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1 hit
[hɪt] present participle ˈhitting: past tense, past participle hit1. verb1) to (cause or allow to) come into hard contact with:He hit his head on/against a low branch
يَضرُبThat boxer can certainly hit hard!
2) to make hard contact with (something), and force or cause it to move in some direction:يَصْدُم، يَصْطَدِمThe batsman hit the ball (over the wall).
3) to cause to suffer:يُسبب المُعاناه، يَضْرُب، يصيب بHer husband's death hit her hard.
4) to find; to succeed in reaching:يجد، ينجَح في الوُصول إلىShe used to be a famous soprano but she cannot hit the high notes now.
2. noun1) the act of hitting:ضَرْب، إصابَهThat was a good hit.
نُقْطَه، هَدَفHe scored five hits.
3) something which is popular or successful:The play/record is a hit
ضَربة ناجِحَه، عمل ناجِح( also adjective) a hit song.
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2 hit
نَجَاح \ hit: a success: That new song became a hit immediately. success: doing what one has planned to do; sth. or sb. that succeeds; an act of getting what one wants: She was a great success as a writer. He had no success in the exam. -
3 hit
ضَرْبَة تصيب الهدف \ hit: a correctly aimed blow or shot: The player made two hits and three misses. The Bomb was a direct hit. \ مُوَفّقِيّة \ hit: a success: That new song became a hit immediately. \ See Also نجاح (نجاح) -
4 hit on, or upon
عَثَرَ على \ come across: to find or meet by chance: I came across this old book in the market. discover: to find, esp. by chance: I discovered a snake under my bed. I never discovered who she was. find (found): to discover by chance: Did you find that old shoe in the road?. hit on, or upon: to find by chance: I hit upon a new way of saving money. lay hands on: to be able to find: I have a key, but I can’t lay hands on it just now. locate: to find sth. in a certain place (esp. on a map): The church is easily located by its high tower. strike: to find (by search or thought): We struck oil in the desert. I struck upon a new way of making soap. -
5 HÍT
f. skin-bag.* * *f. a scrip or bag made of the skin of a beast, Sd. 157, Fb. i. 220, Grett.: as a nickname, Fb. iii: metaph. a vast belly, Ísl. Þjóðs. i. 612: the name of a giantess, Bárð.: the local names Hítar-dalr, Hítar-nes (Landn.) were still at the beginning of this century in that neighbourhood sounded Hitar-dalr, Hitar-nes, with a short i, the original form being Hitár-dalr, Hitár-nes, the dale and ness of the Hot river (a volcanic river), opp. to Kaldá, the Cold river, in the same county. The derivation from a giantess Hít is a mere fiction, and not older than the Bárðar S. Hítnesingr, m. one from Hitarnes, Sturl. -
6 Hit for a six
ruined, e.g. I had planned to go to Murree for the weekend, but the blizzard hit that idea for a six. Also seen in Indian and Sri Lankan English. Pakistani EnglishIभारतीय अंग्रेजी खिचड़ी (Indian-English slang) > Hit for a six
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7 hit
E-coma measure of the number of files or images that are sent to a browser from a Web site in response to a single request.The measure is one of the most abused statistics on the Internet, as hits do not provide an accurate picture of Web site visitor activity. Every Web page is made up of a number of components—graphics, text, programming elements—and many have anything from 10 to 20 components. Each component is counted as a hit. Therefore, the total number of hits is generally very high and bears little or no relation to the number of people visiting. -
8 make a hit with
to make oneself liked or approved of by:يُحْرِزُ نجاحا، يُحَبِّبُ نَفْسَهThat young man has made a hit with your daughter.
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9 smash hit
a song, show etc that is a great success:نَجاح ساحِق لأغْنِيَةٍ جَديدَهThis play was a smash hit in New York.
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10 împotriva ta se îndreaptă aluzia / atacul / ironia
that's a hit at you.Română-Engleză dicționar expresii > împotriva ta se îndreaptă aluzia / atacul / ironia
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11 это в твой адрес
that's a hit/dig at you -
12 ez nem nekem szólt!
that's a hit at you -
13 ezt jól megkaptad!
that's a hit at you! -
14 ezt nem nekem mondták!
