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1 put right
1) to repair; to remove faults etc in (something):يُصَحِّح، يُزيل الأخْطاءThere is something wrong with this kettle – can you put it right?
2) to put an end to or change (something that is wrong):يَضَع نهايَةً لشيءٍ خَطَأ، يُصَحِّح الخَطَأ او الظُّلْمYou've made a mistake in that sum – you'd better put it right.
3) to put (a watch, clock etc) to the correct time.يُصَحِّح الوَقْت على السّاعَه4) to correct (someone who has made a mistake):يُصَحِّح شَخْصاI thought the meeting was at 2.30, but he put me right.
5) to make healthy again:يُشْفي، يُعيدُ الصِّحَّهThat medicine will soon put you right.
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2 put aside
( often with for)1)a) to keep (something) for a particular person or occasion:يُدَخِّر، يَضَع جانِباًWe have put aside the dress you ordered.
b) to abandon (work etc) temporarily:يَتْرُك العَمَل موقَّتاShe put aside her needlework.
2) to save or preserve for the future:يَضَع جانِبا، يَدَّخِرHe tries to put aside a little money each month.
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3 SOMETHING
• Better something than nothing /at all/ - Лучше хоть что-нибудь, чем ничего (Л), С паршивой овцы хоть шерсти клок (C)• Second - rate something is better than a first - rate nothing (A) - Лучше хоть что-нибудь, чем ничего (Л)• You get out of something only what you put in - Что в котел положишь, то и вынешь (4) -
4 put a good face on it
to give the appearance of being satisfied etc with something when one is not:يُبْدي رضاهNow it's done we'll have to put a good face on it.
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5 put (someone) in the picture
to give or have all the necessary information (about something):يَضَعُه في الصّورَهHe put me in the picture about what had happened.
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6 put one's foot down
to be firm about something:يكون صارما أو مُتَشَدِّداI put my foot down and refused.
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7 put one's foot in it
to say or do something stupid:يقولُ أو يَفْعَلُ شيئا غَبِيّاI really put my foot in it when I asked about his wife – she had just run away with his friend!
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8 put paid to
to prevent a person from doing (something he planned or wanted to do):يُعيق، يُعَرْقِل، يَمْنَعThe rain put paid to our visit to the zoo.
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9 put (someone) in the picture
to give or have all the necessary information (about something):يَضَعُه في الصّورَهHe put me in the picture about what had happened.
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10 put up to
to persuade (a person) to do something:يُقْنِعWho put you up to writing that letter?
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11 put something to bed
Gen Mgtto dismiss an idea or put an end to a project (slang) -
12 put to shame
to make feel ashamed of something or to make seem to be of poor quality by showing greater excellence:يُخْجِل، يُخْزيYour beautiful drawing puts me/mine to shame.
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13 put some pants on something
Gen Mgtto supply the missing details of a plan or idea (slang)The ultimate business dictionary > put some pants on something
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14 a put-up job
something done to give a false appearance, in order to cheat or trick someone.خُطَّةٌ مُدَبَّرَه للخَديعَه -
15 down to pay part of the total cost of something, so that you can pay the rest later put something ↔
General subject: put down onУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > down to pay part of the total cost of something, so that you can pay the rest later put something ↔
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16 pay put something ↔
General subject: put down onУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > pay put something ↔
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17 to make something very obvious
General subject: put in sharp reliefУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > to make something very obvious
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18 Not Something that Personnel Should-have-to-put-up-with
Military: NSPSУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > Not Something that Personnel Should-have-to-put-up-with
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19 mengemarikan
put, bring something here; please (do); goodbye; let us (do) -
20 hängen
v/i; hing, ist gehangen; bes. schw. oder altm. hängen1; mit Hangen und Bangen geh. in anxious anticipation; (knapp) barely; mit Hangen und Bangen bestehen geh. scrape through* * *das Hängenhanging* * *Hạn|gen ['haŋən]ntmit Hangen und Bangen — with fear and trembling
* * *das1) (the (act of) killing a criminal by hanging.) hanging2) (to put or fix, or to be put or fixed, above the ground eg by a hook: We'll hang the picture on that wall; The picture is hanging on the wall.) hang3) (to fasten (something), or to be fastened, at the top or side so that it can move freely but cannot fall: A door hangs by its hinges.) hang4) ((often with down or out) to be bending, drooping or falling downwards: The dog's tongue was hanging out; Her hair was hanging down.) hang* * *Han·gen<-s>[ˈhaŋən]nt* * *Iunregelmäßiges intransitives Verb; südd., österr., schweiz. mit sein1) hangdie Bilder hängen [schon] — the pictures are [already] up
der Schrank hängt voller Kleider — the wardrobe is full of clothes
der Weihnachtsbaum hängt voller Süßigkeiten — the Christmas tree is laden with sweets
etwas hängen lassen — (vergessen) leave something behind
2) (sich festhalten) hang, dangle (an + Dat. from)jemandem am Hals hängen — hang round somebody's neck; s. auch Rockzipfel
4) (an einem Fahrzeug) be hitched or attached (an + Dat. to)5) (herabhängen) hang downdie Beine ins Wasser hängen lassen — let one's legs dangle in the water
sich hängen lassen — (fig.) let oneself go
lass dich nicht so hängen! — (fig.) [you must] pull yourself together!
