-
1 snatch
snatch [snætʃ]∎ to snatch sth from sb arracher qch à qn;∎ to snatch sth from sb's hands arracher qch des mains de qn;∎ a boy on a motorbike snatched her bag un garçon en moto lui a arraché son sac;∎ his mother snatched him out of the path of the bus sa mère l'a attrapé par le bras pour l'empêcher d'être renversé par le bus∎ to snatch some sleep réussir à dormir un peu;∎ I snatched three hours' sleep j'ai fait un petit somme de trois heures;∎ I was only able to snatch a sandwich j'ai juste eu le temps d'avaler un sandwich;∎ to snatch a glance at sb lancer un coup d'œil furtif à qn∎ she had her bag snatched on lui a volé son sac(e) (in weightlifting) arracher∎ don't snatch! (to child → from hand) prends-le doucement!; (→ from plate) prends ton temps!3 noun∎ to make a snatch at sth essayer de saisir ou d'attraper qch;∎ figurative to make a snatch at victory essayer de s'emparer de la victoire∎ bag snatch vol m (de sac) à l'arraché;∎ to carry out a wages/jewellery snatch voler la paye/des bijoux□(c) (kidnapping) kidnapping m(d) (fragment → of conversation) fragment m, bribes fpl; (→ of song, music) fragment m, mesure f; (→ of poetry) fragment m, vers m;∎ she could only catch a few snatches of their conversation/the song elle ne put saisir que quelques bribes de leur conversation/quelques mesures de la chanson(e) (short period) courte période f;∎ to sleep in snatches dormir par intervalles ou de façon intermittente;∎ to work in snatches travailler par à-coups(f) (in weightlifting) arraché m►► British snatch squad = groupe de policiers chargé d'arrêter les meneurs (lors d'une manifestation)(try to grab) essayer de saisir ou d'attraper qch;∎ figurative to snatch at an opportunity saisir une occasion (au vol);∎ figurative she snatches at the slightest hope/opportunity elle s'accroche au moindre espoir/saute sur la moindre occasion(letter, plate etc) arracher, enlever d'un geste vif; (hope) ôter, enlever;∎ to snatch sth away from sb arracher qch à qn;∎ she snatched her hand away from the hot stove elle a vite enlevé sa main du fourneau brûlant;∎ victory was snatched away from them in the last minute la victoire leur a été soufflée à la dernière minuteramasser vite ou vivement ou d'un seul coup;∎ she snatched up her child elle a saisi ou empoigné son enfant -
2 snatch away
snatch [sth.] away portare via, strappare (from sb. a qcn.)* * *vt + adv* * *snatch [sth.] away portare via, strappare (from sb. a qcn.) -
3 snatch away
-
4 snatch off
VT + ADVto snatch sth away from or off sb — arrebatar algo a algn
-
5 snatch
1 ( fragment) ( of conversation) bribe f ; (of poem, poet) quelques vers mpl ; (of concerto, composer) quelques mesures fpl ; ( of tune) quelques notes fpl ; I only caught a snatch of the conversation je n'ai entendu que des bribes de la conversation ; he remembers odd snatches of the song il ne se souvient que de quelques bribes de la chanson ;2 ( grab) to make a snatch at sth essayer d'attraper qch ;3 ( theft) vol m ; bag snatch vol à l'arraché ; £100,000 was stolen in a wages snatch 100 000 livres ont été volées lors de l'attaque d'un fourgon qui contenait la paie des salariés ;B vtr1 ( grab) attraper [book, key] ; saisir [opportunity] ; arracher [victory] ; prendre [lead] ; to snatch sth from sb arracher qch à qn ; she snatched the letter out of my hands elle m'a arraché la lettre des mains ; to be snatched from the jaws of death être arraché aux griffes de la mort ;2 ○ ( steal) piquer ○, voler [handbag, jewellery] (from à) ; kidnapper [baby] ; voler [kiss] (from à) ;3 ( take hurriedly) try to snatch a few hours' sleep essaie de dormir quelques heures ; have we got time to snatch a meal? a-t-on le temps de manger quelque chose en vitesse? ; we managed to snatch a week's holiday nous avons réussi à grapiller une semaine de vacances.■ snatch away:▶ snatch [sth] away arracher qch (from sb à qn).■ snatch up:▶ snatch up [sth] ramasser [qch] en vitesse [clothes, papers] ; saisir [child] ; to snatch up a bargain faire une affaire. -
6 snatch
1. transitive verb1) (grab) schnappensnatch a bite to eat — [schnell] einen Bissen zu sich nehmen
snatch a rest — sich (Dat.) eine Ruhepause verschaffen
2. intransitive verb 3. nounsnatch something from something — etwas schnell von etwas nehmen; (very abruptly) etwas von etwas reißen
1)make a snatch at somebody/something — nach jemandem/etwas greifen
4) (fragment) snatches of talk/conversation Gesprächsfetzen od. -brocken Pl.Phrasal Verbs:- academic.ru/91788/snatch_away">snatch away* * *[snæ ] 1. verb2) (to take quickly, when one has time or the opportunity: She managed to snatch an hour's sleep.) ergreifen2. noun1) (an attempt to seize: The thief made a snatch at her handbag.) schneller Griff2) (a short piece or extract eg from music, conversation etc: a snatch of conversation.) die Bruchstücke (pl.)* * *[snætʃ]I. n<pl -es>1. (sudden grab) schneller Griffto make a \snatch at sth nach etw dat greifenI only managed to catch a few \snatches of the conversation ich konnte nur ein paar Gesprächsfetzen mitbekommen4. (spell of activity)to do sth in \snatches etw mit Unterbrechungen tunII. vt▪ to \snatch sth etw schnappento \snatch sth out of sb's hand jdm etw aus der Hand reißen2. (steal)he \snatched the gold medal from the Canadian champion er schnappte dem kanadischen Champion die Goldmedaille weg3. (kidnap)▪ to \snatch sb jdn entführen4. (take quick advantage of sth)▪ to \snatch sth etw ergatternperhaps you'll be able to \snatch a couple of hours' sleep before dinner vielleicht schaffst du es, vor dem Abendessen noch zwei Stunden Schlaf zu kriegen5.▶ to \snatch victory from the jaws of defeat eine drohende Niederlage in einen Sieg verwandeln* * *[sntʃ]1. n1) (= act) Griff mto do sth in snatches — etw in Etappen tun
2. vt1) (= grab) greifento snatch hold of sth — nach etw greifen, etw packen
to snatch sth out of sb's hand — jdm etw aus der Hand reißen
2) some sleep etc ergatternto snatch a quick meal —
the Ferrari snatched the lead on the last lap — der Ferrari riss in der letzten Runde die Führung an sich
to snatch an opportunity —
they snatched a quick kiss — sie gaben sich (dat) schnell einen Kuss
he snatched a kiss while she wasn't looking — als sie gerade wegsah, stahl er ihr schnell einen Kuss
they snatched victory from the jaws of defeat with a goal in the last minute — mit einem Tor in der letzten Minute konnten sie aus der Niederlage noch einen Sieg machen
3. vigreifen (at nach)don't snatch! — nicht grapschen!