that's a hit at you -
15 sitzen
v/i; sitzt, saß, hat oder bes. südd., österr., schw. ist gesessen1. (hat oder ist) sit; am Steuer / im Sattel sitzen sit ( oder be seated) at the (steering) wheel / in the saddle; von morgens bis abends im Auto sitzen spend the whole day sitting in the car; sitz! zum Hund: sit!; bei jemandem sitzen sit beside ( oder next to, with) s.o.; sitzen Sie bequem? are you comfortable?; zu viel sitzen spend too much time sitting (on one’s backside umg.); das viele Sitzen ist nicht gut für dich all this sitting is bad for you; ich war ganz steif vom vielen Sitzen I was really stiff from all that sitting; etw. im Sitzen tun do s.th. sitting down; er sitzt auf seinem Geld umg., fig. he’s sitting on his money; sag mal, sitzt du auf den Ohren? umg., fig. are you deaf?, Am. auch have you got beans in your ears?2. (hat oder ist) (sein) sit, be; lieber zu Hause sitzen prefer to sit ( oder stay) at home; beim Essen sitzen be having one’s dinner ( oder lunch); beim Arzt sitzen umg. be at the doctor’s; im Gefängnis sitzen be in jail (clink umg.); siehe 5; den ganzen Tag in der Kneipe sitzen sit around in the pub all day; stundenlang vor dem Fernseher sitzen spend hours (sitting) in front of the television; stärker: be glued to the television for hours umg.; ich habe lange daran gesessen I spent a lot of time on it; über den Büchern sitzen sit (poring) over one’s books; sie sitzt immer noch an ihren Hausaufgaben she’s still doing her homework; sitzen in (+ Dat) Firma etc.: have its headquarters in; im Parlament sitzen have a seat in Parliament, Brit. auch be an MP ( oder a Member of Parliament); im Stadtrat sitzen be on the (town oder city) council; im Ausschuss sitzen be on the committee; sie sitzen immer noch they’re still in the meeting3. (hat) Kleidung: (passen) fit; (richtig angezogen sein) be on properly; deine Krawatte sitzt nicht richtig your tie’s not straight; dein Hut sitzt schief your hat’s not on straight, your hat’s crooked5. (hat) umg. im Gefängnis: do time; er saß sechs Monate wegen Diebstahl(s) he did six months for theft; er hat sein halbes Leben lang gesessen he’s spent half his life in jail6. (hat) umg. (treffen) find the target; bes. fig. go ( oder hit) home; das hat gesessen! that went ( oder hit) home; jeder Schuss / Schlag sitzt every shot / blow finds its target; bei ihm sitzt jeder Handgriff he knows exactly what he’s doing; jede Pointe saß every punch line went home7. (hat oder ist) fig. (stecken); wo sitzt der Schmerz? where does it hurt exactly?; da sitzt der Fehler! that’s where the problem lies; die Angst / der Hass sitzt tief the fear / hatred runs oder goes deep; mir sitzt der Schreck noch in den Gliedern I’m still shaking with fright; einen sitzen haben umg. have had one too many8. (hat) fig. gespr. ( im Gedächtnis) sitzen have sunk in; die Vokabeln sitzen gut / schlecht he etc. knows his etc. vocabulary off pat, Am. he’s etc. got his etc. vocabulary down pat / his etc. vocabulary’s shaky, he etc. needs to work on his etc. vocabulary; das sitzt noch nicht richtig it hasn’t quite sunk in yet9. (ist): sitzen bleiben remain ( oder stay) seated; umg. beim Tanz: be left without a partner, be a wallflower; (nicht geheiratet werden) be left on the shelf; bleiben Sie sitzen! don’t get up; im Theater etc.: stay in your seat(s); sitzen bleiben PÄD. have to repeat a year, Brit. auch stay down, Am. auch flunk umg.; er ist dreimal sitzen geblieben he had to repeat the class (Brit. auch stay down) three times all told; auf etw. sitzen bleiben be left with ( oder stuck with) s.th.10. (hat): sitzen lassen umg. leave, desert, walk out on; (Freund[in]) leave, walk out on, jilt; (versetzen) stand s.o. up; (im Stich lassen) let s.o. down, leave s.o. in the lurch; sie ließ ihn einfach sitzen (versetzte ihn) auch she just didn’t turn up; er hat sie mit drei Kindern sitzen lassen he walked out on her and three children, he left her to bring up three children on her own; einen Vorwurf etc. nicht auf sich (Dat) sitzen lassen not stand for ( oder take); das lasse ich nicht auf mir sitzen auch I’m not going to take that lying down; dass du so etwas auf dir sitzen lässt! I’m amazed that you would stand for that11. (ist) schw. (sich setzen) sit down; Patsche, Tinte etc.* * *(passen) to fit;(sich befinden) to sit; to be* * *sịt|zen ['zɪtsn] pret sa\#ß [zaːs] ptp gese\#ssen [gə'zɛsn]1) (Mensch, Tier) to sit; (Vogel) to perchauf der Toilette sitzen — to be on (inf) or in the toilet
beim Frühstück/Mittagessen sitzen — to be having breakfast/lunch
beim Wein/Schach sitzen — to sit over a glass of wine/a game of chess
an einer Aufgabe/über den Büchern/über einer Arbeit sitzen — to sit over a task/one's books/a piece of work
See:→ auch sitzen bleiben2) (= Modell sitzen) to sit (jdm for sb)3) (= seinen Sitz haben) (Regierung, Gericht etc) to sit; (Firma) to have its headquarters4) (= Mitglied sein) (im Parlament) to have a seat (in +dat in); (im Vorstand, Aufsichtsrat etc) to be or sit ( in +dat on)5) (inf = im Gefängnis sitzen) to be inside (inf)gesessen haben — to have done time (inf), to have been inside (inf)