6) (unordentlich sitzen)im Sessel hängen — (erschöpft, betrunken) be or sit slumped in one's/the chair; (flegelhaft) lounge in one's/the chair
jemanden hängen lassen — (fig. ugs.): (jemandem nicht helfen) let somebody down
8) (haften) cling, stick (an + Dat. to)an/auf etwas (Dat.) hängen bleiben — stick to something
von dem Vortrag bleib [bei ihm] nicht viel hängen — (fig.) not much of the lecture stuck (coll.)
ein Verdacht bleibt an ihr hängen — (fig.) suspicion rests on her
9) (festhängen)sie hing mit dem Rock am Zaun/in der Fahrradkette — her skirt was caught on the fence/in the bicycle chain
[mit dem Ärmel usw.] an/in etwas (Dat.) hängen bleiben — get one's sleeve etc. caught on/in something
[schon wieder] am Telefon/vorm Fernseher hängen — be on the telephone [again]/be in front of the television [again]
11) (sich nicht trennen wollen)an jemandem/etwas hängen — be very attached to somebody/something
12) (sich neigen) lean13) (ugs.): (angeschlossen sein)an etwas (Dat.) hängen — be on something
14) (ugs.): (nicht weiterkommen) be stuck15) (ugs.): (zurück sein) be behindhängen bleiben — (ugs.): (verweilen) get stuck (coll.); (ugs.): (nicht versekt werden) stay down; have to repeat a year
16) (entschieden werden)II 1.an/bei jemandem/etwas hängen — depend on somebody/something
transitives Verb1)etwas in/über etwas (Akk.) hängen — hang something in/over something
etwas an/auf etwas (Akk.) hängen — hang something on something
2) (befestigen) hitch up (an + Akk. to); couple on <railway carriage, trailer, etc.> (an + Akk. to)3) (hängen lassen) hang4) (erhängen) hangmit Hängen und Würgen — by the skin of one's teeth
5) (ugs.): (aufwenden)an/in etwas (Akk.) hängen — put <work, time, money> into something; spend <time, money> on something
6) (ugs.): (anschließen)2.jemanden/etwas an etwas (Akk.) hängen — put somebody/something on something; s. auch Glocke 1); Nagel 2)
reflexives Verb1) (ergreifen)sich an etwas (Akk.) hängen — hang on to something
sich ans Telefon hängen — (fig. ugs.) get on the telephone
2) (sich festsetzen) < smell> cling (an + Akk. to); <burr, hairs, etc.> cling, stick (an + Akk. to)sich an jemanden hängen — attach oneself to somebody; latch on to somebody (coll.)
