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1 stray
[strei] 1. verb(to wander, especially from the right path, place etc: The shepherd went to search for some sheep that had strayed; to stray from the point.) zatúlať sa2. noun(a cat, dog etc that has strayed and has no home.) túlavé zviera3. adjective1) (wandering or lost: stray cats and dogs.) zatúlaný2) (occasional, or not part of a general group or tendency: The sky was clear except for one or two stray clouds.) jednotlivý* * *• volne sa pást• zablúdenec• zabehnút sa• zablúdit• vypadaný• zabudnutý• zblúdilý• zatúlaná vec• zatúlaný• zatúlaný kus• zatúlat sa• zíst omylom• zblúdený• stratený• sporadický• stratené dieta• spolocná pastvina• túlavý pes• jednotlivý exemplár• individuálny• bludná duša• blúdit• rušivý• rozsypaný• náhodný• nechcený• odíst• odbehnút• odchýlit sa• odbiehat• odlúcit sa
См. также в других словарях:
stray from — phr verb Stray from is used with these nouns as the object: ↑path … Collocations dictionary
stray — stray1 [streı] v [Date: 1200 1300; : Old French; Origin: estraier, from [i]Vulgar Latin extragare, from Latin extra outside + vagari to wander ] 1.) to move away from the place you should be stray into/onto/from ▪ Three of the soldiers strayed… … Dictionary of contemporary English
stray — 01. We ve been feeding a [stray] cat we found for about a week. 02. Be careful of the [stray] dogs in the village; they could be carrying disease. 03. A young child was attacked and badly injured by a pack of [stray] dogs that have been roaming… … Grammatical examples in English
stray — stray1 [ streı ] verb intransitive * 1. ) to move away from the correct place or path: Hikers are reminded not to stray from the path. The airplane strayed into Chinese airspace. a ) to move away from a particular subject, usually without meaning … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
stray — I UK [streɪ] / US verb [intransitive] Word forms stray : present tense I/you/we/they stray he/she/it strays present participle straying past tense strayed past participle strayed * 1) to move around without thinking She let her hands stray over… … English dictionary
stray — v. (D; intr.) 1) to stray from (to stray from the subject) 2) (d; intr.) to stray into, onto (to stray onto smb. s property) * * * [streɪ] onto (to stray onto smb. s property) (d; intr.) to stray into (D;intr.) to stray from (to stray from the… … Combinatory dictionary
stray — strayer, n. /stray/, v.i. 1. to deviate from the direct course, leave the proper place, or go beyond the proper limits, esp. without a fixed course or purpose; ramble: to stray from the main road. 2. to wander; roam: The new puppy strayed from… … Universalium
stray — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} verb ADVERB ▪ far ▪ The animals hadn t strayed too far. ▪ never, rarely ▪ He never strayed far from his home. ▪ … Collocations dictionary
stray — 1 verb (I) 1 to leave the place where you should be without intending to: a warship that had strayed into enemy waters 2 to begin to deal with a different subject than the main one, without intending to: stray into/onto sth: We re straying into… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
stray — to copulate extramaritally The lust in wanderlust. On its own: She s lonely as well she might be, married to the sodden and straying major. (Atwood, 1996) And in phrases like stray your affection or stray from the hearth: Stray d … How not to say what you mean: A dictionary of euphemisms
stray — [[t]streɪ[/t]] v. i. 1) to deviate from the direct or proper course: to stray from the main road[/ex] 2) to wander; roam: straying from room to room[/ex] 3) to deviate, as from a moral course 4) to become distracted; digress 5) a domestic animal… … From formal English to slang