6) (= sein) to beer sitzt in Bulgarien/im Kultusministerium (inf) — he's in Bulgaria/the ministry of culture
er sitzt im Gefängnis (inf) — he's in prison
7) (=angebracht sein Deckel, Schraube etc) to sit8) (= stecken) to be (stuck)9) (= im Gedächtnis sitzen) to have sunk in10) (= seinen Herd haben) (Infektion, Schmerz) to be; (fig Übel, Hass, Schmerz) to lie, to be11) (Kleid, Frisur) to sit12) (inf = treffen) to hit homedas saß!, das hat gesessen! — that hit home
13)einen sitzen haben (inf) — to have had one too many (inf)
* * *1) ((of birds) to perch: An owl was sitting in the tree by the window.) sit2) (to take up a position, or act as a model, in order to have one's picture painted or one's photograph taken: She is sitting for a portrait/photograph.) sit3) ((of a blow, insult etc) to reach the place where it will hurt most.) strike home* * *sit·zen<saß, gesessen>[ˈzɪtsn̩]wir saßen auf Barhockern und tranken ein Bier we perched on bar stools and had a beersitz! (Befehl an Hund) sit![bitte] bleib/bleiben Sie \sitzen! [please] don't get up, [please] remain seated form▪ im S\sitzen when seated, sitting down, in/from a sitting positionbequem/gut \sitzen to be comfortable [or sitting comfortably]sitzt du bequem? are you comfortable?eine \sitzende Lebensweise a sedentary lifejdm Modell \sitzen to sit for sb2. (sich befinden) to sitsie sitzt noch bei Tisch (form) she is still eating [or having her meal]er sitzt den ganzen Tag vor dem Fernseher/in der Kneipe (fam) he spends the whole day sitting in front of the telly/in the pub BRIT famich habe stundenlang beim Zahnarzt \sitzen müssen I had to spend hours at the dentist'ssie sitzt jetzt in einem kleinen Dorf (fam) she's living in a small village nower sitzt in Moskau und hat kein Geld für die Rückfahrt (fam) he's stuck in Moscow and has no money for a return ticketauf der Anklagebank \sitzen to be in the dockbeim Frühstück/Mittagessen \sitzen to be having breakfast/lunchbei einem Glas Wein/einer Tasse Kaffee \sitzen to sit over a glass of wine/a cup of coffeebeim Kartenspiel/Schach \sitzen to sit playing cards/over a game of chessim Sattel \sitzen to be in the saddleauf der Toilette \sitzen to be on the toiletsie sitzt viel über den Büchern she spends a lot of time sitting over her booksan einer Arbeit \sitzen to sit over a piece of work4. JUR, POL (tagen) Gericht, Regierung to sit5. (angehören)sie sitzt in einigen Ausschüssen she sits on a number of committeeser sitzt im Verteidigungsministerium he's in the Ministry of Defence BRIT [or AM Department of Defense]im Parlament/Vorstand \sitzen to have a seat in parliament/on the management boardin der Regierung \sitzen to be with the governmenter musste vier Jahre \sitzen he had to do four years famgesessen haben to have done time [or been inside] fam▪ irgendwo \sitzen Firma, Gesellschaft etc. to have its headquarters somewheredas Unternehmen sitzt in München the company is based [or has its headquarters] in Munich8. (befestigt sein) to beder Knopf sitzt an der falschen Stelle the button isn't in the right placedie Tür sitzt schief in den Angeln the door is not hanging straight9. (stecken)der Splitter sitzt fest in meinem Zeh the splinter won't come out of my toeihr sitzt der Schreck noch in den Gliedern (fig) her knees are still like jellyfest \sitzen to be stuck tight[ly]der Deckel/die Schraube sitzt ziemlich fest the lid is on/the screw is in rather tightly10. (Passform haben) Kleidung to fitdas Jackett sitzt gut the jacket fits wellsitzt die Fliege korrekt? is my bow tie straight?dein Hut sitzt schief your hat is [on] crookedeng/locker \sitzend close-/loose-fittingihr Hass saß tief (fig) she felt nothing but hatreddas hat gesessen! that hit home!13. SCH[in Mathe/Englisch] \sitzen bleiben (fam) to [have to] repeat a year [in maths [or AM math]/English], to stay down [a year] [in maths/English] BRITjdn \sitzen lassen (fam) to keep sb down [or hold sb back] [a year]sie sitzt auf ihrem Geld she's very tight with her money famdu musst die Vokabeln so oft wiederholen, bis sie \sitzen you must keep on repeating the vocab till it sticks famsie hatte so lange geübt, bis jeder Schritt wie im Schlafe saß she had practised till she could do every step in her sleep17.▶ \sitzen bleiben (pej fam: als Frau unverheiratet) to be left on the shelf; (beim Tanz) to be left sitting▶ jdm auf den Fersen \sitzen to be on sb's tail▶ jdn \sitzen lassen (fam: im Stich lassen) to leave sb in the lurch; (versetzen) to stand sb up fam; (nicht heiraten) to jilt [or walk out on] sber hat Frau und Kinder \sitzen lassen he left his wife and childrendas lasse ich nicht auf mir \sitzen I won't take [or stand for] that* * *unregelmäßiges intransitives Verb; südd., österr., schweiz. mit sein1) sitbleiben Sie bitte sitzen — please don't get up; please remain seated
er saß den ganzen Tag in der Kneipe — he spent the whole day in the pub (Brit.) or (Amer.) bar
jemandem auf der Pelle od. dem Pelz sitzen — (salopp) keep bothering somebody; keep on at somebody (coll.)