* * *snatch [snætʃ]at nach):snatch at the offer fig mit beiden Händen zugreifenB v/t1. etwas schnappen, ergreifen, packen:snatch up aufraffen2. etwas schnappen, fangen3. fig eine Gelegenheit etc ergreifen, etwas, auch Schlaf ergattern:snatch a hurried meal rasch etwas zu sich nehmen4. etwas an sich reißen:snatch a kiss einen Kuss rauben5. snatch (away) from jemandem etwas, jemanden dem Meer, dem Tod etc entreißen, jemandem etwas wegschnappen:he was snatched away from us by premature death er wurde uns durch einen (allzu) frühen Tod entrissen;snatch victory away from sb jemandem den Sieg wegschnappen6. snatch off weg-, herunterreißen7. Gewichtheben: reißen8. sla) Br raubenb) besonders US kidnappenC s1. Schnappen n, schneller (Zu)Griff:make a snatch at → B 1, B 2, B 32. kurzer Augenblick:sleep in snatches immer wieder aufwachen, Durchschlafstörungen haben3. fig Bruchstück n, Brocken m:snatches of conversation Gesprächsfetzen5. sla) Br Raub mb) besonders US Kidnapping n6. US vulga) Fotze f, Möse f (beide vulg) (Vulva)b) Nummer f (Geschlechtsverkehr):* * *1. transitive verb1) (grab) schnappensnatch a bite to eat — [schnell] einen Bissen zu sich nehmen
snatch a rest — sich (Dat.) eine Ruhepause verschaffen
2. intransitive verb 3. nounsnatch something from something — etwas schnell von etwas nehmen; (very abruptly) etwas von etwas reißen
1)make a snatch at somebody/something — nach jemandem/etwas greifen
4) (fragment) snatches of talk/conversation Gesprächsfetzen od. -brocken Pl.Phrasal Verbs:* * *v.greifen v.greifen v.(§ p.,pp.: griff, gegriffen)haschen v.zusammenraffen (alt.Rechtschreibung) v. -
7 snatch away
transitive verb[schnell] wegziehen ( from Dat.)* * *vt▪ to \snatch away sth away from sb jdm etw entreißen* * *vt sepwegreißen (sth from sb jdm etw)death snatched him away from us — der Tod hat ihn uns (dat) entrissen
* * *transitive verb[schnell] wegziehen ( from Dat.)* * *v.wegfangen v. -
8 snatch away
vtto \snatch away away <-> sth etw an sich akk reißen;to \snatch away sth away from sb jdm etw entreißen -
9 snatch
I [snætʃ]1) (fragment) (of conversation) frammento m., stralcio m.; (of poem) alcuni versi m.pl.; (of concerto) brano m.; (of tune) pezzetto m., pezzo m.2) (grab)to make a snatch at sth. — cercare di afferrare qcs
3) (theft) scippo m.4) sport (in weight-lifting) strappo m.II 1. [snætʃ]1) (grab) afferrare [ object]; cogliere [ opportunity]; strappare [ victory]; prendere [ lead]2.to snatch sth. from sb. — strappare qcs. a qcn
to snatch at — cercare di afferrare [rope, letter]
* * *[snæ ] 1. verb1) (to (try to) seize or grab suddenly: The monkey snatched the biscuit out of my hand.) afferrare2) (to take quickly, when one has time or the opportunity: She managed to snatch an hour's sleep.) prendere2. noun1) (an attempt to seize: The thief made a snatch at her handbag.) (tentativo di afferrare)2) (a short piece or extract eg from music, conversation etc: a snatch of conversation.) frammento, brano* * *[snætʃ]1. n1)to make a snatch at sth — cercare di afferrare qc2) (fam: theft) furto, rapina, (kidnapping) rapimento3) (snippet) pezzosnatches of conversation — frammenti mpl di conversazione
2. vt(grab: object) strappare con violenza, (opportunity) cogliere, (few days, short break) prendersi, (steal), (also), (fig: kiss, victory) rubare, (kidnap) rapire3. vito snatch at — (object) cercare di afferrare, (opportunity) cogliere al volo
