-
1 shaky
['ʃeɪkɪ]1) (liable to shake) [chair, ladder] traballante, barcollante2) fig. (liable to founder) [relationship, argument] poco solido; [ position] insicuro, privo di certezza; [knowledge, memory, prospects] incerto; [ regime] debole, vacillante3) fig. (uncertain)we got off to a rather shaky start — (in relationship, business) l'inizio è stato un po' incerto; (in performance) all'inizio eravamo un po' insicuri
my French is a bit shaky — il mio francese è un po' incerto o traballante
* * *1) (weak or trembling with age, illness etc: a shaky voice; shaky handwriting.) tremolante2) (unsteady or likely to collapse: a shaky chair.) vacillante, traballante3) ((sometimes with at) not very good, accurate etc: He's a bit shaky at arithmetic; My arithmetic has always been very shaky; I'd be grateful if you would correct my rather shaky spelling.) debole* * *shaky /ˈʃeɪkɪ/a.1 malfermo; barcollante; traballante; tremante; tremolante; debole; vacillante: a shaky table, una tavola traballante; a shaky old man, un vecchio tremolante; a shaky hand, una mano malferma (o tremante); (mil. e sport) a shaky defence, una difesa debole; a shaky house, una casa vacillante2 infido; dubbio; inattendibile; incerto; indeciso; insicuro: a shaky character, un carattere infido; a shaky argument, un argomento dubbio; shaky evidence, prove dubbie (o poco attendibili); His French is rather shaky, il suo francese è piuttosto incerto (o approssimativo)● shaky health, salute malferma (o precaria) □ to feel shaky, non stare in piedi ( dopo una malattia) □ to be shaky on one's legs, avere le gambe che tremano; avere la tremarella alle gambe.* * *['ʃeɪkɪ]1) (liable to shake) [chair, ladder] traballante, barcollante2) fig. (liable to founder) [relationship, argument] poco solido; [ position] insicuro, privo di certezza; [knowledge, memory, prospects] incerto; [ regime] debole, vacillante3) fig. (uncertain)we got off to a rather shaky start — (in relationship, business) l'inizio è stato un po' incerto; (in performance) all'inizio eravamo un po' insicuri
my French is a bit shaky — il mio francese è un po' incerto o traballante
-
2 shaky adj
['ʃeɪkɪ]- ier comp - iest superl (table, building) traballante, (trembling: voice) tremulo (-a), (hands) tremante, (handwriting) tremolante, (fig: health) vacillante, malfermo (-a), (memory) labile, (knowledge) incerto (-a), (start) incerto (-a)
См. также в других словарях:
Shaky camera — is a cinematographic technique where stable image techniques are dispensed with on purpose. It gives a film sequence an ad hoc, news, or documentary feel. It suggests unrehearsed filming of reality in a situation where stable image techniques… … Wikipedia
shaky — adj. 1 shaking because you are frightened/sick VERBS ▪ be, feel, seem, sound ▪ become, get, go ▪ leave sb/sth … Collocations dictionary
shaky — adjective 1) shaky legs Syn: trembling, shaking, tremulous, quivering, quivery, unsteady, wobbly, weak; tottering, tottery, teetering, doddery; informal trembly Ant: steady 2) … Thesaurus of popular words
shaky — adjective 1) shaky legs Syn: unsteady, unstable, rickety, wobbly; Brit.; informal wonky 2) I feel a bit shaky Syn: faint, dizzy, light headed, giddy, w … Synonyms and antonyms dictionary
Mary Anne with the Shaky Hand — Chanson par The Who extrait de l’album The Who Sell Out Sortie 15 décembre 1967 Durée 2:28 Genre Rock Parolier … Wikipédia en Français
See Me, Feel Me — Single par The Who extrait de l’album Tommy Face A See Me, Feel Me Face B Overture from Tommy Sortie septembre 1970 (États Unis) oct … Wikipédia en Français
nauseated — nauseated, nauseating, nauseous 1. In Britain nauseated and nauseating (as parts of the verb nauseate) occasionally mean respectively ‘affected by nausea’ and ‘causing nausea’ in the physical sense but more often mean ‘disgusted’ and (especially) … Modern English usage
nauseating — nauseated, nauseating, nauseous 1. In Britain nauseated and nauseating (as parts of the verb nauseate) occasionally mean respectively ‘affected by nausea’ and ‘causing nausea’ in the physical sense but more often mean ‘disgusted’ and (especially) … Modern English usage
nauseous — nauseated, nauseating, nauseous 1. In Britain nauseated and nauseating (as parts of the verb nauseate) occasionally mean respectively ‘affected by nausea’ and ‘causing nausea’ in the physical sense but more often mean ‘disgusted’ and (especially) … Modern English usage
France — /frans, frahns/; Fr. /frddahonns/, n. 1. Anatole /ann nann tawl /, (Jacques Anatole Thibault), 1844 1924, French novelist and essayist: Nobel prize 1921. 2. a republic in W Europe. 58,470,421; 212,736 sq. mi. (550,985 sq. km). Cap.: Paris. 3.… … Universalium
Shakin' Stevens — Infobox musical artist | Name = Shakin Stevens | Img capt = Img size = Landscape = Background = group or band Born = birth date and age|df=yes|1948|03|04 Alias = Michael Barrett Shaky Origin = Ely, Cardiff, Wales Genre = Rock n roll Years active … Wikipedia