2) (sein) beeinen sitzen haben — (salopp) have had one too many
3) ([gut] passen) fit4) (ugs.): (gut eingeübt sein)Lektionen so oft wiederholen, bis sie sitzen — keep on repeating lessons till they stick (coll.)
5) (ugs.): (wirksam treffen) hit home6) (Mitglied sein) be, sit (in + Dat. on)8)sitzen bleiben — (ugs.) ( nicht versetzt werden) stay down [a year]; have to repeat a year; (abwertend): (als Frau unverheiratet bleiben) be left on the shelf
auf etwas (Dat.) sitzen bleiben — (etwas nicht loswerden) be left or (coll.) stuck with something
jemanden sitzen lassen — (ugs.): (nicht heiraten) jilt somebody; (ugs.): (im Stich lassen) leave somebody in the lurch
er hat Frau und Kinder sitzen lassen — od. (seltener:)
•• Cultural note:etwas nicht auf sich (Dat.) sitzen lassen — not take something; not stand for something
If German pupils fail more than one subject in their end-of-year school report, they have to repeat the year. This is colloquially referred to as sitzen bleiben, and it means that some pupils do not manage to sit their Abitur until they are 20* * *1. (hat oder ist) sit;am Steuer/im Sattel sitzen sit ( oder be seated) at the (steering) wheel/in the saddle;von morgens bis abends im Auto sitzen spend the whole day sitting in the car;sitz! zum Hund: sit!;bei jemandem sitzen sit beside ( oder next to, with) sb;sitzen Sie bequem? are you comfortable?;zu viel sitzen spend too much time sitting (on one’s backside umg);das viele Sitzen ist nicht gut für dich all this sitting is bad for you;ich war ganz steif vom vielen Sitzen I was really stiff from all that sitting;etwas im Sitzen tun do sth sitting down;er sitzt auf seinem Geld umg, fig he’s sitting on his money;sag mal, sitzt du auf den Ohren? umg, fig are you deaf?, US auch have you got beans in your ears?2. (hat oder ist) (sein) sit, be;lieber zu Hause sitzen prefer to sit ( oder stay) at home;beim Essen sitzen be having one’s dinner ( oder lunch);beim Arzt sitzen umg be at the doctor’s;den ganzen Tag in der Kneipe sitzen sit around in the pub all day;stundenlang vor dem Fernseher sitzen spend hours (sitting) in front of the television; stärker: be glued to the television for hours umg;ich habe lange daran gesessen I spent a lot of time on it;über den Büchern sitzen sit (poring) over one’s books;sie sitzt immer noch an ihren Hausaufgaben she’s still doing her homework;sitzen in (+dat) Firma etc: have its headquarters in;im Stadtrat sitzen be on the (town oder city) council;im Ausschuss sitzen be on the committee;sie sitzen immer noch they’re still in the meetingdeine Krawatte sitzt nicht richtig your tie’s not straight;dein Hut sitzt schief your hat’s not on straight, your hat’s crooked4. (hat) Modell: sit (jemandem for sb)5. (hat) umg im Gefängnis: do time;er saß sechs Monate wegen Diebstahl(s) he did six months for theft;er hat sein halbes Leben lang gesessen he’s spent half his life in jaildas hat gesessen! that went ( oder hit) home;jeder Schuss/Schlag sitzt every shot/blow finds its target;bei ihm sitzt jeder Handgriff he knows exactly what he’s doing;jede Pointe saß every punch line went home7. (hat oder ist) fig (stecken);wo sitzt der Schmerz? where does it hurt exactly?;da sitzt der Fehler! that’s where the problem lies;die Angst/der Hass sitzt tief the fear/hatred runs oder goes deep;mir sitzt der Schreck noch in den Gliedern I’m still shaking with fright;einen sitzen haben umg have had one too many8. (hat) fig gespr(im Gedächtnis) sitzen have sunk in;die Vokabeln sitzen gut/schlecht he etc knows his etc vocabulary off pat, US he’s etc got his etc vocabulary down pat/his etc vocabulary’s shaky, he etc needs to work on his etc vocabulary;das sitzt noch nicht richtig it hasn’t quite sunk in yet9. (ist):sitzen bleiben remain ( oder stay) seated; umg beim Tanz: be left without a partner, be a wallflower; (nicht geheiratet werden) be left on the shelf;bleiben Sie sitzen! don’t get up; im Theater etc: stay in your seat(s);er ist dreimal sitzen geblieben he had to repeat the class (Br auch stay down) three times all told;auf etwas sitzen bleiben be left with ( oder stuck with) sth10. (hat):sitzen lassen umg leave, desert, walk out on; (Freund[in]) leave, walk out on, jilt; (versetzen) stand sb up; (im Stich lassen) let sb down, leave sb in the lurch;sie ließ ihn einfach sitzen (versetzte ihn) auch she just didn’t turn up;er hat sie mit drei Kindern sitzen lassen he walked out on her and three children, he left her to bring up three children on her own;einen Vorwurf etcnicht auf sich (dat)sitzen lassen not stand for ( oder take);das lasse ich nicht auf mir sitzen auch I’m not going to take that lying down;dass du so etwas auf dir sitzen lässt! I’m amazed that you would stand for that* * *unregelmäßiges intransitives Verb; südd., österr., schweiz. mit sein1) sitbleiben Sie bitte sitzen — please don't get up; please remain seated
er saß den ganzen Tag in der Kneipe — he spent the whole day in the pub (Brit.) or (Amer.) bar
jemandem auf der Pelle od. dem Pelz sitzen — (salopp) keep bothering somebody; keep on at somebody (coll.)
