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1 scramble
1. intransitive verb1) (clamber) klettern; kraxeln (ugs.)scramble for something — um etwas rangeln; [Kinder:] sich um etwas balgen
3) (Air Force) [im Alarmfalle] aufsteigen2. transitive verb1) (Cookery)scramble some eggs — Rührei[er] machen; see also academic.ru/91277/scrambled_egg">scrambled egg
2) (Teleph., Radio) verschlüsseln3) (mix together) [ver]mischen4)3. nounscramble the ball away — (Footb.) den Ball [irgendwie] wegschlagen
* * *['skræmbl] 1. verb1) (to crawl or climb quickly, using arms and legs: They scrambled up the slope; He scrambled over the rocks.) krabbeln2) (to move hastily: He scrambled to his feet.) sich aufrappeln3) ((with for) to rush, or struggle with others, to get: The boys scrambled for the ball.) sich balgen4) (to distort (a telephone message etc) so that it can only be received and understood with a special receiver.) zerhacken2. noun((sometimes with for) an act of scrambling; a rush or struggle: There was a scramble for the best bargains.) die Balgerei- scrambler- scrambled eggs
- scrambled egg* * *scram·ble[ˈskræmbl̩]I. n2. no pl (rush) Gedrängel nt fam ( for um + akk); (scrap) Gerangel nt fam ( for um + akk); (chase) Jagd f ( for nach + dat)the S\scramble for Africa HIST der Kampf um AfrikaII. vi2. (move hastily and awkwardly) hastento \scramble for the exit zum Ausgang stürzen3. (compete)▪ to \scramble for sth sich akk um etw akk reißen; (struggle) sich akk um etw akk rangeln; (push) sich akk zu etw dat drängeln [o fam vordrängeln]to \scramble for the exit sich akk zum Ausgang drängeln4. (take off quickly) aircraft sofort losfliegen [o aufsteigenIII. vt1. (beat and cook)to \scramble eggs Rühreier [o ÖSTERR Eierspeis] machen2. ( fam)to \scramble sb's brains jdn durcheinanderbringen [o fam meschugge machen3. (encode)▪ to \scramble sth etw verschlüsseln4. (take off quickly)5. COMPUT▪ to \scramble sth etw verwürfeln* * *['skrmbl]1. n1) (= climb) Kletterei fwe went for a scramble in the hills — wir sind in den Bergen herumgeklettert
2. vt1) pieces, letters (untereinander) mischen2) eggs verquirlen, verrühren4) (MIL) helicopter, crew schnell losschicken3. vi1) (= climb) kletternhe scrambled to his feet — er rappelte sich auf
to scramble up sth — auf etw (acc) hinaufklettern or hinaufkraxeln (inf)
2)(= struggle)
to scramble for sth — sich um etw balgen or raufen; for ball etc um etw kämpfen; for bargains, job, good site sich um etw drängelnto scramble to get sth — sich balgen or raufen, um etw zu bekommen; ball etc darum kämpfen, etw zu bekommen; bargains, job, good site sich drängeln, um etw zu bekommen
* * *scramble [ˈskræmbl]A v/i1. (auf allen vieren) krabbeln, klettern, kriechen:scramble to one’s feet sich aufrappeln umg;scramble into one’s clothes in die Kleider fahrenfor um):scramble for a living sich um seinen Lebensunterhalt abstrampeln umg3. sich unregelmäßig ausbreitenB v/t2. Karten etc durcheinanderwerfen, einen Flugplan etc durcheinanderbringen3. Eier verrühren:scramble eggs Rührei machen;4. ein Telefongespräch etc zerhacken5. WIRTSCH US öffentliche und private Industrie mischenC s1. (Herum)Krabbeln n, (-)Kriechen n, (-)Klettern n* * *1. intransitive verb1) (clamber) klettern; kraxeln (ugs.)scramble for something — um etwas rangeln; [Kinder:] sich um etwas balgen
3) (Air Force) [im Alarmfalle] aufsteigen2. transitive verb1) (Cookery)scramble some eggs — Rührei[er] machen; see also scrambled egg
2) (Teleph., Radio) verschlüsseln3) (mix together) [ver]mischen4)3. nounscramble the ball away — (Footb.) den Ball [irgendwie] wegschlagen
* * *v.klettern v.verschlüsseln v. -
2 scramble
scram·ble [ʼskræmbl̩] n2) no pl ( rush) Gedrängel nt ( fam) ( for um +akk); ( scrap) Gerangel nt ( fam) ( for um +akk); ( chase) Jagd f ( for nach +dat)the S\scramble for Africa hist der Kampf um Afrika1) ( climb) klettern;2) ( move hastily and awkwardly) hasten;to \scramble into one's clothes sich dat schnell etwas überziehen ( fam), in seine Kleider steigen ( fam)to \scramble for the exit zum Ausgang stürzen;to \scramble out of sb's way jdm hastig freie Bahn machen ( fam)3) ( compete)to \scramble for the exit sich akk zum Ausgang drängeln;to \scramble for the best seats sich akk um die besten Plätze rangeln1) ( beat and cook)to \scramble eggs Rühreier machen2) ( fam);3) ( encode)to \scramble sth etw verschlüsseln4) ( take off quickly)to \scramble sth aircraft etw sofort starten
См. также в других словарях:
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Scramble — Scram ble, n. 1. The act of scrambling, climbing on all fours, or clambering. [1913 Webster] 2. The act of jostling and pushing for something desired; eager and unceremonious struggle for what is thrown or held out; as, a scramble for office.… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
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scramble — I UK [ˈskræmb(ə)l] / US verb Word forms scramble : present tense I/you/we/they scramble he/she/it scrambles present participle scrambling past tense scrambled past participle scrambled * 1) a) [intransitive] to climb somewhere using your feet and … English dictionary
Scramble band — A scramble band also known as a scatter band is a particular type of field performing marching band with distinct characteristics that set it apart from other common forms of marching bands; most notably, scramble bands do not normally march. In… … Wikipedia
scramble — scram|ble1 [ˈskræmbəl] v ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(climb)¦ 2¦(move quickly)¦ 3¦(do something quickly)¦ 4¦(compete)¦ 5¦(information/message)¦ 6¦(mix )¦ 7 scramble an egg 8 scramble somebody s brains 9¦(aircraft)¦ ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ [Date: 1500 1600; Origin … Dictionary of contemporary English
scramble — scram|ble1 [ skræmbl ] verb * ▸ 1 climb with difficulty ▸ 2 compete to achieve something ▸ 3 mix and cook egg ▸ 4 change electronic signal ▸ 5 take off in aircraft ▸ + PHRASES 1. ) intransitive scramble over/up/down/out of etc. to climb somewhere … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
scramble — 01. The children [scrambled] up the hillside, laughing and shouting. 02. Do you want your eggs [scrambled] or just fried sunnyside up? 03. The children were playing a game in which they had ten letters all [scrambled], and had to make a word out… … Grammatical examples in English
scramble — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun ADJECTIVE ▪ desperate, frantic, mad, undignified (esp. BrE) ▪ There was a mad scramble for the exits. PREPOSITION ▪ in a/the … Collocations dictionary
scramble — [[t]skræ̱mb(ə)l[/t]] scrambles, scrambling, scrambled 1) VERB If you scramble over rocks or up a hill, you move quickly over them or up it using your hands to help you. [V prep/adv] Tourists were scrambling over the rocks looking for the perfect… … English dictionary
scramble — i. To encrypt any plain language message during the transmission process so as to make it unintelligible to a third party. ii. The whole action involved in getting interceptors into the air in the shortest time possible, sometimes without… … Aviation dictionary