•* * *snatch /snætʃ/n.1 atto del ghermire; tentativo d'afferrare; tentativo di presa; stretta: to make a snatch at st., cercar d'afferrare qc.2 breve periodo ( di tempo, di lavoro, ecc.): snatches of time off, brevi periodi di ferie; ferie a bocconi3 frammento; brano; pezzetto; squarcio: snatches of a tale, frammenti di un racconto; a snatch of a song, un pezzetto di una canzone4 (fam.) boccone; spuntino● (naut.) snatch block, pastecca □ a snatch of sleep, una dormitina □ (in GB) snatch squad, reparto antisommossa; (fam.) squadra di poliziotti che fa un arresto □ to sleep in snatches, dormire a intervalli □ to work in snatches, lavorare a strappi.(to) snatch /snætʃ/v. t.1 afferrare; agguantare; carpire; ghermire; dar di piglio a: to snatch the first opportunity, afferrare la prima occasione; to snatch a kiss, carpire (o rubare) un bacio2 strappare a viva forza; strappare ( anche fig.); portare via; cogliere a stento: The wind snatched my hat off, il vento mi ha portato via il cappello; He was snatched from my arms [from the flames], è stato strappato dalle mie braccia [alle fiamme]; to snatch victory, strappare ( cogliere a stento) la vittoria; ( sport) to snatch a draw, strappare il pareggio● to snatch at, fare l'atto d'afferrare, cercar di strappare; afferrare, agguantare; (fig.) accettare al volo, con entusiasmo ( un'offerta, un invito): The drowning man snatched at the lifebelt, l'uomo sul punto d'annegare ha cercato d'afferrare il salvagente; The thief snatched at my purse, il ladro ha cercato di strapparmi la borsa □ to snatch at the chance, cogliere il destro; non farsi sfuggire l'occasione □ to snatch away, portare via ( anche, fig., speranze, ecc.); rapire: He was snatched away by premature death, è stato rapito da morte prematura □ ( basket, ecc.) to snatch the ball, rubare palla □ to snatch sb. from the jaws of death, strappare q. alla morte □ to snatch a meal, rimediare un pasto □ ( calcio) to snatch one's shot, sbucciare il pallone; colpirlo male □ to snatch up, prendere su, raccogliere, afferrare in fretta e furia (q. o qc.): The thug snatched up a knife, il malvivente ha afferrato un coltello.* * *I [snætʃ]1) (fragment) (of conversation) frammento m., stralcio m.; (of poem) alcuni versi m.pl.; (of concerto) brano m.; (of tune) pezzetto m., pezzo m.2) (grab)to make a snatch at sth. — cercare di afferrare qcs
3) (theft) scippo m.4) sport (in weight-lifting) strappo m.II 1. [snætʃ]1) (grab) afferrare [ object]; cogliere [ opportunity]; strappare [ victory]; prendere [ lead]2.to snatch sth. from sb. — strappare qcs. a qcn
to snatch at — cercare di afferrare [rope, letter]
-
10 snatch
snæ
1. verb1) (to (try to) seize or grab suddenly: The monkey snatched the biscuit out of my hand.) arrebatar, arrancar, coger2) (to take quickly, when one has time or the opportunity: She managed to snatch an hour's sleep.) aprovechar
2. noun1) (an attempt to seize: The thief made a snatch at her handbag.) arrebatamiento2) (a short piece or extract eg from music, conversation etc: a snatch of conversation.) fragmentosnatch vb1. coger / agarrar / asir2. robar de un tiróntr[snæʧ]1 (grab) arrebatamiento3 (of song, conversation) fragmento2 (sleep, food, etc) coger, pillar; (opportunity etc) aprovechar1 arrebatar, quitar■ don't snatch! ¡no me lo quites!\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLin snatches a ratossnatch ['snæʧ] vt: arrebatarsnatch n: fragmento mn.(§ pl.: snatches) = arrebatamiento s.m.• trocito s.m.v.• aferrar v.• arrebatar v.• rapar v.
I
1. snætʃ1)a) ( grab)b) ( steal) (colloq & journ) robar ( arrebatando)c) ( kidnap) (journ) secuestrar, raptar2)a) ( take hurriedly) \<\<opportunity\>\> no dejar pasarb) \<\<victory\>\> hacerse* con; \<\<goal\>\> meter
2.
vi arrebatarto snatch AT something: he snatched at the keys — trató de agarrar or (esp Esp) de coger las llaves
II
1)a) ( robbery) (BrE journ) robo mb) ( kidnapping) (journ) secuestro m, rapto m2)a) ( fragment) fragmento mb) ( brief spell) rato m[snætʃ]to sleep in snatches — dormir* (de) a ratos
1. N1) (=act of snatching) arrebatamiento mto make a snatch at sth — intentar arrebatar or agarrar algo
2) * (=theft) robo m, hurto m ; (=kidnapping) secuestro mjewellery snatch — robo m or hurto m de joyas
3) (=snippet) trocito msnatches of conversation — fragmentos mpl de conversación
4) *** (=vagina) coño *** m2. VT1) (=grab) arrebatarto snatch a knife out of sb's hand — arrebatarle or arrancarle un cuchillo a algn de las manos
2) (=steal) robar; (=kidnap) secuestrar3.VIdon't snatch! — ¡no me lo quites!