2) (sein) beeinen sitzen haben — (salopp) have had one too many
3) ([gut] passen) fit4) (ugs.): (gut eingeübt sein)Lektionen so oft wiederholen, bis sie sitzen — keep on repeating lessons till they stick (coll.)
5) (ugs.): (wirksam treffen) hit home6) (Mitglied sein) be, sit (in + Dat. on)8)sitzen bleiben — (ugs.) ( nicht versetzt werden) stay down [a year]; have to repeat a year; (abwertend): (als Frau unverheiratet bleiben) be left on the shelf
auf etwas (Dat.) sitzen bleiben — (etwas nicht loswerden) be left or (coll.) stuck with something
jemanden sitzen lassen — (ugs.): (nicht heiraten) jilt somebody; (ugs.): (im Stich lassen) leave somebody in the lurch
er hat Frau und Kinder sitzen lassen — od. (seltener:)
•• Cultural note:etwas nicht auf sich (Dat.) sitzen lassen — not take something; not stand for something
If German pupils fail more than one subject in their end-of-year school report, they have to repeat the year. This is colloquially referred to as sitzen bleiben, and it means that some pupils do not manage to sit their Abitur until they are 20* * *v.(§ p.,pp.: saß, gesessen)= to sit v.(§ p.,p.p.: sat) -
16 tener suerte
v.to be lucky, to have good luck, to have luck, to get lucky.* * *to be lucky* * *(v.) = be lucky, count + Posesivo + blessings, get + lucky, strike + gold, hit + the jackpot, strike + lucky, be in for a good thing, come in for + a good thing, be into a good thing, be in luckEx. 'We were lucky you happened to be sitting in your dean's office when I called about the position, and that you could come over for an interview right away'.Ex. The article ' Count your blessings' evaluates the features and performance of 7 log-file analyzers designed to analyze the traffic using World Wide Web (WWW) Web sites.Ex. The article is entitled 'Sports get lucky with lotteries lolly'.Ex. That was a Gold Rush term: the money a miner needed for grub until he struck gold.Ex. Many gamblers dream about the day that they will hit the jackpot.Ex. It's a bit like a lottery -- sometimes you strike lucky and become rich and famous.Ex. The value of shares were steadily rising and we began to hope that we might be in for a good thing at last.Ex. They are the kind who complain of their hard luck when some one else happens to come in for a good thing.Ex. They are plainly and simply greedy people who are into a good thing.Ex. We were in luck in that the cheese was both in season and in stock andwe bought a huge wheel for 11 euros.* * *(v.) = be lucky, count + Posesivo + blessings, get + lucky, strike + gold, hit + the jackpot, strike + lucky, be in for a good thing, come in for + a good thing, be into a good thing, be in luckEx: 'We were lucky you happened to be sitting in your dean's office when I called about the position, and that you could come over for an interview right away'.
Ex: The article ' Count your blessings' evaluates the features and performance of 7 log-file analyzers designed to analyze the traffic using World Wide Web (WWW) Web sites.Ex: The article is entitled 'Sports get lucky with lotteries lolly'.Ex: That was a Gold Rush term: the money a miner needed for grub until he struck gold.Ex: Many gamblers dream about the day that they will hit the jackpot.Ex: It's a bit like a lottery -- sometimes you strike lucky and become rich and famous.Ex: The value of shares were steadily rising and we began to hope that we might be in for a good thing at last.Ex: They are the kind who complain of their hard luck when some one else happens to come in for a good thing.Ex: They are plainly and simply greedy people who are into a good thing.Ex: We were in luck in that the cheese was both in season and in stock and
we bought a huge wheel for 11 euros. -
17 Finger
m; -s, -1. finger (auch des Handschuhs); der kleine Finger the little finger; einen Finger breit / dick / lang the width / thickness / length of a finger, as wide / thick / long as a finger; den Finger an die Lippen legen put one’s finger to one’s lips; einen Ring am Finger tragen wear a ring on one’s finger; mit dem Finger drohen wag one’s finger; mit den Fingern schnippen snap one’s fingers; etw. an den Fingern abzählen können be able to count s.th. on the fingers of one hand; das kannst du dir an den oder fünf Fingern abzählen umg. fig. that’s clear as daylight; was oder eins auf die Finger bekommen oder kriegen umg. get a rap across the knuckles (auch fig.); sich (Dat) in den Finger schneiden cut one’s finger; umg. fig. make a big mistake; sich (Dat) die Finger verbrennen burn one’s fingers (auch umg. fig.); Finger weg! oder lass die Finger davon! umg. hands off!, don’t touch!; fig. don’t you get involved; mit dem Finger zeigen auf (+ Akk) point at ( oder to); fig. point one’s finger at; man zeigt nicht mit dem nackten Finger auf angezogene Leute hum. it’s rude to point (at people); der elfte Finger umg., hum. one’s third leg2. fig.: das sagt mir mein kleiner Finger a little bird told me; etw. im kleinen Finger haben umg. have s.th. at one’s fingertips; das macht sie mit dem kleinen Finger umg. she can do that with her eyes shut; jemanden um den ( kleinen) Finger