-
1 sweat
swet 1. noun(the moisture given out through the skin: He was dripping with sweat after running so far in the heat.) svette2. verb1) (to give out sweat: Vigorous exercise makes you sweat.) svette2) (to work hard: I was sweating (away) at my work from morning till night.) svette over, slite med•- sweater- sweaty
- sweatiness
- a cold sweat Isubst. \/swet\/1) svette2) ( overført) møye, slit, besvær3) svetting, svettebad, svettekur4) ( teknikk e.l.) fuktighet, svetting, svetteprosess, fuktningsprosessbe a bit of a sweat være litt av et slitbe in a cold sweat kaldsvettebe in (all of) a sweat bade i svette ( overført) være svært nervøsbloody sweat ( bibelsk) blodsdråperbreak out in(to) a sweat begynne å svetteby the sweat of one's brow\/face i sitt ansikts sved, med ens eget slitno sweat (spesielt amer., hverdagslig) ingen sak, ikke noe problem• I've climbed that hill. No sweat!jeg har klatret opp det fjellet. Ikke noe problem!an old sweat en gammel kriger, en veteranIIsweat) \/swet\/1) svette, få til å svette2) arbeide hardt, slite3) engste seg• give them a new test on Monday. Let them sweatgi dem en ny prøve på mandag. La dem engste seg4) svette ut, utdunste, utsondre5) ( medisin) sette på svettekur• Dr. Dylan decided to sweat the patientdr. Dylan bestemte seg for å sette pasienten på svettekur6) ( hverdagslig) presse, tyne, plyndre7) ( teknikk e.l.) svette, la svette, la gjære8) skrape svetten av, tørke svetten avsweat blood slite vondt, slite beinhardtsweated labour hardt arbeid (for sultelønn), slavearbeidsweated through gjennomsvettsweat it out slite hardt (uten å gi opp), holde ut til sluttensweat out ( hverdagslig) lide seg gjennomkjempe seg frem til( teknikk e.l.) fordampe, sildre\/dunste ut, sive gjennom, utsondre (amer. hverdagslig) slite vondt, plagessweat out a cold svette ut en forkjølelsesweat over something svette over noesweat workers arbeidere som må slite for føden, utnyttede arbeidere -
2 save
I 1. seiv verb1) (to rescue or bring out of danger: He saved his friend from drowning; The house was burnt but he saved the pictures.) berge, redde2) (to keep (money etc) for future use: He's saving (his money) to buy a bicycle; They're saving for a house.) spare, legge til side3) (to prevent the using or wasting of (money, time, energy etc): Frozen foods save a lot of trouble; I'll telephone and that will save me writing a letter.) spare en for4) (in football etc, to prevent the opposing team from scoring a goal: The goalkeeper saved six goals.) redde (ballen)5) (to free from the power of sin and evil.) frelse6) (to keep data in the computer.) lagre2. noun((in football etc) an act of preventing the opposing team from scoring a goal.) redning- saver- saving
- savings
- saviour
- saving grace
- savings account
- savings bank
- save up II seiv preposition, conjunction(except: All save him had gone; We have no news save that the ship reached port safely.) unntatt, så nær som, bortsett fraberge--------frelse--------redde--------spare--------unntattIsubst. \/seɪv\/( sport) redningIIverb \/seɪv\/1) ( også sport) redde2) berge, bevare, verne, beskytte3) ( religion) frelse4) spare, legge unna, legge til side5) spare (på), legge (seg) opp6) spare (inn), spare seg, spare for, unngå• if you walk to the office, you will save spending money on bus fareshvis du går til jobben, sparer du bussutgifter7) holde av, reservere8) ( EDB) lagre9) nå, rekke, komme tidsnokcannot do something to save one's life kan ikke gjøre noe for alt i livetsave appearances bevare ansiktsaved by the bell reddet av gonggongensave from redde frasave one's bacon ( hverdagslig) redde skinnet, ro seg i landsave one's breath være stille, ikke si noe• please, save your breath for a minute!save oneself redde seg, komme seg unna spare seg, spare på kreftene sinesave one's pain spare seg bryderietsave one's pocket spare pengene sinesave one's skin eller save one's neck redde skinnetsave one's strength spare på kreftene (sine), samle kreftersave something out of the fire redde stumpenesave the best till the last spare det beste til sluttsave the day eller save the situation redde situasjonensave the tide (sjøfart, gammeldags) rekke inn og ut mens det er tidevannsave up for spare til, legge unna tilsave us! (Gud) bevare oss!IIIprep. \/seɪv\/(litterært, poetisk) unntatt, med unntak av, så nær som, bare ikkesave and except unntattsave for bortsett fra, unntatt, så nær somIVkonj. \/seɪv\/ eller save that(litterært, poetisk) unntatt, men, bortsett fra
См. также в других словарях:
sweat — [c]/swɛt / (say swet) verb (sweat or sweated, sweating) –verb (i) 1. to excrete watery fluid through the pores of the skin, as from heat, exertion, etc.; perspire, especially freely or profusely. 2. to exude moisture, as green plants piled in a… …
sweat off — verb lose weight by sweating I sweated off 3 pounds in the sauna • Hypernyms: ↑reduce, ↑melt off, ↑lose weight, ↑slim, ↑slenderize, ↑thin, ↑slim down … Useful english dictionary
sudate — verb excrete perspiration through the pores in the skin Exercise makes one sweat • Syn: ↑sweat, ↑perspire • See Also: ↑sweat off (for: ↑sweat) • … Useful english dictionary
sweat off — verb To lose (weight) by sweating (from heavy exercise, sauna etc.). The shocked Aussie fighters started to sweat off the excess pounds, but competition manager Lenni Gama denied any problem with the scales … Wiktionary
sweat bullets — verb To sweat profusely; especially, to be very nervous or anxious. He was sweating bullets about the exam all week. Syn: shit bricks, sweat blood … Wiktionary
break a sweat — verb a) To start sweating. Are you feeling stronger and more energetic, and even dare I say it breaking a sweat? No, not a pink faced, dripping sweat; nevertheless, a little dewy under the arms and around your forehead b) To put effort into… … Wiktionary
break into sth phrasal — verb (T) 1 STEAL to enter a building by using force, in order to steal something: Thieves broke into the bank vault by digging a tunnel. 2 break into a run/gallop/trot etc to suddenly start running etc: Suzie heard footsteps behind her and broke… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
break out phrasal — verb (I) 1 ESCAPE to escape from a prison or similar place (+ of): a plan to break out of jail see also: breakout 2 WAR/FIRE ETC if something unpleasant such as a fire, war, or disease breaks out, it starts to happen: Several scuffles broke out… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
sweat cobs — Verb. To perspire profusely, to sweat excessively. E.g. With the room temperature at 95 degrees, I was sweating cobs … English slang and colloquialisms
sweat — I. verb (sweat or sweated; sweating) Etymology: Middle English sweten, from Old English swǣtan, from swāt sweat; akin to Old High German sweiz sweat, Latin sudare to sweat, Greek hidrōs sweat Date: before 12th century intransitive verb 1 … New Collegiate Dictionary
sweat — 1 verb 1 LIQUID FROM SKIN (I) to have liquid coming out through your skin, especially because you are hot or frightened: I was sweating after the long climb. | sweat heavily/profusely (=sweat a lot) | sweat like a pig informal (=sweat a lot) |… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English