to snatch at sth — (lit, fig) intentar agarrar algo
4.CPDsnatch squad N — unidad f de arresto
* * *
I
1. [snætʃ]1)a) ( grab)b) ( steal) (colloq & journ) robar ( arrebatando)c) ( kidnap) (journ) secuestrar, raptar2)a) ( take hurriedly) \<\<opportunity\>\> no dejar pasarb) \<\<victory\>\> hacerse* con; \<\<goal\>\> meter
2.
vi arrebatarto snatch AT something: he snatched at the keys — trató de agarrar or (esp Esp) de coger las llaves
II
1)a) ( robbery) (BrE journ) robo mb) ( kidnapping) (journ) secuestro m, rapto m2)a) ( fragment) fragmento mb) ( brief spell) rato mto sleep in snatches — dormir* (de) a ratos
-
11 snatch
اِنْتَزَعَ \ extort: to obtain sth. (a promise, money, etc.) by force, or fear of force. extract: to take out (a tooth from sb.’s mouth, oil from a seed, useful parts from a book, etc.). grab: to seize quickly. snatch: to take (or try to take) violently: He snatched the bag from her hand. He snatched at the ball but missed it. It is rude to snatch when you are offered something. tear: (with down, off, out) to move by pulling or tearing: Someone has torn the notice down. tear sb. away: to cause sb. to leave sth. very interesting: I could hardly tear myself away from the party, but I had to go home. \ See Also ابتز (ابْتَزَّ)، اختطف (اِخْتَطَفَ)، مزق (مَزَّقَ) -
12 tear sb. away
اِنْتَزَعَ \ extort: to obtain sth. (a promise, money, etc.) by force, or fear of force. extract: to take out (a tooth from sb.’s mouth, oil from a seed, useful parts from a book, etc.). grab: to seize quickly. snatch: to take (or try to take) violently: He snatched the bag from her hand. He snatched at the ball but missed it. It is rude to snatch when you are offered something. tear: (with down, off, out) to move by pulling or tearing: Someone has torn the notice down. tear sb. away: to cause sb. to leave sth. very interesting: I could hardly tear myself away from the party, but I had to go home. \ See Also ابتز (ابْتَزَّ)، اختطف (اِخْتَطَفَ)، مزق (مَزَّقَ) -
13 wegschnappen
v/t (trennb., hat -ge-) umg. snatch s.th. away ( jemandem from s.o.); (Freundin) steal, Brit. auch pinch; jemandem etw. wegschnappen (Job, Kleid) snatch s.th. away from under s.o.’s eyes* * *wẹg|schnap|penvt sep (inf)die andere Kundin hat mir das Kleid weggeschnappt — the other customer snapped up the dress before I could
jdm die Freundin/den Job wegschnappen — to pinch (Brit) or snatch (US) sb's girlfriend/job (inf)
* * *weg|schnap·penvt (fam)* * *transitives Verb (ugs.) snatch away (Dat. from)* * ** * *transitives Verb (ugs.) snatch away (Dat. from) -
14 entreißen
v/t (unreg.): jemandem etw. entreißen auch fig. snatch ( stärker: wrest) s.th. from s.o., tear s.th. from s.o.’s grasp; jemanden den Flammen etc. entreißen rescue s.o. from the flames etc.; jemanden dem Tod entreißen fig. snatch s.o. from the jaws of death; jemanden dem Schlaf entreißen fig. drag s.o. from his ( oder her) sleep ( oder slumbers hum.), rudely awaken s.o.* * *to wrest* * *ent|rei|ßen [ɛnt'raisn] ptp entri\#ssen [ɛnt'rɪsn]vt irreg* * *ent·rei·ßen *1. (wegreißen)▪ jdm etw \entreißen to snatch sth [away] from sbin letzter Minute wurde er dem Tode entrissen at the last moment he was snatched from the jaws of death* * *unregelmäßiges transitives Verbjemanden dem Tod entreißen — (fig.) save somebody from imminent death
* * *entreißen v/t (irr):entreißen rescue sb from the flames etc;jemanden dem Tod entreißen fig snatch sb from the jaws of death;jemanden dem Schlaf entreißen fig drag sb from his ( oder her) sleep ( oder slumbers hum), rudely awaken sb* * *unregelmäßiges transitives Verbjemanden dem Tod entreißen — (fig.) save somebody from imminent death