wickeln umg. twist s.o. (a)round one’s little finger; gibt man ihm den kleinen Finger, nimmt er gleich die ganze Hand give him an inch, and he’ll take (you) a mile; krumme oder lange Finger machen umg. get itchy fingers; mit spitzen Fingern anfassen hold at arm’s length; jemandem auf die Finger klopfen rap s.o.’s knuckles; jemandem auf die Finger sehen oder schauen umg. keep a close eye on s.o.; jemandem durch die Finger schlüpfen oder gehen slip through s.o.’s fingers (Verbrecher etc.: auch clutches); Verbrecher etc.: auch give s.o. the slip; das lasse ich mir nicht durch die Finger gehen umg. I’m not going to let the opportunity slip; jemandem in die Finger geraten oder fallen umg. fall into s.o.’s hands; in oder zwischen die Finger bekommen umg. get hold of, get one’s hands on; der soll mir nur unter die Finger kommen! umg. drohend: just wait till I lay my hands on him!; wenn ich den / die in oder zwischen die Finger kriege! umg. drohend: if I lay my hands on him / her!; seine Finger im Spiel oder drin haben umg. have a hand in it; er hat überall seine Finger im Spiel oder drin umg. he’s got a finger in every pie; keinen Finger rühren oder krümmen oder krumm machen umg. not lift a finger ( für jemanden to help s.o.); er hat keinen Finger gerührt etc. umg. he never once lifted a finger (to help); er macht sich die Finger nicht ( gern) schmutzig umg. he doesn’t like getting his hands dirty; es juckt oder kribbelt mich in den Fingern oder mir jucken die Finger nach dem Haus / ihn zu schlagen umg. I’m longing ( oder dying) for that house / to hit him; ich würde mir die oder alle zehn Finger danach lecken umg. I’d give my right arm for it; ( sich [Dat]) etw. aus den Fingern saugen make s.th. up; den Finger auf die Wunde legen touch on a sore point; sie hat an jedem Finger einen oder zehn umg. she has one for every day of the week* * *der Fingerfinger* * *Fịn|ger ['fɪŋɐ]m -s, -fingermit dem Finger auf jdn/etw zeigen or weisen (geh) — to point to sb/sth
mit Fingern auf jdn zeigen (fig) — to look askance at sb
jdm eins auf die Finger geben — to give sb a rap across the knuckles
jdm was auf die Finger geben — to rap sb across the knuckles
jdm auf die Finger schlagen or hauen or klopfen (lit, fig) — to rap sb's knuckles, to give sb a rap on the knuckles
zwei Finger breit —
keinen Finger breit nachgeben or weichen — not to give an inch → auch Fingerbreit
(nimm/lass die) Finger weg! — (get/keep your) hands off!
nicht die Finger schmutzig machen (lit, fig) — not to get one's hands dirty, not to dirty one's hands
das kann sich jeder an den ( fünf or zehn) Fingern abzählen (inf) — it sticks out a mile (to anybody) (inf)
jdn/etw in die Finger bekommen or kriegen (inf) — to get one's hands on sb/sth, to get hold of sb/sth
bei etw die Finger drinhaben (inf) — to have a hand in sth
er hat überall seine Finger drin (inf) — he has a finger in every pie (inf)
die Finger abschreiben or wund schreiben/wund arbeiten etc — to write/work etc one's fingers to the bone
wenn man ihm/dem Teufel den kleinen Finger gibt, (dann) nimmt er (gleich) die ganze Hand (prov) — give him an inch and he'll take a mile (inf)
lange Finger machen (hum inf) — to be light-fingered
jdm in or zwischen die Finger geraten or fallen — to fall into sb's hands or clutches
die Finger von jdm/etw lassen (inf) — to keep away from sb/sth
die Finger verbrennen — to burn one's fingers in sth, to get one's fingers burned in sth
jdm ( scharf) auf die Finger sehen — to keep an eye or a close eye on sb
etw aus den Fingern saugen — to conjure sth up (inf), to dream sth up
die or alle Finger nach etw lecken (inf) — to be panting or dying for sth (inf)
für jdn keinen Finger rühren — not to lift a finger to help sb
keinen Finger krumm machen (inf) — not to lift a finger (inf)
den Finger auf eine/die Wunde legen — to touch on a sore point
mich or mir juckt es in den Fingern(, etw zu tun) (inf) — I'm itching or dying to ( do sth)
da hast du dich in den Finger geschnitten (inf) — you've made a big mistake
jdn um den kleinen Finger wickeln — to twist sb round one's little finger
etw im kleinen Finger haben (= perfekt beherrschen) (= sicher im Gefühl haben) — to have sth at one's fingertips to have a feel for sth
See:→ spitz* * *der1) (one of the five end parts of the hand, sometimes excluding the thumb: She pointed a finger at the thief.) finger2) (the part of a glove into which a finger is put.) finger* * *Fin·ger<-s, ->[ˈfɪŋɐ]m finger, fingerder kleine \Finger the [or one's] little finger, the [or one's] pinkie fam[nimm/lass die] \Finger weg! [get/take your] hands off!