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there+was+no+trace

  • 1 streak

    [stri:k] 1. noun
    1) (a long, irregular mark or stripe: There was a streak of blood on her cheek; a streak of lightning.) proga
    2) (a trace of some quality in a person's character etc: She has a streak of selfishness.) nadih
    2. verb
    1) (to mark with streaks: Her dark hair was streaked with grey; The child's face was streaked with tears.) zaznamovati s progami
    2) (to move very fast: The runner streaked round the racetrack.) drveti
    * * *
    I [stri:k]
    noun
    proga, črta; (svetlobna) črta ali proga; žila (v lesu); nit (druge barve); chemistry gostina (v steklu); figuratively nadih, mrvica, malce
    like a streak of lightning — kot blisk, bliskovito
    the silver streak figuratively Rokavski preliv
    II [stri:k]
    transitive verb
    obeležiti s progami, narediti proge ali črte; intransitive verb dobiti črte (proge); figuratively hiteti, drveti kot blisk, šiniti, švigniti

    English-Slovenian dictionary > streak

  • 2 suggestion

    [- ən]
    1) (the act of suggesting.) sugestija
    2) (something that is suggested; a proposal or idea: Has anyone any other suggestions to make?; What a clever suggestion!) predlog
    3) (a slight trace or sign: There was a suggestion of boredom in his tone.) kanček
    * * *
    [sədžéščən]
    noun
    predlog, sugestija; domneva, hipoteza; pobuda, nagovarjanje; namig, nasvet; domislek; spominjanje na, predstava, slutnja (of česa); nadih, sled
    full of suggestions — zelo sugestiven, spodbuden
    suggestion box — pisemski nabiralnik (za pritožbe, predloge v podjetjih itd.)

    English-Slovenian dictionary > suggestion

  • 3 suspicion

    [sə'spiʃən]
    1) (the process of suspecting or being suspected; the/a feeling causing a person to suspect: They looked at each other with suspicion; I have a suspicion that she is not telling the truth.) sum
    2) (a slight quantity or trace: There was a suspicion of triumph in his tone.) kanec
    * * *
    [səspíšən]
    1.
    noun
    sum, sumnja, sumničenje; sumljiva okoliščina; nezaupanje, slutnja; majhna količina, malce, malenkost sled
    a suspicion of s.o.sum proti komu
    to cast (to draw) suspicion on s.o. — vreči (obrniti) sum na koga, prikazati koga kot sumljivega;
    2.
    transitive verb American colloquially (za)sumiti ( that da)

    English-Slovenian dictionary > suspicion

См. также в других словарях:

  • trace — trace1 [ treıs ] verb transitive ** 1. ) to find someone or something that you are looking for by asking questions and getting information: Detectives have so far failed to trace the missing woman. trace someone to something: They finally traced… …   Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • trace — trace1 [treıs] v [T] ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(find somebody/something)¦ 2¦(origins)¦ 3¦(history/development)¦ 4¦(copy)¦ 5¦(with your finger)¦ 6 trace a call ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ [Date: 1200 1300; : Old French; Origin: tracier, from Vulgar Latin tractiare to pull , from …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • trace */*/ — I UK [treɪs] / US verb [transitive] Word forms trace : present tense I/you/we/they trace he/she/it traces present participle tracing past tense traced past participle traced 1) a) to find someone or something that you are looking for by asking… …   English dictionary

  • trace — 1 verb (T) 1 FIND SB/STH to find someone or something that has disappeared by searching for them carefully: She had given up all hope of tracing her missing daughter. 2 ORIGINS to find the origins of something, or where something came from: trace …   Longman dictionary of contemporary English

  • trace, vestige — These words refer to something that has existed or gone before. Trace, the more widely used, is derived from Latin tractus, meaning a dragging. It applies to any evidence, such as a footprint, a fragment, or a lingering odor that suggests the… …   Dictionary of problem words and expressions

  • trace — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun 1 mark/sign that shows sb/sth happened/existed ADJECTIVE ▪ archaeological, historical ▪ indelible, permanent ▪ memory (technical) VERB + TRACE …   Collocations dictionary

  • Trace (deconstruction) — Trace is one of the most important concepts in Derridian Deconstruction. In the 1960s, Derrida used this word in two of his early books, namely “Writing and Difference” and “Of Grammatology”. The English word “trace” was first used by Gayatri… …   Wikipedia

  • Trace (psycholinguistics) — TRACE is a connectionist model of speech perception, proposed by James McClelland and Jeffrey Elman in 1986McClelland, J.L., Elman, J.L. (1986). The TRACE model of speech perception. Cognitive Psychology, 18, 1 86.] . TRACE was made into a… …   Wikipedia

  • Trace fossil classification — Trace fossils are classified in various ways for different purposes. Traces can be classified taxonomically (by morphology), ethologically (by behavior), and toponomically, that is, according to their relationship to the surrounding sedimentary… …   Wikipedia

  • Trace evidence — contends that every contact, no matter how slight, will leave a trace. The trace is normally caused by objects or substances contacting one another, and leaving a minute sample on the contact surfaces. Material is often transferred by heat… …   Wikipedia

  • Trace heating — Electric Trace Heating, also known as Electric Heat Tracing and Electric Surface Heating, is a system used to maintain or raise the temperature of pipes and vessels. Trace heating takes the form of a electrical like heating element run in… …   Wikipedia

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