4) (verfolgen)sich an jemanden/ein Auto hängen — follow or (coll.) tail somebody/a car
* * *hängen1 v/i; hängt, hing, hat/südd, österr, schweiz ist gehangen1. (befestigt sein) hang (an +dat on;es hängt schief/zu tief etc it’s not (hanging) straight/it’s (hanging) too low etc;jemanden hängen lassen umg, fig leave sb in the lurch2. (sich festhalten) hang;das Kind hing an i-r Hand/i-m Hals the child was hanging onto her hand/around her neck;sie hing aus dem Fenster umg (lehnte sich hinaus) she was hanging out of the window3. durch sein Gewicht etc: droop, hang down; (durchhängen) sag; (sich zur Seite neigen) be inclined, lean over (bis auf den Boden hängen Zweige, Tischdecke etc: hang down to the ground;die Köpfe der Blumen hängen (nach unten) the heads of the flowers are drooping;die Beine ins Wasser hängen lassen dangle one’s legs in the water;den Kopf/Schwanz hängen lassen hang one’s head/let its tail hang down;lass den Kopf nicht hängen! fig keep your head up;sich hängen lassen fig (sich gehen lassen) let o.s. go;lässig im Sessel hängen loll in the armchair;4. geh (unbeweglich schweben) float, hover;hängen über (+dat) Schicksal, Schwert etc: hang over;Wolken hängen am Himmel clouds float ( oder hang) in the sky;Rauch hing in der Luft smoke was hanging in the air5. (haften) cling, stick (6.hängen bleiben get ( oder be) caught (in +dat in); TECH jam, stick; Computer, Programm, Schallplatte: hang; umg, fig (nicht weiterkommen) be stuck; fig stick (im Gedächtnis in one’s mind); umg bei Freunden, in Kneipe etc: get stuck; (aufgehalten werden) be held up; SPORT be stopped (er blieb mit der Hose am Zaun hängen he caught his trousers (US pants) on the fence;ihr Blick/ein Verdacht blieb an ihm hängen her eyes/a suspicion rested on him;von dem Vortrag ist bei mir nicht viel hängen geblieben I can’t remember much of (what was said in) the talk;an mir bleibt alles hängen umg I get lumbered with everything, I end up having to do everything;die ganze Arbeit hängt an mir umg (bin verantwortlich) I’m responsible for all the work; (bin damit belastet) I’ve been lumbered with all the work umg;wo(ran) hängt’s? umg what’s the problem?;sie hängt in Latein umg she’s behind in Latin7. umg (sich aufhalten, sein) hang around (in +dat in;bei at);sie hängt den ganzen Tag vor dem Fernseher she’s glued to the TV all day8. (voll sein):der Baum hängt voller Früchte the tree is laden with fruit9. (angeschlossen sein) be connected (up) (to);der Computer hängt am Netz the computer is connected to the net(work), the computer is networked;sie hängt am Tropf/an der Herz-Lungen-Maschine she’s on a drip (US IV)/heart-lung machine10. fig:hängen an (+dat) an einem Brauch, am Leben etc: cling to; an jemandem: be very attached ( stärker: devoted) to; am Geld, an Besitz: love, be fond of; (abhängen von) depend on; (verbunden sein mit) be involved;du weißt ja nicht, was für mich alles daran hängt you’ve no idea how much is hanging on this as far as I’m concerned, you just don’t know what this means for me; → auch Faden1 3, Lippe etchängen2; hängt, hängte, hat gehängtA. v/t3. (hängen lassen) dangle;die Beine ins Wasser hängen dangle one’s legs in the water;den Kopf aus dem Fenster hängen stick one’s head out of the window4. (jemanden) hang;gehängt werden be hanged;5. fig:sein Herz an etwas (akk)hängen set one’s heart on sth;viel Arbeit/Mühe/Zeit an oderin etwas (akk)B. v/r:sich an jemanden/etwas hängen hang on to sb/sth, auch gefühlsmäßig: cling to sb/sth;sich ans Telefon hängen umg get on the telephone;sich an jemandes Fersen hängen (jemanden verfolgen) follow close on sb’s heels;sich aus dem Fenster hängen hang out of the window;sich in etwas (akk)* * *Iunregelmäßiges intransitives Verb; südd., österr., schweiz. mit sein1) hangdie Bilder hängen [schon] — the pictures are [already] up
etwas hängen lassen — (vergessen) leave something behind
2) (sich festhalten) hang, dangle (an + Dat. from)jemandem am Hals hängen — hang round somebody's neck; s. auch Rockzipfel
3) (erhängt werden) hang; be hanged4) (an einem Fahrzeug) be hitched or attached (an + Dat. to)5) (herabhängen) hang downsich hängen lassen — (fig.) let oneself go
lass dich nicht so hängen! — (fig.) [you must] pull yourself together!
im Sessel hängen — (erschöpft, betrunken) be or sit slumped in one's/the chair; (flegelhaft) lounge in one's/the chair
7) (geh.): (schweben, auch fig.) hang (über + Dat. over)jemanden hängen lassen — (fig. ugs.): (jemandem nicht helfen) let somebody down
8) (haften) cling, stick (an + Dat. to)an/auf etwas (Dat.) hängen bleiben — stick to something
von dem Vortrag bleib [bei ihm] nicht viel hängen — (fig.) not much of the lecture stuck (coll.)
