-
1 беспорядок
1) General subject: Rafferty rules, alarum, bewilderment, bumble, clutter, cobweb, combustion, confusion, disarray, disorder, disorderliness, disorganization, helter-skelter, hugger mugger, jumble, kippage, litter, mess, mess hall, messroom, misrule, mix, moil, muddle, pease meal, pease-meal, pell-mell, rabblement, riot, snarl, tanglement, tea fight, tea party, topsy turvy, topsy-turvy, topsyturvy, topsyturvydom, troy fair, troy town, troy-fair, tumble, turbulence, turmoil, untidiness, upset, disarrangement, addlement, gobbledygook2) Colloquial: hugger-mugger, puddle, shambles, tea-fight, tea-party5) Obsolete: misarray6) Military: disturbance7) Mathematics: chaos, derangement, inversion8) Accounting: irregularity9) Australian slang: Rafferty's rules, dog's breakfast, dog's dinner10) Automobile industry: rough-and-tumble11) Diplomatic term: distraction14) Business: anarchy15) Crystallography: dislocation16) Makarov: excess, huddle, mud, perturbation, printer's pie, tangle17) Taboo: ass-up, balls (pl) (usu make balls of something), balls-up, chicken shit, fuck-up, hell of a mess, let hell pop loose, merry hell, pig's ass18) Scuba diving: out of order -
2 удаваться
1) General subject: answer, come off (all came off satisfactorily - все сошло благополучно), come way, manage, pan out, succeed, come home, strike home, touch home, have a knack for ("Germans have a knack for changing the way something works yet keeping its basic structure intact." (The Economist) - Немцам удаётся... Немцы умеют...)2) Agriculture: do well3) Mathematics: be successful in, succeed (in), turn out well
См. также в других словарях:
stack — [stak] n. [ME stac < ON stakkr, akin to MLowG stack, barrier of slanting stakes: for IE base see STICK] 1. a large pile of straw, hay, etc., esp. one neatly arranged, as in a conical form, for outdoor storage 2. any somewhat orderly pile or… … English World dictionary
stack up against something — stack up (against (something)) to compare with something else. We wondered how London restaurants stacked up against Atlanta s … New idioms dictionary
stack up against — stack up (against (something)) to compare with something else. We wondered how London restaurants stacked up against Atlanta s … New idioms dictionary
stack up — (against (something)) to compare with something else. We wondered how London restaurants stacked up against Atlanta s … New idioms dictionary
stack — stack1 [ stæk ] noun * 1. ) count a pile of things placed one on top of another: stack of: a stack of unopened mail There were stacks of books on the floor. a ) a pile of things standing or lying together: a stack of firewood b ) a pile of HAY… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
stack — stack1 [stæk] n [Date: 1200 1300; : Old Norse; Origin: stakkr] 1.) a neat pile of things →↑heap stack of ▪ a stack of papers ▪ stacks of dirty dishes 2.) a stack of sth/stacks of sth … Dictionary of contemporary English
stack — ▪ I. stack stack 1 [stæk] noun [countable] COMPUTING a temporary store of information on a computer [m0] ▪ II. stack stack 2 verb 1. [transitive] to put things into neat piles … Financial and business terms
Stack-oriented programming language — A stack oriented programming language is one that relies on a stack machine model for passing parameters. Several programming languages fit this description, notably Forth and PostScript, and also many Assembly languages (but on a much lower… … Wikipedia
stack — stacker, n. stackless, adj. /stak/, n. 1. a more or less orderly pile or heap: a precariously balanced stack of books; a neat stack of papers. 2. a large, usually conical, circular, or rectangular pile of hay, straw, or the like. 3. Often, stacks … Universalium
stack — 1 noun (C) 1 a neat pile of things one on top of the other (+ of): a stack of papers | stacks of dishes waiting to be washed 2 a large pile of grain, grass etc that is stored outside see also: haystack 3 a stack of/stacks of informal especially… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
stack — [stæk] noun [C] I 1) a pile of things that are placed one on top of another a stack of unopened mail[/ex] 2) informal a large amount of something There s stacks of time left.[/ex] II verb [T] stack [stæk] 1) to arrange things by placing one on… … Dictionary for writing and speaking English