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1 batinati
• bludgeon; cane; chastise; club; drub; flagellate; flog; swinge; swinge off; thump; thwack; towel; trounce; welt; whack; whang; whip -
2 bičevati
• flagellate; flog; lash; scourge; slash; swinge; swinge off; switch; welt; whip; winge -
3 izbatinati
• bludgeon; cane; club; cudgel; drub; pay; pepper; swinge; swinge off; thwack; towel; welt; whack; whip -
4 opaučiti
• have a shy at; slog; strike out; strikeout; swinge; swinge off; take a shy at -
5 tući
• bash; beat; belabour; chastice; curry; ding; flog; knuckle; mill; overthrow; search out; swinge; swinge off; thrash; thresh; thump; trounce; wallop; whack; whop -
6 kazniti
• amerce; assess; avange; castigate; chasten; chastice; chastise; deliver; discipline; execute; gave; given; mulct; pay; penalize; punish; scourge; swinge; tar out; tickle; vindicate; visit -
7 kažnjavati
• k; penalize; punish; scourge; swinge -
8 šibati
• chastise; driving belt; flagellate; flog; lash; scourge; slash; swinge off; thwack; whang; whip
См. также в других словарях:
Swinge — Swinge, n. 1. The sweep of anything in motion; a swinging blow; a swing. [Obs.] Waller. [1913 Webster] 2. Power; sway; influence. [Obs.] [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Swinge — (sw[i^]nj), v. & n. See {Singe}. [Obs.] Spenser. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Swinge — Swinge, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Swinged} (sw[i^]njd); p. pr. & vb. n. {Swingeing} (sw[i^]nj [i^]ng).] [OE. swengen, AS. swengan to shake, causative of swingan. See {Swing}.] 1. To beat soundly; to whip; to chastise; to punish. [1913 Webster] I had… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
swinge — swinge; swinge·ing; … English syllables
swinge — [swinj] vt. swinged, swingeing [ME swengen < OE swengan, caus. of swingan, to SWING] Archaic to punish with blows; beat; whip … English World dictionary
swinge — 1. verb a) To lash. Sir Feeble: Tis jelousy, the old worm that bites. [To Sir Cautious] Whom is it that you suspect. b) To strike hard. Sir Cautious: Alas I know not whom to suspect, I would I did; but if you discover him, I would swinge him. 2.… … Wiktionary
swinge — [[t]swɪndʒ[/t]] v. t. swinged, swinge•ing brit. brit. dial. to thrash; punish • Etymology: 1250–1300; ME swengen to shake, smite, OE swengan … From formal English to slang
swinge-buckler — swingeˈ buckler noun (obsolete) A swashbuckler • • • Main Entry: ↑swinge … Useful english dictionary
swinge´ing|ly — swinge|ing «SWIHN jihng», adjective. Informal. very forcible, strong, or large of its kind: »He and his editor are swiftly haled before the bench and swingeing penalties…are demanded (Punch). –swinge´ing|ly, adverb … Useful english dictionary
swinge|ing — «SWIHN jihng», adjective. Informal. very forcible, strong, or large of its kind: »He and his editor are swiftly haled before the bench and swingeing penalties…are demanded (Punch). –swinge´ing|ly, adverb … Useful english dictionary
swinge — I. transitive verb (swinged; swingeing) Etymology: Middle English swengen to shake, from Old English swengan; akin to Old English swingan Date: 12th century chiefly dialect beat, scourge II. transitive verb (swinged; swin … New Collegiate Dictionary