* * *v.to wrest v. -
15 wegreißen
v/t (unreg., trennb., hat -ge-) tear away ( oder off); (Haus) tear ( oder pull) down; die Brücke wegreißen Fluss: sweep away the bridge; jemandem etw. wegreißen snatch s.th. (away) from s.o.* * *to tear off; to sweep away* * *wẹg|rei|ßenvt septo tear away (jdm from sb); Zweige to break off; (inf ) Häuser etc to tear or pull down* * *weg|rei·ßen2. (abreißen)* * *die Brücke wegreißen Fluss: sweep away the bridge;jemandem etwas wegreißen snatch sth (away) from sb* * *v.to tear away v.to tear off v. -
16 reißen
n; -s, kein Pl.1. tearing etc.; reißen3. umg. (Rheuma) rheumatics Pl., Am. rheumatiz* * *to tear; to rend; to tug; to jolt; to jerk; to rip; to pull* * *Rei|ßen ['raisn]nt -s,no pl2) (inf = Gliederreißen) ache* * *1) split2) (to make (a bare patch, a hole etc) by rubbing, use etc: I've worn a hole in the elbow of my jacket.) wear3) (to make or get a hole or tear in by pulling, tearing etc: He ripped his shirt on a branch; His shirt ripped.) rip4) (to pull suddenly and sharply: She yanked the child out of the mud.) yank* * *Rei·ßen1<-s>[ˈraisn̩]Rei·ßen2<-s>[ˈraisn̩]nt kein pl (veraltend fam) achewas stöhnst du so, hast du wieder das \Reißen im Rücken? why are you groaning like that, is your back aching again?* * *1.unregelmäßiges transitives Verb1) tearjemandem etwas aus den Händen/Armen reißen — snatch or tear something from somebody's hands/arms
jemanden aus seinen Gedanken reißen — (fig.) awaken somebody rudely from his/her thoughts
eine Welle riss ihn zu Boden — a wave knocked him to the ground
jemanden in die Tiefe reißen — drag somebody down into the depths
[innerlich] hin und her gerissen sein od. werden — (fig.) be torn [two ways]
5)etwas an sich reißen — (fig.) seize something
7) (Leichtathletik)2.die Latte/eine Hürde reißen — knock the bar down/knock a hurdle over
unregelmäßiges intransitives Verb1) mit sein < paper, fabric> tear, rip; <rope, thread> break, snap; < film> break; < muscle> tearwenn alle Stricke od. Stränge reißen — (fig.) if all else fails
2) (ziehen)an etwas (Dat.) reißen — pull at something
3) (Leichtathletik) bring the bar down/knock the hurdle over3.1) tear oneself/itself (aus, von from)2) (ugs.): (sich bemühen um)sie reißen sich um die Eintrittskarten — they are scrambling to or fighting each other to get tickets
* * *reißen; reißt, riss, ist oder hat gerissenA. v/t (hat)sich (dat)der Sturm riss mir den Hut vom Kopf the gale tore ( oder whipped) the hat from my headjemanden zu Boden reißen drag sb to the ground;das Lenkrad nach rechts reißen wrench the steering to the right;der Fluss riss das Haus einfach mit sich the river simply swept the house away;zehn Skifahrer wurden von der Lawine mit in den Tod gerissen the avalanche swept ten skiers to their deaths3. (beschädigen) tear, rip;sich (dat)einen Splitter in den Finger reißen get a splinter into one’s finger;sich (dat)ein Loch in die Hose reißen tear a hole in one’s trousers (US pants)4. fig:aus dem Schlaf gerissen werden be rudely awakened;aus seinen Illusionen gerissen werden come down to earth with a bump umg;die Macht an sich reißen seize power;sie war hin und her gerissen she couldn’t make up her mind; (war begeistert) she was thrilled to bits (US pieces) umg;das reißt mich nicht gerade vom Hocker umg I can’t say I’m thrilled, it’s nothing to write home about; → Witz, Zote etc5. Raubtier: (töten) killB. v/t & v/i (hat) SPORT Gewichtheben: lift in the snatch; Hochsprung, Pferdesport: knock off the bar;C. v/ider Film/Schnürsenkel ist gerissen the film tore/the shoelace broke;da riss ihm die Geduld his patience snapped ( oder gave out [on him]);jetzt reißt mir aber gleich der Geduldsfaden my patience is running out2. (hat) (zerren):D. v/r:sich um einen Fußballer/Filmstar reißen try to outbid one another to get a footballer/film star (US moviestar);ich reiße mich nicht darum, ihn kennen zu lernen I’m not exactly dying to get to know him* * *1.unregelmäßiges transitives Verb1) tearsich (Dat.) ein Loch in die Hose reißen — tear or rip a hole in one's trousers
