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1 thin
[Ɵin] 1. adjective1) (having a short distance between opposite sides: thin paper; The walls of these houses are too thin.) plonas2) ((of people or animals) not fat: She looks thin since her illness.) sulysęs, liesas3) ((of liquids, mixtures etc) not containing any solid matter; rather lacking in taste; (tasting as if) containing a lot of water or too much water: thin soup.) skystas4) (not set closely together; not dense or crowded: His hair is getting rather thin.) retas5) (not convincing or believable: a thin excuse.) neįtikinantis, nevykęs2. verb(to make or become thin or thinner: The crowd thinned after the parade was over.) plonėti, ploninti, retėti, sklaidytis- thinly- thinness
- thin air
- thin-skinned
- thin out -
2 thin air
(nowhere: He disappeared into thin air.) nebūtis, nežinia -
3 thin-skinned
adjective (sensitive; easily hurt or upset: Be careful what you say - she's very thin-skinned.) jautrus -
4 thin out
(to make or become less dense or crowded: The trees thinned out near the river.) retėti, retinti -
5 through thick and thin
(whatever happens; in spite of all difficulties: They were friends through thick and thin.) ir džiaugsme, ir varge; nepaisant kliūčių/sunkumų -
6 wafer-thin
adjective (extremely thin.) plonytis -
7 filament
['filəmənt](something very thin shaped like a thread, especially the thin wire in an electric light bulb.) siūlelis, vielelė -
8 film
[film] 1. noun1) ((a thin strip of) celluloid made sensitive to light on which photographs are taken: photographic film.) filmas2) (a story, play etc shown as a motion picture in a cinema, on television etc: to make a film; ( also adjective) a film version of the novel.) filmas3) (a thin skin or covering: a film of dust.) plėvelė, sluoksnelis2. verb1) (to make a motion picture (of): They are going to film the race.) filmuoti2) ((usually with over) to cover with a film: Her eyes gradually filmed (over) with tears.) apsitraukti, pasidengti•- filmy- filmstar -
9 gaunt
[ɡo:nt]((of a person) thin or thin-faced: a gaunt old woman.) liesas, sudžiūvęs -
10 lash
[læʃ] 1. noun1) (an eyelash: She looked at him through her thick lashes.) blakstiena2) (a stroke with a whip etc: The sailor was given twenty lashes as a punishment.) rimbo kirtis3) (a thin piece of rope or cord, especially of a whip: a whip with a long, thin lash.) botagas, rimbas2. verb1) (to strike with a lash: He lashed the horse with his whip.) čaižyti, pliekti2) (to fasten with a rope or cord: All the equipment had to be lashed to the deck of the ship.) pririšti3) (to make a sudden or restless movement (with) (a tail): The tiger crouched in the tall grass, its tail lashing from side to side.) mosikuoti4) ((of rain) to come down very heavily.) prapliupti, pratrūkti•- lash out -
11 leaf
[li:f]plural - leaves; noun1) (a part of a plant growing from the side of a stem, usually green, flat and thin, but of various shapes depending on the plant: Many trees lose their leaves in autumn.) lapas2) (something thin like a leaf, especially the page of a book: Several leaves had been torn out of the book.) lapas, lakštas3) (an extra part of a table, either attached to one side with a hinge or added to the centre when the two ends are apart.) atlenkiamoji (stalo) lenta•- leaflet- leafy
- turn over a new leaf -
12 pencil
['pensl] 1. noun(a long, thin instrument (usually of wood) containing a thin stick of graphite or some similar solid substance for writing or drawing: This pencil needs sharpening / to be sharpened; He wrote in pencil; ( also adjective) a pencil sharpener.) pieštukas2. verb(to write or draw with a pencil: He pencilled an outline of the house.) rašyti/piešti pieštuku -
13 skin
[skin] 1. noun1) (the natural outer covering of an animal or person: She couldn't stand the feel of wool against her skin; A snake can shed its skin.) oda2) (a thin outer layer, as on a fruit: a banana-skin; onion-skins.) odelė3) (a (thin) film or layer that forms on a liquid: Boiled milk often has a skin on it.) plėvelė2. verb(to remove the skin from: He skinned and cooked the rabbit.) nudirti odą- skin flick
- skin-tight
- by the skin of one's teeth -
14 strand
I [strænd] II [strænd] noun(a thin thread, eg one of those twisted together to form rope, string, knitting-wool etc, or a long thin lock of hair: She pushed the strands of hair back from her face.) pluoštas, sruoga -
