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1 sparsom
* * *adj( spredt) scattered,(mere F) sparse ( fx vegetation),( tynd) thin ( fx hair);( ringe, F) slender ( fx income, means),( utilstrækkelig) scanty ( fx clothing, supplies),( stærkere, F) meagre ( fx income, resources, salary);[ i hans sparsomme fritid] in the limited free time he had;[ sparsomt befolket] sparsely populated. -
2 spredt
adj scattered ( fx troops, villages, showers, instances),( spredt og tilfældig) stray ( fx examples, remarks),(F: spredt og fåtallig) sparse ( fx population, vegetation),( usystematisk) desultory ( fx reading, remarks);( ikke epidemisk) sporadic;[ spredt orden](mil.) extended order. -
3 tynd
bony, filmy, fine, flimsy, lame, sheer, thin* * *adj thin ( fx wall, paper, rope, clothes, grass, hair, soup, air);(om person etc: mager) thin ( fx arms, legs; he was thin and pale after his illness),( stærkere) skinny;( om befolkning, vegetation etc) scattered,(mere F) sparse;(indholdsløs etc), se tyndbenet;[ tyndt befolket] sparsely populated;[ sejle vandet tyndt] plough the seas;[ skære noget tyndt] cut something thin;[ tyndt øl] thin (el. weak) beer;
См. также в других словарях:
sparse´ly — sparse «spahrs», adjective, spars|er, spars|est. 1. thinly scattered; occurring here and there: »The sparse population of the country, sparse hair; ... an unorganised mob thick in one place, sparse in another (Walter Besant). SYNONYM(S): See syn … Useful english dictionary
Sparse — Sparse, a. [Compar. {Sparser}; superl. {Sparsest}.] [L. sparsus, p. p. of spargere to strew, scatter. Cf. {Asperse}, {Disperse}.] 1. Thinly scattered; set or planted here and there; not being dense or close together; as, a sparse population.… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
sparse — [spa:s US spa:rs] adj [Date: 1700 1800; : Latin; Origin: sparsus spread out , from the past participle of spargere to scatter ] existing only in small amounts ▪ his sparse brown hair ▪ rural areas with sparse population >sparsely adv ▪ a… … Dictionary of contemporary English
sparse — [ spars ] adjective existing in small amounts, or very spread out: Higher up the mountain, houses became sparse. ╾ sparse|ly adverb: a sparsely populated country … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
sparse — sparse·ly; sparse·ness; sparse; … English syllables
Sparse — Sparse, v. t. [L. sparsus, p. p. of spargere to scatter.] To scatter; to disperse. [Obs.] Spenser. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
sparse — index barren, deficient, infrequent, insufficient, petty, scarce, sporadic Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton … Law dictionary
sparse — (adj.) 1727, from L. sparsus scattered, pp. of spargere to scatter, spread, from PIE root * (s)pregh to jerk, scatter (Cf. Skt. parjanya rain, rain god, Avestan fra sparega branch, twig, lit. that which is jerked off a tree, O.N. freknur freckles … Etymology dictionary
sparse — *meager, spare, exiguous, scanty, scant, skimpy, scrimpy Analogous words: scattered, dispersed (see SCATTER): sporadic, occasional, infrequent, uncommon: *thin, slim, slender Antonyms: dense Contrasted words: *close, thick, compact … New Dictionary of Synonyms
sparse — [adj] very few and scattered dispersed, exiguous, few and far between, inadequate, infrequent, meager, occasional, poor, rare, scant, scanty, scarce, scrimpy, skimpy, spare, sporadic, thin, uncommon; concepts 762,789 Ant. full, lush, plentiful … New thesaurus
sparse — ► ADJECTIVE ▪ thinly dispersed. DERIVATIVES sparsely adverb sparseness noun sparsity noun. ORIGIN Latin sparsus, from spargere scatter … English terms dictionary