jemandem etwas aus den Händen/Armen reißen — snatch or tear something from somebody's hands/arms
sich (Dat.) die Kleider vom Leibe reißen — tear one's clothes off
jemanden aus seinen Gedanken reißen — (fig.) awaken somebody rudely from his/her thoughts
3) (werfen, ziehen)[innerlich] hin und her gerissen sein od. werden — (fig.) be torn [two ways]
5)etwas an sich reißen — (fig.) seize something
2.die Latte/eine Hürde reißen — knock the bar down/knock a hurdle over
unregelmäßiges intransitives Verb1) mit sein <paper, fabric> tear, rip; <rope, thread> break, snap; < film> break; < muscle> tearwenn alle Stricke od. Stränge reißen — (fig.) if all else fails
2) (ziehen)an etwas (Dat.) reißen — pull at something
3) (Leichtathletik) bring the bar down/knock the hurdle over3.1) tear oneself/itself (aus, von from)2) (ugs.): (sich bemühen um)sie reißen sich um die Eintrittskarten — they are scrambling to or fighting each other to get tickets
* * *v.(§ p.,pp.: riß, ist/hat gerissen)= to pull v.to rend v.(§ p.,p.p.: rent)to rip v.to wrench v. -
17 miel
f.honey.las mieles del éxito the sweet smell of success* * *1 honey\dejar a alguien con la miel en los labios to leave somebody wanting moremiel sobre hojuelas it just gets better and better, it's even better than it soundedno hay miel sin hiel you've got to take the rough with the smoothser todo miel figurado to be all sweetness and light* * *noun f.* * *miel sobre hojuelas —
me gusta el trabajo, y si está bien pagado, pues es miel sobre hojuelas — I enjoy the work, and if it's also well-paid, so much the better
* * *femenino honey* * *= honey.Ex. The article 'A taste of honey' is report of a 2-week professional visit to libraries in Bangladesh.----* luna de miel = honeymoon.* no miel sin hiel = no pain, no gain.* pasar la luna de miel = honeymoon.* tarro de miel = honey pot.* * *femenino honey* * *= honey.Ex: The article 'A taste of honey' is report of a 2-week professional visit to libraries in Bangladesh.
* luna de miel = honeymoon.* no miel sin hiel = no pain, no gain.* pasar la luna de miel = honeymoon.* tarro de miel = honey pot.* * *honeydulce como la miel as sweet as honeydejar a algn con la miel en los labios to snatch sth away from under sb's nosemiel sobre hojuelas: es un piso estupendo y además muy barato, miel sobre hojuelas it's a fantastic apartment and, what's more o better still, it's cheapno se hizo la miel para la boca del asno I'm/you're casting pearls before swineno hay miel sin hiel there's no rose without a thorn, there's always a catchCompuestos:sugar-cane syrup, golden syrup ( BrE)corn syruppalm syrup* * *
miel sustantivo femenino
honey;
miel sustantivo femenino honey
♦ Locuciones: dejar/quedarse con la miel en los labios, to leave/be left yearning for more
' miel' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
dar
- hojuela
- luna
- sustituir
- untar
English:
fall apart
- flapjack
- granola
- honey
- honeymoon
- runny
- taste
