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1 hatch
I [hætʃ]1) aer. portello m.; mar. portello m. di boccaporto; aut. portellone m. posteriore2) (in dining room) passavivande m.••II 1. [hætʃ]1) (incubate) covare [ eggs]2) (plan secretly) tramare, ordire [plot, scheme]2. III [hætʃ]verbo transitivo art. tratteggiare, ombreggiare* * *I [hæ ] noun((the door or cover of) an opening in a wall, floor, ship's deck etc: There are two hatches between the kitchen and dining-room for serving food.)- hatchwayII [hæ ] verb1) (to produce (young birds etc) from eggs: My hens have hatched ten chicks.)2) (to break out of the egg: These chicks hatched this morning.)3) (to become young birds: Four of the eggs have hatched.)4) (to plan (something, usually bad) in secret: to hatch a plot.)* * *I [hætʃ] n(Naut: hatchway) boccaporto, (Brit: service hatch) sportello passavivandeII [hætʃ]down the hatch! — (fam: when drinking) salute!
1. vt2. vi* * *hatch (1) /hætʃ/n.4 (autom.) portellone posteriore5 (aeron.) portello6 botola8 (miss.) boccaporto; portello10 (autom., fam.) ► hatchback● ( slang) Down the hatch!, cin cin!; salute! □ under hatches, (naut.) sotto coperta; (fig.) fuori servizio; fuori vista, nascosto; in cella di rigore, agli arresti; spacciato, morto.hatch (2) /hætʃ/n. [uc]● (giorn., scherz.) hatches, matches, and dispatches, (rubrica a pagamento che riporta) le nascite, i matrimoni e i decessi.hatch (3) /hætʃ/n.(to) hatch (1) /hætʃ/A v. t.B v. i.● to hatch out, ( di pulcini) uscire dal guscio; ( di uova) schiudersi; mettere al mondo ( pulcini).(to) hatch (2) /hætʃ/v. t.* * *I [hætʃ]1) aer. portello m.; mar. portello m. di boccaporto; aut. portellone m. posteriore2) (in dining room) passavivande m.••II 1. [hætʃ]1) (incubate) covare [ eggs]2) (plan secretly) tramare, ordire [plot, scheme]2. III [hætʃ]verbo transitivo art. tratteggiare, ombreggiare
См. также в других словарях:
hatch|ing — hatch|ing1 «HACH ihng», noun. 1. fine parallel lines drawn, cut, or engraved close together to produce the effect of shading. 2. one of the lines made. ╂[< hatch3 + ing1] hatch|ing2 «HACH ihng», noun. a hatch, as of chickens; brood … Useful english dictionary
Hatch — Hatch, n. 1. The act of hatching. [1913 Webster] 2. Development; disclosure; discovery. Shak. [1913 Webster] 3. The chickens produced at once or by one incubation; a brood. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
hatch — 01. The eggs might not [hatch] because they got quite cold during the winter storm. 02. After the salmon eggs [hatch], the babies live in the gravel for a few weeks. 03. There is a salmon [hatchery] located near the mouth of the river. 04. The… … Grammatical examples in English
hatch — See: COUNT ONE S CHICKENS BEFORE THEY ARE HATCHED … Dictionary of American idioms
hatch — See: COUNT ONE S CHICKENS BEFORE THEY ARE HATCHED … Dictionary of American idioms
hatch — See: count one s chickens before they are hatched … Словарь американских идиом
hatch — (verb) Kiko, ho okiko, kiko ka hua (of little chickens) … English-Hawaiian dictionary
hatch — see don’t count your chickens before they are hatched … Proverbs new dictionary
count your chickens — ◇ If you count your chickens or (US) count your chickens before they hatch or (Brit) before they re hatched, you believe that something you want to happen will definitely happen before you know for certain that it really will. Don t count your… … Useful english dictionary
don’t count your chickens before they are hatched — An instruction not to make, or act upon, an assumption (usually favourable) which might turn out to be wrong. The metaphorical phrase to count one’s chickens is also used. c 1570 T. HOWELL New Sonnets C2 Counte not thy Chickens that vnhatched be … Proverbs new dictionary
count your chickens before they hatch — see ↑chicken, 1 • • • Main Entry: ↑count … Useful english dictionary