-
121 accuse
[ə'kju:z]((with of) to charge (someone) with having done something wrong: They accused him of stealing the car.) obtožiti- the accused* * *[əkjú:z]transitive verbtožiti, obtožiti, obdolžiti -
122 acute
[ə'kju:t]1) ((of a disease etc) severe but not lasting very long: They think his illness is acute rather than chronic.) akuten2) (very great: There is an acute shortage of teachers.) kritičen3) (quick-witted: As a businessman, he's very acute.) sposoben4) ((of the senses) keen: acute hearing.) oster5) (high, shrill s high sound.)•- acutely
- acuteness* * *[əkjú:t]adjective ( acutely adverb)oster, šilast; bister; silovit; vreščav; medicine vnet, akuten -
123 addition
1) (the act of adding: The child is not good at addition.) seštevanje2) (something added: They've had an addition to the family.) dodatek* * *[ədíšən]noundodatek, prirastek; chemistry primes; mathematics seštevanje, seštevekin addition — poleg tega, razen tega, vrh tega -
124 adjacent
[ə'‹eisənt]((often with to) lying next (to): We had adjacent rooms in the hotel; They have bought the house adjacent to mine.) soseden* * *[ədžéisənt]adjective (to) soseden, blizek, mejaški, tik ležečgeometry adjacent angle — sokot -
125 admiration
[ædmi'reiʃən]noun They were filled with admiration at the team's performance.) občudovanje* * *[ædmiréišən]noun(of, for) občudovanje; občudovanja vredna stvar; predmet občudovanja -
126 advertise
(to make (something) known to the public by any of various methods: I've advertised (my house) in the newspaper; They advertised on TV for volunteers.) oglašati- advertiser* * *[aedvətaiz]1.transitive verbnaznaniti, opozoriti; archaic sporočiti; objaviti;2.intransitive verbdelati reklamo, oglašati -
127 aerodrome
['eərədrəum](a place (usually private or military) where aircraft are kept and from which they fly.) letališče* * *[ʌ/ərədroum]nounletališče -
128 affront
1. noun(an insult, usually one made in public: His remarks were obviously intended as an affront to her.) žalitev2. verb(to insult or offend: We were affronted by the offhand way in which they treated us.) užaliti* * *I [əfrʌnt]transitive verbžaliti, sramotiti; dražiti, izzivati; kljubovati; konfrontiratiII [əfrʌnt]nounžalitev, izzivanje, sramotenjeto offer an affront to, to put an affront upon — (raz)žaliti koga
См. также в других словарях:
they — W1S1 [ðeı] pron [used as the subject of a verb] [Date: 1100 1200; : Old Norse; Origin: their] 1.) used to refer to two or more people or things that have already been mentioned or are already known about ▪ Bob and Sue said they wouldn t be able… … Dictionary of contemporary English
they — (thā) pron. 1) Used to refer to the ones previously mentioned or implied. 2) Usage Problem Used to refer to the one previously mentioned or implied, especially as a substitute for generic he: »Every person has rights under the law, but they don t … Word Histories
They — (IPAEng|ðeɪ) is a third person, personal pronoun (subject case) in Modern English.UsageThe singular they is the use of this pronoun, where they is used as a gender neutral singular rather than plural pronoun. The correctness of this usage is… … Wikipedia
they — [ ðeı ] pronoun *** They is used as the subject of a verb: They killed him. In formal English they can also be used after the verb to be, especially before a relative clause: It is they who are telling lies. 1. ) used for referring to a group of… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
They — ([th][=a]), pron. pl.; poss. {Theirs}; obj. {Them}. [Icel. [thorn]eir they, properly nom. pl. masc. of s[=a], s[=u], [thorn]at, a demonstrative pronoun, akin to the English definite article, AS. s[=e], se[ o], [eth][ae]t, nom. pl. [eth][=a]. See… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
they'd — [ ðeıd ] short form 1. ) the usual way of saying or writing they would. This is not often used in formal writing: They said they d be happy to help. 2. ) the usual way of saying or writing they had when had is an AUXILIARY verb. This is not often … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
they're — (they are) n. they exist, they live, they occupy a certain position, they exist in a certain state … English contemporary dictionary
they'd — [ðeıd] 1.) the short form of they had ▪ If only they d been there. 2.) the short form of they would ▪ It s a pity my parents didn t come they d have enjoyed it … Dictionary of contemporary English
they — ► PRONOUN (third person pl. ) 1) used to refer to two or more people or things previously mentioned or easily identified. 2) people in general. 3) informal people in authority regarded collectively. 4) used to refer to a person of unspecified sex … English terms dictionary
they'd — (they had) v. verb used together with another verb to express past tense they d (they would) v. verb used together with another verb to express future tense … English contemporary dictionary
they — [thā] pron. sing. he, she, it [ME thei < ON thei r, nom. masc. pl. of the demonstrative pron.; like THEIR & THEM (ME theim), also < the ON demonstrative forms, thei replaced earlier ME he (hi) because the native pronouns were phonetically… … English World dictionary