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1 spike heel
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2 hammer
hammer ['hæmə(r)]1 noun∎ Sport the hammer le marteau;∎ the hammer and sickle (flag) la faucille et le marteau;∎ to come or to go under the hammer (at auction) être mis aux enchères;∎ to be or to go at it hammer and tongs (argue) se disputer comme des chiffonniers; (in work, match) mettre le paquet, ne pas y aller de main morte;∎ to hammer a nail into sth enfoncer un clou dans qch;∎ to hammer sth flat/straight aplatir/redresser qch à coups de marteau;∎ to hammer home (nail) enfoncer à fond au marteau; figurative (point of view) insister lourdement sur;∎ she hammered it home with the heel of her shoe elle l'a enfoncé avec le talon de sa chaussure;∎ I had it hammered into me that I mustn't do that type of thing on m'a enfoncé dans la tête que je ne devais pas faire ce genre de choses;∎ they're always hammering it into us that... ils nous rabâchent sans arrêt que...;∎ to hammer an agreement into shape réussir à mettre un accord au point∎ to hammer on the table (with fist) taper du poing sur la table;∎ to hammer at the door tambouriner à la porte;∎ the rain hammered at the window la pluie tambourinait contre la fenêtre∎ he came hammering round the final bend il a débouché à fond de train du dernier virage;∎ the French champion was really hammering along the track when he tripped le champion français était en pleine vitesse quand il a trébuché∎ the Hammers = surnom donné à l'équipe de football anglais West Ham►► British hammer drill perceuse f à percussion;Hammer Horror film = film d'horreur produit en Grande-Bretagne dans les années 50 et 60(with hammer) donner des coups de marteau;∎ to hammer away at sth taper sur qch avec un marteau, donner des coups de marteau sur qch; figurative (at agreement, contract) travailler avec acharnement à la mise au point de qch; (problem) travailler avec acharnement à la solution de qch;∎ he hammered away at the door (with fists) il a tambouriné à la porte;∎ to hammer away at the piano/on the typewriter marteler le piano/la machine à écrire(nail, spike) enfoncer (au marteau); (door) défoncer(nail, spike) enfoncer (au marteau);∎ figurative it's no good telling him just once, you'll have to hammer it in le lui dire une bonne fois ne suffira pas, il faudra le lui répéter sans cesse(dent) aplatir au marteau; figurative (solution, agreement) mettre au point, élaborer; (tune, rhythm) marteler;∎ unions and management hammered out an agreement les syndicats et le patronat sont finalement parvenus à un accord
См. также в других словарях:
spike heel — spike′ heel′ n. clo a very high tapering heel used on women s shoes … From formal English to slang
spike heel — noun a very high narrow heel on women s shoes • Syn: ↑spike, ↑stiletto heel • Hypernyms: ↑heel * * * noun : a very high tapering heel used on women s shoes compare : french heel, spanish heel … Useful english dictionary
spike heel — noun Date: 1926 1. a very high tapering heel used on women s shoes 2. plural shoes with spike heels … New Collegiate Dictionary
spike heel — a very high heel that tapers to a narrow base, used on women s shoes. [1925 30] * * * … Universalium
spike — spike1 [spīk] n. [ME < ON spīkr, a nail, spike, or < MDu & MLowG spīker, both ult. < IE base * (s)p(h)ei , sharp, pointed splinter > SPIT1, SPOKE1, L spica, ear of grain, spina,SPINE] 1. a long, heavy nail 2. a sh … English World dictionary
spike — I. noun Etymology: Middle English, probably from Old Norse spīk splinter & spīkr spike; akin to Middle Dutch spiker spike more at spoke Date: 13th century 1. a very large nail 2. a. one of a row of pointed irons placed (as on the top of a wall)… … New Collegiate Dictionary
spike — 1. n. & v. n. 1 a a sharp point. b a pointed piece of metal, esp. the top of an iron railing etc. 2 a any of several metal points set into the sole of a running shoe to prevent slipping. b (in pl.) a pair of running shoes with spikes. 3 a a… … Useful english dictionary
spike — I [[t]spaɪk[/t]] n. v. spiked, spik•ing 1) bui rai a naillike fastener, 3 to 12 in. (7.6 to 30.5 cm) long and proportionately thicker than a common nail, for fastening together heavy timbers or railroad track 2) something resembling such a nail,… … From formal English to slang
Heel (shoe) — A heel is the projection at the back of a shoe which rests below the heel bone. The shoe heel is used to improve the balance of the shoe or for decorative purposes. Sometimes raised, the high heel is common to a form of shoe often worn by women… … Wikipedia
heel — noun 1 back part of the foot VERB + HEEL ▪ lean back on, sit back on, squat on ▪ She took a potato from the fire and sat back on her heels. ▪ rock (back) on ▪ The punch rocked him back on his … Collocations dictionary
spike — spike1 spikelike, adj. /spuyk/, n., v., spiked, spiking. n. 1. a naillike fastener, 3 to 12 in. (7.6 to 30.5 cm) long and proportionately thicker than a common nail, for fastening together heavy timbers or railroad track. 2. something resembling… … Universalium