; often followed by of; as, to smell of smoke, or of musk. [1913 Webster] 2. To have a particular tincture or smack of any quality; to savor; as, a report smells of calumny.… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • smell — verb. The form for the past tense and past participle in BrE is smelled or smelt; in AmE smelled is usually preferred. When the verb is used intransitively, the quality of the smell is normally expressed either by a phrase introduced by of or by… …   Modern English usage

  • smell — (v.) late 12c., emit or perceive an odor, also (n.) odor, aroma, stench; not found in O.E., perhaps cognate with M.Du. smolen, Low Ger. smelen to smolder (see SMOLDER (Cf. smolder)). OED says no doubt of O.E. origin, but not recorded, and not… …   Etymology dictionary

  • smell — [n] odor aroma, bouquet, emanation, essence, flavor, fragrance, incense, perfume, redolence, savor, scent, spice, stench, stink, tang, trace, trail, whiff; concepts 590,599 smell [v1] perceive with the nose breathe, detect, discover, find, get a… …   New thesaurus

  • smell|y — «SMEHL ee», adjective, smell|i|er, smell|i|est. having or giving out a strong or unpleasant smell: »I wonder what makes the sea so smelly. I don t like it (Rudyard Kipling). SYNONYM( …   Useful english dictionary

  • Smell — may refer to:* Olfaction, the sense of smell, the ability of humans and other animals to perceive odors * Odor * In programming, a code smell is a symptom in the source code of a program that something is wrong …   Wikipedia

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