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1 throbbed
past tense, past participle; see academic.ru/74772/throb">throb -
2 throb
1. intransitive verb,- bb-2) [Motor, Artillerie:] dröhnen2. nounsee 1.: Pochen, das; Dröhnen, das* * *[Ɵrob] 1. past tense, past participle - throbbed; verb2) (to beat regularly like the heart: The engine was throbbing gently.) pochen2. noun(a regular beat: the throb of the engine / her heart / her sore finger.) das Pochen* * *[θrɒb, AM θrɑ:b]I. n Klopfen nt, Hämmern nt; of heart, pulse Schlagen nt, Pochen nt; of bass Dröhnen nt; of engine Hämmern nt, Dröhnen ntII. vi<- bb->his head \throbbed er hatte rasende Kopfschmerzena \throbbing pain ein pochender [o pulsierender] Schmerzthe town \throbs with life in the summer months ( fig) in den Sommermonaten pulsiert in der Stadt das Leben* * *[ɵrɒb]1. vi(engine) klopfen, hämmern; (drums, gunfire) dröhnen; (heart, pulse) pochen, klopfen; (painfully wound) pochen, pulsieren, klopfen; (very strongly) hämmern; (fig with life, activity) pulsieren (with vor +dat, mit)my head was still throbbing (with pain) — ich hatte immer noch dieses Pochen im Kopf
a street throbbing with people — eine Straße, die von Menschen wimmelt
2. n(of engine) Klopfen nt, Hämmern nt; (of drums, gunfire) Dröhnen nt; (of heart, pulse, wound) Klopfen nt, Pochen nt, Hämmern ntthe throb of life — der Pulsschlag des Lebens
* * *A v/ia) (heftig) klopfen, pochen, hämmern ( alle:with vor dat):his arm was throbbing with pain er hatte einen pochenden oder klopfenden Schmerz im Armb) hämmern (Maschine etc)B s Klopfen n, Pochen n, Hämmern n* * *1. intransitive verb,- bb-1) (palpitate, pulsate) pochen2) [Motor, Artillerie:] dröhnen2. nounsee 1.: Pochen, das; Dröhnen, das* * *v.klopfen v. -
3 throb
[ɵrɒb, Am ɵrɑ:b] nKlopfen nt, Hämmern nt; of heart, pulse Schlagen nt, Pochen nt; of bass Dröhnen nt; of engine Hämmern nt, Dröhnen nt vi <- bb-> klopfen, pochen; pulse, heart pochen, schlagen; bass dröhnen; engine hämmern, dröhnen;his head \throbbed er hatte rasende Kopfschmerzen;a \throbbing pain ein pochender [o pulsierender] Schmerz;the town \throbs with life in the summer months ( fig) in den Sommermonaten pulsiert in der Stadt das Leben
См. также в других словарях:
Throbbed — Throb Throb, v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Throbbed}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Throbbing}.] [OE. [thorn]robben; of uncertain origin; cf. Russ. trepete a trembling, and E. trepidation.] To beat, or pulsate, with more than usual force or rapidity; to beat in… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
throbbed — θrÉ‘b /θrÉ’b n. beat, pulse, vibration v. beat, strike … English contemporary dictionary
throb — [[t]θrɒ̱b[/t]] throbs, throbbing, throbbed 1) VERB If part of your body throbs, you feel a series of strong and usually painful beats there. His head throbbed... [V with n] Presently George s ankle began to throb with pain. [V ing] ...the… … English dictionary
throb — throbber, n. throbbingly, adv. /throb/, v., throbbed, throbbing, n. v.i. 1. to beat with increased force or rapidity, as the heart under the influence of emotion or excitement; palpitate. 2. to feel or exhibit emotion: He throbbed at the happy… … Universalium
throb´bing|ly — throb «throb», verb, throbbed, throb|bing, noun. –v.i. 1. to beat rapidly or strongly: »a heart throbbing with joy. The long climb up the hill made her heart throb. His wounded arm throbbed with pain. SYNONYM(S): pulsate, palpitate. 2 … Useful english dictionary
throb´ber — throb «throb», verb, throbbed, throb|bing, noun. –v.i. 1. to beat rapidly or strongly: »a heart throbbing with joy. The long climb up the hill made her heart throb. His wounded arm throbbed with pain. SYNONYM(S): pulsate, palpitate. 2 … Useful english dictionary
throb — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun ADJECTIVE ▪ dull ▪ steady ▪ the steady throb of the engine ▪ bass ▪ the opening bass throbs of the song … Collocations dictionary
throb — throb1 [θrɔb US θra:b] v past tense and past participle throbbed present participle throbbing [Date: 1300 1400; Origin: Probably from the sound] 1.) if a part of your body throbs, you have a feeling of pain in it that regularly starts and stops ▪ … Dictionary of contemporary English
throb — I UK [θrɒb] / US [θrɑb] verb [intransitive] Word forms throb : present tense I/you/we/they throb he/she/it throbs present participle throbbing past tense throbbed past participle throbbed 1) if a painful part of your body throbs, the pain comes… … English dictionary
Throb — Throb, v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Throbbed}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Throbbing}.] [OE. [thorn]robben; of uncertain origin; cf. Russ. trepete a trembling, and E. trepidation.] To beat, or pulsate, with more than usual force or rapidity; to beat in consequence… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Throbbing — Throb Throb, v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Throbbed}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Throbbing}.] [OE. [thorn]robben; of uncertain origin; cf. Russ. trepete a trembling, and E. trepidation.] To beat, or pulsate, with more than usual force or rapidity; to beat in… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English