-
1 затоплять
-
2 затоплять
несов. - затопля́ть, сов. - затопи́ть; (вн.)1) ( покрывать водой) flood [flʌd] (d), inundate (d); submerge (d)ша́хты бы́ли зато́плены — the shafts were flooded
2) ( пускать ко дну) sink (d)затопля́ть кора́бль — sink / scuttle a ship
-
3 затоплять
vt; св - затопи́ть1) залить to flood, to inundate lit2) потоплять to sink, to submergeзатопи́ть су́дно преднамеренно — to scuttle a ship
-
4 заниматься анальным сексом
1) Jargon: go anal2) Taboo: ass-fuck, back scuttle, (с кем-л.) back-scuttle somebody, bless (см. kneel at the altar и religious observances), bott, bowl from the Pavilion end, brown, brown-hole (somebody) (с кем-л.), (с кем-л.) bugger somebody, buke, (с кем-л.) bum somebody, (с кем-л.) bum-fuck somebody, (с кем-л.) bumhole somebody, bunghole, (с кем-л.) bunghole somebody, (с кем-л.) burgle somebody, buttfuck, buy the ring, corn-hole (как гомо-, так и гетеросексуально), (с кем-л.) corn-hole somebody, dig a ditch, do a back scuttle, (с кем-л.) do somebody, drop anchor in bum bay, get some brown, git some boody (особ. с мужчиной), (с кем-л.) go down on somebody, go up the old dirt road, (с кем-л.) goose somebody, hang out of somebody, have a bit of Navy cake, have a bit of ship's, kick with the left foot, leather, (с кем-л.) molly somebody, moonshot, open up the ass, (с кем-л.) oscar somebody, pack peanut butter (с женщиной), (с кем-л.) pedicate somebody, plug (somebody), pot brown, pratt, punk, putt from the rough, ream, (с кем-л.) ream somebody, ride the deck, rim, service, shit-stab, shoot in the tail, snag, (с кем-л.) sod somebody, (с кем-л.) sodomize, split someone's buns (см. buns), stir chocolate, (с кем-л.) stir shit out of somebody, take a turn at the bunghole (см. bunghole), take on some backs, throw a buttonhole on, use the back-way, wheel tap at the Bourneville factory, wolf, wreck a rectum, yodel, zorberУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > заниматься анальным сексом
-
5 анальный секс
1) General subject: anal sex2) Jargon: cornholing3) Taboo: Donald ( см. Donald Duck), Greek culture, Italian fashion, Zinzanbrook (произносится zin-zan-bruck), arsometry, ass-fuck, assfuck, back door boogie, back jump (как гетеро так и гомосексуальный), back-door work, back-scuttle (usu do/have a back-scuttle), behind the behind, bit of ring, booty busting, brown eye, brown wings (см. red wings), budli-budli, buggery, chocolate cha-cha, chuff, corn-hole, dog fashion (не гомосексуальный), drilling for vegemite (гомосексуальный), flame, flip, frame, freak, freak-fuck, frig, frock, futz, good old brown, hoe the HP, navy style, peanut butter, rear entry, ring, ring-snatching, root, ship's, shit-fuck, sodomy, trip to the moon, up the chute (см. chute), brown town ((to go to brown town, to take to brown town) трахнуть в/через зад/жопу), А - level -
6 дезертировать
1) General subject: abandon post, fink (out of; откуда-л.), leave post, quit post, rat, scuttle, skin out (с военного корабля), turn the corner, defect, get skates on, put on skates3) Military: bludge, desert, desert the color, lam, quit, take a powder, take hill, to be round the corner4) Jargon: go over the hill, split5) Makarov: desert the colours, fink out of (откуда-л.)
См. также в других словарях:
Scuttle — Scut tle, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Scuttled} (sk[u^]t t ld); p. pr. & vb. n. {Scuttling}.] 1. To cut a hole or holes through the bottom, deck, or sides of (as of a ship), for any purpose. [1913 Webster] 2. To sink by making holes through the bottom… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
scuttle — [[t]skʌ̱t(ə)l[/t]] scuttles, scuttling, scuttled 1) VERB When people or small animals scuttle somewhere, they run there with short quick steps. [V adv/prep] Two very small children scuttled away in front of them... [V adv/prep] Crabs scuttle… … English dictionary
Scuttle — Scut tle (sk[u^]t t l), n. [OF. escoutille, F. [ e]scoutille, cf. Sp. escotilla; probably akin to Sp. escotar to cut a thing so as to make it fit, to hollow a garment about the neck, perhaps originally, to cut a bosom shaped piece out, and of… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Scuttle butt — Scuttle Scut tle (sk[u^]t t l), n. [OF. escoutille, F. [ e]scoutille, cf. Sp. escotilla; probably akin to Sp. escotar to cut a thing so as to make it fit, to hollow a garment about the neck, perhaps originally, to cut a bosom shaped piece out,… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Scuttle cask — Scuttle Scut tle (sk[u^]t t l), n. [OF. escoutille, F. [ e]scoutille, cf. Sp. escotilla; probably akin to Sp. escotar to cut a thing so as to make it fit, to hollow a garment about the neck, perhaps originally, to cut a bosom shaped piece out,… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
scuttle — Ⅰ. scuttle [1] ► NOUN 1) a lidded metal container with a handle, used to store coal for a domestic fire. 2) Brit. the part of a car s bodywork between the windscreen and the bonnet. ORIGIN Latin scutella dish . Ⅱ. scuttle [2] … English terms dictionary
Scuttle — may refer to:*Scuttling, deliberately sinking a ship by allowing water in *Coal scuttle, a bucket like container for coal *Shaving scuttle, a teapot like container for hot water *Scuttle, a fictional character in Disney s The Little Mermaid… … Wikipedia
scuttle — scuttle1 [skut′ l] n. [ME scutel, a dish < OE < L scutella, salver, dim. of scutra, flat dish] 1. a broad, open basket for carrying grain, vegetables, etc. 2. a kind of bucket, usually with a wide lip, used for pouring coal on a fire: in… … English World dictionary
scuttle — English has three distinct words scuttle. The oldest, ‘large container’ [15] (now mainly encountered in coal scuttle), was borrowed from Old Norse skutill, which goes back ultimately to Latin scutella ‘tray, salver’ (from which English also gets… … The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins
scuttle — English has three distinct words scuttle. The oldest, ‘large container’ [15] (now mainly encountered in coal scuttle), was borrowed from Old Norse skutill, which goes back ultimately to Latin scutella ‘tray, salver’ (from which English also gets… … Word origins
ship — I n. 1) to build; refit a ship 2) to christen; launch a ship 3) to navigate; sail a ship 4) to scuttle; sink; torpedo a ship 5) to abandon ship (when it is sinking) 6) to jump ship ( to desert from a ship s crew ) 7) to raise a sunken ship 8) to… … Combinatory dictionary