\Finger weg davon! hands off !den \Finger am Abzug haben to hold the triggerjdm mit dem \Finger drohen to wag one's finger at sbden \Finger heben to lift one's fingermit den \Fingern knipsen [o schnippen] to snap one's fingersmit dem \Finger auf jdn/etw zeigen to point [one's finger] at sb/sthdas hättest du dir an den fünf \Fingern abzählen können! a five-year-old could have worked that out! famden Grund kann man sich ja wohl an den \Fingern abzählen the reason is quite obviouswenn ich den in die \Finger kriege! wait till I get my hands on him!da hast du dir aber gründlich in den \Finger geschnitten! you have another think coming! fam▶ einen/eine [o zehn] an jedem \Finger haben (hum fam) to have a woman/man for every day of the week▶ jdn [o jdm] juckt [o zuckt] es in den \Fingern[, etw zu tun] (fam) sb is dying [or itching] to do sth fam▶ wenn man ihm den kleinen \Finger gibt, [dann] nimmt er [gleich] die ganze Hand (prov) give him an inch and he'll take a mile prov▶ etw mit dem kleinen \Finger machen [o im kleinen \Finger haben] (fam) to do sth with one's eyes shut fig▶ jdm auf die \Finger klopfen (fam) to give sb a rap across [or on] the knuckles fig, to rap sb's knuckles figandre lecken sich nach so einer Chance die \Finger! others would kill for an opportunity like that! fam▶ jdm [scharf] auf die \Finger sehen to keep a watchful eye [or an eye] on sb* * *der; Fingers, Finger1) fingermit dem Finger auf jemanden/etwas zeigen — (auch fig.) point one's finger at somebody/something
2) (fig.)wenn man ihm den kleinen Finger reicht, nimmt er gleich die ganze Hand — if you give him an inch he takes a mile
die Finger davonlassen/von etwas lassen — (ugs.) steer clear of it/of something
sie macht keinen Finger krumm — (ugs.) she never lifts a finger
lange Finger machen — (ugs.) get itchy fingers
ich würde mir alle [zehn] Finger danach lecken — (ugs.) I'd give my eye-teeth for it
die Finger in etwas (Dat.) /im Spiel haben — (ugs.) have a hand in something/have one's finger in the pie
sich (Dat.) die Finger verbrennen — (ugs.) burn one's fingers (fig.)
sich (Dat.) die Finger schmutzig machen — get one's hands dirty
sich (Dat.) etwas an den [fünf od. zehn] Fingern abzählen können — be able to see something straight away
jemandem auf die Finger klopfen — (ugs.) rap somebody across the knuckles
ihm od. ihn juckt es in den Fingern [, etwas zu tun] — (ugs.) he is itching [to do something]
wenn ich den in die Finger kriege! — (ugs.) wait till I get my hands on him (coll.)
jemanden um den [kleinen] Finger wickeln — (ugs.) wrap somebody round one's little finger
* * *1. finger (auch des Handschuhs);der kleine Finger the little finger;einen Finger breit/dick/lang the width/thickness/length of a finger, as wide/thick/long as a finger;den Finger an die Lippen legen put one’s finger to one’s lips;einen Ring am Finger tragen wear a ring on one’s finger;mit dem Finger drohen wag one’s finger;mit den Fingern schnippen snap one’s fingers;etwas an den Fingern abzählen können be able to count sth on the fingers of one hand;fünf Fingern abzählen umg fig that’s clear as daylight;sich (dat)in den Finger schneiden cut one’s finger; umg fig make a big mistake;sich (dat)die Finger verbrennen burn one’s fingers (auch umg fig);Finger weg! oderlass die Finger davon! umg hands off!, don’t touch!; fig don’t you get involved;man zeigt nicht mit dem nackten Finger auf angezogene Leute hum it’s rude to point (at people);der elfte Finger umg, hum one’s third leg2. fig:das sagt mir mein kleiner Finger a little bird told me;etwas im kleinen Finger haben umg have sth at one’s fingertips;das macht sie mit dem kleinen Finger umg she can do that with her eyes shut;jemanden um den (kleinen) Finger wickeln umg twist sb (a)round one’s little finger;gibt man ihm den kleinen Finger, nimmt er gleich die ganze Hand give him an inch, and he’ll take (you) a mile;lange Finger machen umg get itchy fingers;mit spitzen Fingern anfassen hold at arm’s length;jemandem auf die Finger klopfen rap sb’s knuckles;schauen umg keep a close eye on sb;gehen slip through sb’s fingers (Verbrecher etc: auch clutches); Verbrecher etc: auch give sb the slip;das lasse ich mir nicht durch die Finger gehen umg I’m not going to let the opportunity slip;fallen umg fall into sb’s hands;in oderzwischen die Finger bekommen umg get hold of, get one’s hands on;wenn ich den/die in oderzwischen die Finger kriege! umg drohend: if I lay my hands on him/her!;drin haben umg have a hand in it;drin umg he’s got a finger in every pie;krumm machen umg not lift a finger (für jemanden to help sb);er hat keinen Finger gerührt etc umg he never once lifted a finger (to help);mir jucken die Finger nach dem Haus/ihn zu schlagen umg I’m longing ( oder dying) for that house/to hit him;(sich [dat])etwas aus den Fingern saugen make sth up;den Finger auf die Wunde legen touch on a sore point;zehn umg she has one for every day of the week* * *der; Fingers, Finger1) fingermit dem Finger auf jemanden/etwas zeigen — (auch fig.) point one's finger at somebody/something
2) (fig.)wenn man ihm den kleinen Finger reicht, nimmt er gleich die ganze Hand — if you give him an inch he takes a mile
die Finger davonlassen/von etwas lassen — (ugs.) steer clear of it/of something
sie macht keinen Finger krumm — (ugs.) she never lifts a finger
lange Finger machen — (ugs.) get itchy fingers
ich würde mir alle [zehn] Finger danach lecken — (ugs.) I'd give my eye-teeth for it
die Finger in etwas (Dat.) /im Spiel haben — (ugs.) have a hand in something/have one's finger in the pie
sich (Dat.) die Finger verbrennen — (ugs.) burn one's fingers (fig.)
