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1 through
adj. doorgaand--------adv. door; stap voor stap tot het eind--------prep. door1 doorgaand ⇒ doorlopend, ononderbroken♦voorbeelden:through passengers • passagiers op doorreisthrough train • doorgaande treinno through road • geen doorgaand verkeer————————♦voorbeelden:get through • erdoorheen komen, slagen; weten over te brengenI will put you through • ik zal u doorverbindensee something through • ergens van begin tot eind bijblijven→ be through be through/, come through come through/ etc.————————1 〈 aanduiding van richting, weg of medium; ook figuurlijk〉 (helemaal) door ⇒ via, langs, over, gedurende♦voorbeelden:did my application get through the board? • is mijn aanvraag door de raad aanvaard?seen through a child's eyes • gezien met de ogen van een kindhe peered through his glasses • hij tuurde door zijn brilget through one's exams • slagen voor zijn examenall through his life • gedurende heel zijn levenI could not speak through the noise • ik kon het lawaai niet overstemmenhe remained calm through the whole trial • hij bleef kalm gedurende heel het proceshe stayed through the summer • hij bleef tot het einde van de zomerwe get our information through the papers • we ontvangen onze informatie via de krantenhe spoke through his representative • hij sprak via zijn vertegenwoordiger
См. также в других словарях:
the old bill — the (old) bill british informal phrase the police Thesaurus: general words for the policehyponym Main entry: bill … Useful english dictionary
the Old Bill — n British the police. A working class London term which slowly entered common currency during the 1970s, partly owing to tele vision police dramas. The term s origins are obscure. It seems to have passed from Bill or Old Bill , a mock affec… … Contemporary slang
(the) Old Bill — British, informal, old fashioned the police. The Old Bill was round here yesterday, asking where you were … New idioms dictionary
Bill, the Bill, the Old Bill — n British the police. A working class London term which slowly entered common currency during the 1970s, partly owing to tele vision police dramas. The term s origins are obscure. It seems to have passed from Bill or Old Bill , a mock affec… … Contemporary slang
the Bill or the Old Bill — [treated as sing. or plural] Brit. informal the police. → Bill … English new terms dictionary
(the) old bill — Noun. The police. Often shortened to the bill . 1950s … English slang and colloquialisms
(the) old bill — Noun. The police. Often shortened to the bill . 1950s … English slang and colloquialisms
Old Bill — n [Date: 1900 2000; Origin: Perhaps from Old Bill complaining old soldier in cartoons by Bruce Bairnsfather (1888 1959)] the Old Bill BrE informal the police … Dictionary of contemporary English
Old Bill's Fun Run for Charities — Date Second Saturday in September Location Jackson, Wyoming Distance 10K, 5K, 5K Youth Beneficiary All Jackson Hole Nonprofit Organizations Established … Wikipedia
Old Bill (cartoon character) — Old Bill Old Bill [1] Comic strip(s) Fragments from France Creator(s) Bruce Bairnsf … Wikipedia
Old Bill and Son — is a 1941 British, black and white, comedy, war film, directed by Ian Dalrymple and starring Morland Graham, John Mills, Mary Clare and Ronald Shiner as Herbert Bert Smith.[1] It was produced by Legeran Films. Contents 1 Synopsis … Wikipedia