15 thick
[Ɵik] 1. adjective1) (having a relatively large distance between opposite sides; not thin: a thick book; thick walls; thick glass.) storas2) (having a certain distance between opposite sides: It's two inches thick; a two-inch-thick pane of glass.) storumo3) ((of liquids, mixtures etc) containing solid matter; not flowing (easily) when poured: thick soup.) tirštas4) (made of many single units placed very close together; dense: a thick forest; thick hair.) tankus5) (difficult to see through: thick fog.) tirštas6) (full of, covered with etc: The room was thick with dust; The air was thick with smoke.) pilnas7) (stupid: Don't be so thick!) kvailas, bukas2. noun(the thickest, most crowded or active part: in the thick of the forest; in the thick of the fight.) tankmė, įkarštis- thickly- thickness
- thicken
- thick-skinned
- thick and fast
- through thick and thin -
16 wafer
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17 ཨར་གེན་ཐིན་
[ar gen thin]Argentina. -
18 ལ་ཏིང་མེ་གླིང་, ལ་ཐིན་ཨ་མེ་རི་ཀ་, ལའ་དིང་ཨ་མེ་རི་ཀ་
[la ting me gling, la thin a me ri ka, la' ding a me ri ka]Lotynų Amerika.Tibeto-lietuvių žodynas > ལ་ཏིང་མེ་གླིང་, ལ་ཐིན་ཨ་མེ་རི་ཀ་, ལའ་དིང་ཨ་མེ་རི་ཀ་
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19 -lipped
a thin-lipped mouth.) -lūpis -
20 angular
['æŋɡjulə]1) (having (sharp) angles: an angular building.) kampuotas2) ((of a person) thin and bony: She is tall and angular.) liesas, prakaulus
См. также в других словарях:
thin´ly — thin «thihn», adjective, thin|ner, thin|nest, adverb, verb, thinned, thin|ning, noun. –adj. 1. with little space from one side to the opposite side; not thick: »a thin book, thin paper, thin wire. The ice o … Useful english dictionary
Thin — Thin, a. [Compar. {Thiner}; superl. {Thinest}.] [OE. thinne, thenne, thunne, AS. [thorn]ynne; akin to D. dun, G. d[ u]nn, OHG. dunni, Icel. [thorn]unnr, Sw. tunn, Dan. tynd, Gael. & Ir. tana, W. teneu, L. tenuis, Gr. ? (in comp.) stretched out, ? … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
thin — [θɪn] adjective JOURNALISM if trading on a financial market is thin, there is not much activity: • Trade was thin in the currency markets yesterday, heading into a Japanese long weekend. * * * thin UK US /θɪn/ adjective (thinner, thinnest) ►… … Financial and business terms
thin — [thin] adj. thinner, thinnest [ME thinne < OE thynne, akin to Ger dünn < IE * tenu , thin < base * ten , to stretch > L tenuis, thin, tenere, to hold, tendere & Gr teinein, to stretch] 1. having relatively little depth; of little… … English World dictionary
Thin — may refer to:* Thin client, computer in client server architecture networks * Thin film, material layer of about 1 µm thickness * Thin film memory, high speed variation of core memory developed by Sperry Rand in a government funded research… … Wikipedia
Thin — Photo bienvenue Merci Caractéristiques Longueur 22,1 km Bassin 93,5 km2 Bassin collecteur Meuse Débit moyen 1,33 m3 … Wikipédia en Français
thin — [adj1] fine, light, slender attenuate, attenuated, beanpole*, beanstalk*, bony*, cadaverous, delicate, emaciated, ethereal, featherweight, fragile, gangling, gangly, gaunt, haggard, lank, lanky, lean, lightweight, meager, narrow, peaked, pinched … New thesaurus
thin — ► ADJECTIVE (thinner, thinnest) 1) having opposite surfaces or sides close together. 2) (of a garment or fabric) made of light material. 3) having little flesh or fat on the body. 4) having few parts or members relative to the area covered or… … English terms dictionary
thin — vb Thin, attenuate, extenuate, dilute, rarefy. Thin is the most inclusive of these terms and is interchangeable with any of the others, though not without some loss of precision or of specific connotations. Basically it implies reduction in… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
thin — O.E. þynne narrow, lean, scanty, from P.Gmc. *thunnuz, *thunw (Cf. W.Fris. ten, M.L.G. dunne, Du. dun, O.H.G. dunni, Ger. dünn, O.N. þunnr), from PIE *tnus , *tnwi , from weak grade of root *ten stretch (Cf. L. tenuis … Etymology dictionary
Thin — Thin, adv. Not thickly or closely; in a seattered state; as, seed sown thin. [1913 Webster] Spain is thin sown of people. Bacon. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English