ein Verdacht bleibt an ihr hängen — (fig.) suspicion rests on her
9) (festhängen)sie hing mit dem Rock am Zaun/in der Fahrradkette — her skirt was caught on the fence/in the bicycle chain
[mit dem Ärmel usw.] an/in etwas (Dat.) hängen bleiben — get one's sleeve etc. caught on/in something
10) (ugs.): (sich aufhalten, sein) hang around (coll.)[schon wieder] am Telefon/vorm Fernseher hängen — be on the telephone [again]/be in front of the television [again]
an jemandem/etwas hängen — be very attached to somebody/something
12) (sich neigen) lean13) (ugs.): (angeschlossen sein)an etwas (Dat.) hängen — be on something
14) (ugs.): (nicht weiterkommen) be stuck15) (ugs.): (zurück sein) be behindhängen bleiben — (ugs.): (verweilen) get stuck (coll.); (ugs.): (nicht versekt werden) stay down; have to repeat a year
II 1.an/bei jemandem/etwas hängen — depend on somebody/something
transitives Verb1)etwas in/über etwas (Akk.) hängen — hang something in/over something
etwas an/auf etwas (Akk.) hängen — hang something on something
2) (befestigen) hitch up (an + Akk. to); couple on <railway carriage, trailer, etc.> (an + Akk. to)3) (hängen lassen) hang4) (erhängen) hang5) (ugs.): (aufwenden)an/in etwas (Akk.) hängen — put <work, time, money> into something; spend <time, money> on something
6) (ugs.): (anschließen)2.jemanden/etwas an etwas (Akk.) hängen — put somebody/something on something; s. auch Glocke 1); Nagel 2)
reflexives Verb1) (ergreifen)sich an etwas (Akk.) hängen — hang on to something
sich ans Telefon hängen — (fig. ugs.) get on the telephone
2) (sich festsetzen) < smell> cling (an + Akk. to); <burr, hairs, etc.> cling, stick (an + Akk. to)sich an jemanden hängen — attach oneself to somebody; latch on to somebody (coll.)
4) (verfolgen)sich an jemanden/ein Auto hängen — follow or (coll.) tail somebody/a car
* * *adj.hung adj. v.(§ p.,pp.: hing, gehangen)= to hang v.(§ p.,p.p.: hung) (•§ p.,p.p.: hanged•)
См. также в других словарях:
put away (something) — 1. to eat or drink a lot of something. He put away a whole apple pie in one sitting. I like to put away a few beers with my friends after work. 2. to save or store something for future use. I found the box where I had put away the children s toys … New idioms dictionary
put forth something — put forth (something) to offer something for consideration. We can put forth some guidelines for what you should write about in your essay. We tried to put something forth that s really sincere … New idioms dictionary
put/set something to rights — put/set (something) to rights : to put (something) back into the normal or proper condition He helped his mother put things to rights [=put things in order] after his father died. • • • Main Entry: ↑right … Useful english dictionary
put aside (something) — 1. to decide not to deal with something. Let s put aside our differences and enjoy the evening. 2. to save something for later use, esp. money. We re putting aside $50 a week for our vacation. He puts some time aside each evening to read to his… … New idioms dictionary
put forward something — put forward (something) to offer for consideration. None of the ideas I put forward at the meeting have been accepted. He s still working on the report and plans to put it forward as soon as he finishes it … New idioms dictionary
put through (something) — put (someone/yourself) through (something) to pay for someone or for yourself to go to school. I ended up putting my granddaughter through school. My father wasn t well and couldn t work, so all of us kids put ourselves through college … New idioms dictionary
put someone/something to flight — cause someone or something to flee a soldier who held off, and eventually put to flight, waves of attackers … Useful english dictionary
put someone/something in the shade — SURPASS, outshine, outclass, overshadow, eclipse, transcend, cap, top, outstrip, outdo, put to shame, beat, outperform, upstage; informal run rings around, be a cut above, leave standing. → shade … Useful english dictionary
put someone/something to shame — OUTSHINE, outclass, eclipse, surpass, excel, outstrip, outdo, put in the shade, upstage; informal run rings around, leave standing; Brit. informal knock spots off. → shame … Useful english dictionary
put someone/something out of one's mind — deliberately forget someone or something … Useful english dictionary
put someone/something out of their misery — end the suffering of a person or animal in pain by killing them ■ informal release someone from suspense or anxiety by telling them something they are anxious to know … Useful english dictionary