sich (Dat.) die Finger schmutzig machen — get one's hands dirty
sich (Dat.) etwas an den [fünf od. zehn] Fingern abzählen können — be able to see something straight away
jemandem auf die Finger klopfen — (ugs.) rap somebody across the knuckles
sich (Dat.) etwas aus den Fingern saugen — (ugs.) make something up
ihm od. ihn juckt es in den Fingern [, etwas zu tun] — (ugs.) he is itching [to do something]
wenn ich den in die Finger kriege! — (ugs.) wait till I get my hands on him (coll.)
jemanden um den [kleinen] Finger wickeln — (ugs.) wrap somebody round one's little finger
* * *- m.finger n. -
18 aparecerse la virgen
(v.) = land on + Posesivo + (own two) feet, strike + lucky, strike + gold, hit + the jackpotEx. He thought he had landed on his feet when he got a job at a large and prestigious firm, but he soon discovered there was more to the job than he imagined.Ex. It's a bit like a lottery -- sometimes you strike lucky and become rich and famous.Ex. That was a Gold Rush term: the money a miner needed for grub until he struck gold.Ex. Many gamblers dream about the day that they will hit the jackpot.* * *(v.) = land on + Posesivo + (own two) feet, strike + lucky, strike + gold, hit + the jackpotEx: He thought he had landed on his feet when he got a job at a large and prestigious firm, but he soon discovered there was more to the job than he imagined.
Ex: It's a bit like a lottery -- sometimes you strike lucky and become rich and famous.Ex: That was a Gold Rush term: the money a miner needed for grub until he struck gold.Ex: Many gamblers dream about the day that they will hit the jackpot. -
19 descubrir una mina de oro
(v.) = strike + gold, hit + the jackpotEx. That was a Gold Rush term: the money a miner needed for grub until he struck gold.Ex. Many gamblers dream about the day that they will hit the jackpot.* * *(v.) = strike + gold, hit + the jackpotEx: That was a Gold Rush term: the money a miner needed for grub until he struck gold.
Ex: Many gamblers dream about the day that they will hit the jackpot. -
20 hacer fortuna
(v.) = make + Posesivo + fortune, make + a fortune, strike + it rich, strike + gold, hit + the jackpotEx. Trading for cash, not credit, Lackington relied on the size of his turnover to make his fortune.Ex. Lester J. V. Halvorsen, a Swedish immigrant who made a fortune in lumber, built the mansion for his Italian bride.Ex. 'Stagecoach robberies', 'shoot-outs', ' striking it rich' these are all typical events associated to the Wild West when men and women from the East went to California searching for gold.Ex. That was a Gold Rush term: the money a miner needed for grub until he struck gold.Ex. Many gamblers dream about the day that they will hit the jackpot.* * *(v.) = make + Posesivo + fortune, make + a fortune, strike + it rich, strike + gold, hit + the jackpotEx: Trading for cash, not credit, Lackington relied on the size of his turnover to make his fortune.
Ex: Lester J. V. Halvorsen, a Swedish immigrant who made a fortune in lumber, built the mansion for his Italian bride.Ex: 'Stagecoach robberies', 'shoot-outs', ' striking it rich' these are all typical events associated to the Wild West when men and women from the East went to California searching for gold.Ex: That was a Gold Rush term: the money a miner needed for grub until he struck gold.Ex: Many gamblers dream about the day that they will hit the jackpot.
См. также в других словарях:
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hit one's stride — {v. phr.} 1. To walk or run at your best speed; reach your top speed or game. * /After walking the first mile, Jim was just hitting his stride./ * /The horse began to hit his stride and moved ahead of the other horses in the race./ 2. To do your… … Dictionary of American idioms