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121 verstümmeln
* * *to mangle; to maim; to garble; to mutilate* * *ver|stụ̈m|meln [fɛɐ'ʃtʏmln] ptp verstü\#mmeltvtto mutilate, to maim; (fig) Nachricht, Bericht to garble, to distort; Namen to mutilate* * *1) (to injure badly, especially with permanent effects: The hunter was maimed for life.) maim2) (to spoil (eg a piece of music) by bad mistakes etc: He mangled the music by his terrible playing.) mangle* * *ver·stüm·meln *[fɛɐ̯ˈʃtʏml̩n]vt1. (entstellen)▪ etw \verstümmeln to disfigure sth▪ etw \verstümmeln to garble sth* * *transitives Verb mutilate; (fig.) garble < report>; chop, mutilate < text>; mutilate, do violence to < name>* * *sich selbst verstümmeln mutilate oneself* * *transitives Verb mutilate; (fig.) garble < report>; chop, mutilate < text>; mutilate, do violence to < name>* * *v.to garble v.to maim v.to mangle v.to mutilate v. -
122 Fehlbogen
Fehl·bo·genm TYPO imperfect [or spoil] sheet -
123 Gutes
good* * *Gu|te(s) ['guːtə]nt decl as adjGútes tun — to do good
es hat alles sein Gútes (prov) — every cloud has a silver lining (Prov), it's an ill wind (that blows nobody any good) (Brit Prov)
alles Gúte! — all the best!, good luck!
man hört über sie nur Gútes — you hear so many good things about her
das führt zu nichts Gútem — it'll lead to no good
jdm (viel) Gútes tun — to be (very) good to sb
des Gúten zu viel tun — to overdo things
das ist des Gúten zu viel — that is too much of a good thing
das Gúte daran — the good thing about it
das Gúte siegt — Good or good shall triumph
das Gúte im Menschen — the good in man
im Gúten wie im Bösen — for better or for worse
im Gúten (sich trennen) — amicably
ich sage es dir im Gúten — I want to give you a friendly piece of advice
* * *Gu·te(s)1. (Positives)▪ \Gutess goodman hört viel \Gutess über ihn you hear a lot of good things about him▪ etwas \Gutess something goodich habe im Schrank etwas \Gutess für dich I've got something nice for you in the cupboard▪ etwas/nichts \Gutess (eine gute/keine gute Tat) something/nothing gooder tat in seinem Leben viel \Gutess he did a lot of good in his life[auch] sein \Gutess haben to have its good points [or good side] [too]ein \Gutess hat die Sache there is one good thing about itjdm schwant nichts \Gutess sb has a nasty feeling about sthnichts \Gutess versprechen to not sound very promising, to bode ill [or no good]jdm \Gutess tun to be good to sbwas kann ich dir denn \Gutess tun? how can I spoil [or what can I do for] you?alles \Gutes! all the best!alles \Gutes und viele Grüße an deine Frau! all the best and give my regards to your wifedas \Gutes daran the good thing about it2. (friedlich)im \Gutesn amicablylass dir's im \Gutesn gesagt sein, dass ich das nicht dulde take a bit of friendly advice, I won't put up with it!das \Gutes im Menschen the good in man\Gutess tun to do good4.▶ im \Gutesn wie im Bösen (mit Güte wie mit Strenge) every way possible; (in guten und schlechten Zeiten) through good [times] and badich habe es im \Gutesn wie im Bösen versucht, aber sie will einfach keine Vernunft annehmen I've tried to do everything I can, but she simply won't see sense▶ des \Gutesn zu viel sein to be too much [of a good thing]das ist wirklich des \Gutesn zu viel! that's really overdoing things! -
124 Papierzuschuss
Pa·pier·zu·schussRRm TYPO allowance for spoil -
125 in Unordnung bringen
to disarrange; to mess up; to disorganize; to disarray; to disorder; to upset; to derange; to unsettle; to muss; to mess* * *1) (to put in disorder: He confused the arrangements by arriving late.) confuse2) (to throw out of order; to make untidy: The strong wind had disarranged her hair.) disarrange3) (to spoil; to make a mess of: Don't mess the room up!) mess up* * *ausdr.disarray adj.to confuse v. -
126 quer schießen
quer* * *quer|schie|ßen sep irregvi (inf)to be awkward, to spoil things -
127 Abladeplatz
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128 absetzen
vt <tech.allg> ■ set off vt
См. также в других словарях:
Spoil — (spoil), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Spoiled} (spoild) or {Spoilt} (spoilt); p. pr. & vb. n. {Spoiling}.] [F. spolier, OF. espoillier, fr. L. spoliare, fr. spolium spoil. Cf. {Despoil}, {Spoliation}.] 1. To plunder; to strip by violence; to pillage; to… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
spoil — n Spoil, plunder, booty, prize, loot, swag can mean something of value that is taken from another by force or craft. Spoil applies to the movable property of a defeated enemy, which by the custom of old time warfare belongs to the victor and of… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
Spoil — Spoil, n. [Cf. OF. espoille, L. spolium.] 1. That which is taken from another by violence; especially, the plunder taken from an enemy; pillage; booty. [1913 Webster] Gentle gales, Fanning their odoriferous wings, dispense Native perfumes, and… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
spoil — [ spɔıl ] verb ** ▸ 1 make worse ▸ 2 allow child everything ▸ 3 treat someone with care ▸ 4 food: become too old ▸ 5 in election ▸ + PHRASES 1. ) transitive to affect something in a way that makes it worse, less attractive, or less enjoyable:… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
Spoil — (spoil), v. i. 1. To practice plunder or robbery. [1913 Webster] Outlaws, which, lurking in woods, used to break forth to rob and spoil. Spenser. [1913 Webster] 2. To lose the valuable qualities; to be corrupted; to decay; as, fruit will soon… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
spoil — c.1300, from O.Fr. espoillier to strip, plunder, from L. spoliare to strip of clothing, rob, from spolium armor stripped from an enemy, booty; originally skin stripped from a killed animal, from PIE *spol yo , perhaps from root *spel to split, to … Etymology dictionary
spoil — [v1] ruin, hurt blemish, damage, debase, deface, defile, demolish, depredate, desecrate, desolate, despoil, destroy, devastate, disfigure, disgrace, harm, impair, injure, make useless, mar, mess up*, muck up*, pillage, plunder, prejudice, ravage … New thesaurus
spoil — [spoil] vt. spoiled or Brit. spoilt, spoiling [ME spoilen < MFr espoillier < L spoliare, to plunder < spolium, arms taken from a defeated foe, plunder, orig., hide stripped from an animal < IE base * (s)p(h)el , to split, tear off… … English World dictionary
spoil|er — «SPOY luhr», noun. 1. a person or thing that spoils. 2. a person who takes spoils. 3. a movable flap on the upper surface of the wing of an airplane, to help in slowing down or in decreasing lift, as in descending or landing. 4. an airflow… … Useful english dictionary
spoil — I (impair) verb addle, blemish, blight, botch, break, bungle, butcher, corrumpere, corrupt, damage, damage irreparably, debase, decay, decompose, deface, defile, deform, demolish, destroy, deteriorate, dilapidate, disable, disfigure, go bad, harm … Law dictionary
spoil — ► VERB (past and past part. spoilt (chiefly Brit. ) or spoiled) 1) diminish or destroy the value or quality of. 2) (of food) become unfit for eating. 3) harm the character of (a child) by being too indulgent. 4) treat with great or excessive… … English terms dictionary