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101 make/pull a face
(to twist one's face into a strange expression: She pulled faces at the baby to make it laugh.) fazer careta -
102 malady
['mælədi]plural - maladies; noun(an illness or disease: He is suffering from some strange malady.) doença -
103 noise
[noiz]1) (a sound: I heard a strange noise outside; the noise of gunfire.) barulho2) (an unpleasantly loud sound: I hate noise.) barulho•- noiselessly - noisy - noisily -
104 novel
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105 novelty
plural - novelties; noun1) (newness and strangeness: It took her a long time to get used to the novelty of her surroundings.) singularidade2) (something new and strange: Snow is a novelty to people from hot countries.) novidade3) (a small, cheap manufactured thing sold as a toy or souvenir: a stall selling novelties.) novidade -
106 occurrence
noun a strange occurrence.) ocorrência, acontecimento -
107 odd
[od]1) (unusual; strange: He's wearing very odd clothes; a very odd young man.) estranho2) ((of a number) that cannot be divided exactly by 2: 5 and 7 are odd (numbers).) ímpar3) (not one of a pair, set etc: an odd shoe.) avulso4) (occasional; free: at odd moments.) extra•- oddity- oddly - oddment - odds - odd jobs - odd job man - be at odds - make no odds - oddly enough - odd man out / odd one out - odds and ends - what's the odds? -
108 oddity
plural - oddities; noun (a strange person or thing: He's a bit of an oddity.) pessoa excêntrica -
109 oddly enough
(it is strange or remarkable (that): I saw John this morning. Oddly enough, I was just thinking I hadn't seen him for a long time.) curiosamente -
110 outlook
1) (a view: Their house has a wonderful outlook.) panorama, vista2) (a person's view of life etc: He has a strange outlook (on life).) visão3) (what is likely to happen in the future: The weather outlook is bad.) previsão -
111 peculiar
[pi'kju:ljə]1) (strange; odd: peculiar behaviour.) estranho, singular2) (belonging to one person, place or thing in particular and to no other: customs peculiar to France.) peculiar•- peculiarly -
112 prodigy
['prodi‹i]plural - prodigies; noun(something strange and wonderful: A very clever child is sometimes called a child prodigy; prodigies of nature.) prodígio -
113 pull a face / faces (at)
(to make strange expressions with the face eg to show disgust, or to amuse: The children were pulling faces at each other; He pulled a face when he smelt the fish.) fazer caretaEnglish-Portuguese (Brazil) dictionary > pull a face / faces (at)
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114 pull a face / faces (at)
(to make strange expressions with the face eg to show disgust, or to amuse: The children were pulling faces at each other; He pulled a face when he smelt the fish.) fazer caretaEnglish-Portuguese (Brazil) dictionary > pull a face / faces (at)
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115 quaint
[kweint](pleasantly odd or strange, especially because of being old-fashioned: quaint customs.) singular- quaintly- quaintness -
116 queer
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117 quirk
[kwə:k](a strange or unusual feature of a person's behaviour etc.) peculiaridade -
118 rational
1) (able to think, reason and judge etc: Man is a rational animal.) racional2) (sensible; reasonable; logical; not (over-) influenced by emotions etc: There must be a rational explanation for those strange noises) sensato•- rationality -
119 rig out
to dress: She was rigged out in rather odd clothes (noun rig-out: She was wearing a strange rig-out) vestir -
120 strangely enough
(it is strange (that): He lives next door, but strangely enough I rarely see him.) por estranho que pareça
См. также в других словарях:
strânge — STRẤNGE, strâng, vb. III. I. 1. tranz. A trage tare de capetele unei sfori, ale unei curele etc. înnodate sau înfăşurate în jurul cuiva sau a ceva, spre a lega ori a închide, a fixa etc. (mai) bine; a face ca o legătură să fie mai strâmtă. ♢ expr … Dicționar Român
Strange — Strange, a. [Compar. {Stranger}; superl. {Strangest}.] [OE. estrange, F. [ e]trange, fr. L. extraneus that is without, external, foreign, fr. extra on the outside. See {Extra}, and cf. {Estrange}, {Extraneous}.] 1. Belonging to another country;… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Strange — may refer to:* Strange (surname), a family name * Strange, Ontario, Canada * Strange (TV series), a British programme * Strange quark, an elementary particleIn comics: * Strange (comic), a comic book limited series by Marvel Comics * Strange… … Wikipedia
strange´ly — strange «straynj», adjective, strang|er, strang|est, adverb. –adj. 1. unusual; odd; queer; peculiar: »a strange accident. What a str … Useful english dictionary
Strange — bezeichnet einen Quark Flavour, Quark (Physik)#Strange Quark Strange ist der Familienname folgender Personen: Alf Strange (1900–1978), englischer Fußballspieler Allen Strange (1943–2008), US amerikanischer Komponist, Musiktheoretiker und Musiker… … Deutsch Wikipedia
Strange — Título Strange Ficha técnica Dirección Anton Corbijn Producción Richard Bell Datos y cifras … Wikipedia Español
strange — strange, *singular, unique, peculiar, eccentric, erratic, odd, queer, quaint, outlandish, curious can mean varying from what is ordinary, usual, and to be expected. Strange, the most comprehensive of these terms, suggests unfamiliarity; it may… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
strange — [strānj] adj. stranger, strangest [ME < OFr estrange < L extraneus, EXTRANEOUS] 1. of another place or locality; foreign; alien 2. not previously known, seen, heard, or experienced; unfamiliar 3. quite unusual or uncommon; extraordinary 4.… … English World dictionary
Strange — Strange, adv. Strangely. [Obs.] [1913 Webster] Most strange, but yet most truly, will I speak. Shak. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
strange — strange·ly; strange; strange·ness; … English syllables
strange — ► ADJECTIVE 1) unusual or surprising. 2) not previously visited, seen, or encountered. 3) (strange to/at/in) archaic unaccustomed to or unfamiliar with. 4) Physics denoting one of the six flavours of quark. DERIVATIVES strangely adverb … English terms dictionary