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1 stocking
جَوْرَب طويل \ stocking: a soft covering for the leg and foot: Give me a pair of stockings, please. A woman’s nylon stockings cover the whole leg. A boy’s woollen stockings end below the knee. -
2 stocking
[ˈstɔkɪŋ] nounone of a pair of close-fitting coverings for the legs and feet, reaching to or above the knee:جَوْرَب نِسائيMost women prefer tights to stockings nowadays.
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3 خدر جوربي التوزع
stocking anesthesia -
4 جورب مطاطي
elastic stocking -
5 خدر قفازي وجوربي التوزع
glove and stocking anesthesia -
6 داء جوارب الحرير
silk stocking disease -
7 جرد
1́ n. inventory, stocking2́ v. strip, divest, dispossess, empty, deprive, riffle, oust, inventory, unclothe, sucker, shear, denude -
8 جورب
n. sock, socks, stocking, hose, hosiery -
9 شىء كالجورب
n. stocking -
10 ladder
[ˈlædə]1. noun1) a set of rungs or steps between two long supports, for climbing up or down:سُلَّمthe ladder of success.
2) (American run) a long, narrow flaw caused by the breaking of a stitch in a stocking or other knitted fabric.تَنْسيل طولي في جوارِب النِّساء2. verbto (cause to) develop such a flaw:يُنسِل الخَيطFine stockings ladder very easily.
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11 run
[ran] present participle ˈrunning: past tense ran [ræn]: past participle run1. verb1) (of a person or animal) to move quickly, faster than walking:يَرْكُضHe ran down the road.
2) to move smoothly:يَسيرُTrains run on rails.
يَنْسابُ، يَتَدَفَّقThe tap is running.
4) (of a machine etc) to work or operate:يُشَغِّلHe ran the motor to see if it was working.
5) to organize or manage:يُديرHe runs the business very efficiently.
6) to race:يُسابِق، يَشْتَرِك في سِباقIs your horse running this afternoon?
7) (of buses, trains etc) to travel regularly:يَسيرُThe train is running late.
8) to last or continue; to go on:يَمْتَد، يَسْتَمِرThe play ran for six weeks.
9) to own and use, especially of cars:يَمْلُك ويَسْتَعْمِلHe runs a Rolls Royce.
10) (of colour) to spread:يَنْتَشِرWhen I washed my new dress the colour ran.
11) to drive (someone); to give (someone) a lift:يأخُذُ أو يوصِلُ بالسَّيّارَهHe ran me to the station.
12) to move (something):يُحَرِّكHe ran his eyes over the letter.
13) (in certain phrases) to be or become:يُصْبِحMy blood ran cold (= I was afraid).
2. noun1) the act of running:رَكْضHe went for a run before breakfast.
2) a trip or drive:رِحْلَه، شَوْطWe went for a run in the country.
3) a length of time (for which something continues):فَتْرَهHe's had a run of bad luck.
سُلَّمI've got a run in my tights.
5) the free use (of a place):إسْتِعْمال مَجّانيHe gave me the run of his house.
6) in cricket, a batsman's act of running from one end of the wicket to the other, representing a single score:رَكْضَه في الكريكيت وتُساوي نُقْطَةHe scored/made 50 runs for his team.
7) an enclosure or pen:بَيْت القَلَمa chicken-run.
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12 stitch
[stɪtʃ]1. noun1) a loop made in thread, wool etc by a needle in sewing or knitting:She sewed the hem with small, neat stitches
غُرْزَهBother! I've dropped a stitch.
2) a type of stitch forming a particular pattern in sewing, knitting etc:قُطْبَهThe jersey was knitted in stocking stitch.
3) a sharp pain in a person's side caused by eg running:ألَم شَديدI've got a stitch.
2. verbto sew or put stitches into:يَدْرِز، يُخيطI stitched the button on.
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13 stock up
to accumulate a supply of (something):يُجَهِّز بالسِّلَع، يَتَزَوَّد بالطَّعامThe boys were stocking up on/with chocolate and lemonade for their walk.
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14 strangle
[ˈstræŋgl] verbto kill by gripping or squeezing the neck tightly, eg by tightening a cord etc round it:يَخْنُقThis top button is nearly strangling me!
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15 جورب طويل
جَوْرَب طويل \ stocking: a soft covering for the leg and foot: Give me a pair of stockings, please. A woman’s nylon stockings cover the whole leg. A boy’s woollen stockings end below the knee.
См. также в других словарях:
Stocking — Stocking … Deutsch Wikipedia
Stocking — Stock ing, n. [From {Stock}, which was formerly used of a covering for the legs and feet, combining breeches, or upper stocks, and stockings, or nether stocks.] 1. A close fitting covering for the foot and leg, usually knit or woven. [1913… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
stocking — ► NOUN 1) either of a pair of separate close fitting nylon garments covering the foot and leg, worn especially by women. 2) US or archaic a long sock worn by men. 3) a real or ornamental stocking hung up by children on Christmas Eve for Father… … English terms dictionary
stocking — close fitting garment covering the foot and leg, 1580s, from stocka leg covering, stock, from O.E. stocu sleeve, related to O.E. stocc trunk, log (see STOCK (Cf. stock) (n.1)). Probably so called because of a fancied resemblance of legs to tree… … Etymology dictionary
stocking — [stäk′iŋ] n. [< STOCK, in obs. sense of leg covering + ING] 1. a closefitting covering, usually knitted, for the foot and, usually, most of the leg 2. something resembling this, as a patch of color on the leg of an animal in one s stocking… … English World dictionary
Stocking — Stock ing, v. t. To dress in GBs. Dryden. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Stocking up — Stocking up, also known as Filling up or Filled legs refers to a condition in horses caused when fluid builds up and swells the leg. Sometimes it is linked to lameness and other times it is purely an aesthetic problem. Fluid buildup can be caused … Wikipedia
Stocking — This article is about the article of clothing primarily worn by women. For other uses, see Stocking (disambiguation). A pair of dark grey nylon stockings. A stocking, (also known as hose, especially in a historical context), is a close fitting,… … Wikipedia
stocking — n. 1 a either of a pair of long separate coverings for the legs and feet, usu. close woven in wool or nylon and worn esp. by women and girls. b esp. US = SOCK(1). 2 any close fitting garment resembling a stocking (bodystocking). 3 a differently… … Useful english dictionary
stocking — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ fishnet, sheer ▪ laddered (BrE) ▪ nylon, silk, etc. ▪ Christmas … Collocations dictionary
Stocking — Recorded as Stocken, Stockin, Stocking, and Stockings, this is an English surname. According to the famous Victorian etymologister Canon Charles Bardsley writing in the year1880, the word amd hence the surname, is a diminutive of the word stock… … Surnames reference