* * *miel nf1. [sustancia] honey;ser pura miel to be as sweet as honey;miel sobre hojuelas all the better;no está hecha la miel para la boca del asno it's like casting pearls before swine;dejar a alguien/quedarse con la miel en los labios to leave sb/to be left feeling frustratedmiel líquida clear honey2.mieles [satisfacción] [m5]saborear las mieles del éxito/de la victoria to savour the sweet taste of success/victory* * *f honey;quedarse con la miel en los labios have the gift of the gab;ser miel sobre hojuelas be even better* * *miel nf: honey* * *miel n honey -
18 zdmuchiwać
impf ⇒ zdmuchnąć* * ** * *ipf.zdmuchnąć pf. -ij1. (= dmuchając, gasić) blow ( sth) out.2. (= dmuchając, usuwać) blow ( sth) off; zdmuchnąć komuś coś sprzed nosa snatch sth (away) from under sb's nose.3. tylko pf. pot. (= zjeść łapczywie) gobble ( sth) up l. down.The New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > zdmuchiwać
-
19 entreißen
ent·rei·ßen *1) ( wegreißen)jdm etw \entreißen to snatch sth [away] from sbin letzter Minute wurde er dem Tode entrissen at the last moment he was snatched from the jaws of death -
20 grab
1. transitive verb,grab somebody by the arm — etc. jemanden am Arm usw. packen
grab some food or a bite to eat — (coll.) schnell etwas essen
2. intransitive verb,grab hold of somebody/something — sich (Dat.) jemanden/etwas schnappen (ugs.)
- bb-3. noun1)make a grab at or for somebody/something — nach jemandem/etwas greifen od. (ugs.) grapschen
be up for grabs — (coll.) zu erwerben sein; [Posten:] frei sein
2) (Mech.) Greifer, der* * *1. past tense, past participle - grabbed; verb1) (to seize, grasp or take suddenly: He grabbed a biscuit.) grapschen2) (to get by rough or illegal means: Many people tried to grab land when oil was discovered in the district.) sich aneignen2. noun(a sudden attempt to grasp or seize: He made a grab at the boy.) plötzlicher Griff- academic.ru/116487/grab_at">grab at* * *[græb]I. n3.▶ to be up for \grabs zu haben seinII. vt<- bb->1. (snatch)to \grab sth out of sb's hands jdm etw aus den Händen reißen▪ to \grab sth [away] from sb jdm etw entreißen▪ to \grab hold of sb/sth jdn/etw festhaltenhe \grabbed hold of his child's arm to stop her from running into the road er packte seine Tochter am Arm, damit sie nicht auf die Straße liefto \grab sb's attention jds Aufmerksamkeit erregento \grab a bite [to eat] schnell einen Happen essento \grab a chance/an opportunity eine Chance/eine Gelegenheit wahrnehmen [o fam beim Schopf[e] packen]to \grab some sleep [ein wenig] schlafen▪ to \grab sb jdn beeindruckenhow does that [idea] \grab you? wie findest du das?, was hältst du davon?III. vi<- bb->1. (snatch) grapschen3. (take advantage of)to \grab at a chance/an opportunity eine Chance/eine Gelegenheit wahrnehmen* * *[grb]1. n1) Griff m3) (inf)to be up for grabs — zu haben sein (inf)
there are big prizes up for grabs — es gibt tolle Preise zu gewinnen
grab bag (US) — Glücksbeutel m, Grabbelsack m
2. vt1) (= seize) packen; (greedily) packen, sich (dat) schnappen (inf); (= take, obtain) wegschnappen (inf); money raffen; (inf = catch) person schnappen (inf); chance beim Schopf ergreifen (inf); attention auf sich (acc) ziehenhe grabbed (hold of) my sleeve — er packte mich am Ärmel
I'll just grab a sandwich (inf) — ich esse nur schnell ein Sandwich
2) (inf: appeal to) anmachen (inf)it didn't grab me — das hat mich nicht angemacht (inf)
how does that grab you? — wie findest du das?, was meinst du dazu?
3. vi(hastig) zugreifen or zupackento grab at — greifen or grapschen (inf) nach, packen (+acc)
he grabbed at the chance of promotion —
help yourselves, children, but don't grab — greift zu, Kinder, aber nicht so hastig
* * *grab [ɡræb]A v/t1. (hastig oder gierig) ergreifen, packen, fassen, (sich) etwas schnappen, sich etwas grapschen umg:grab a seat sich einen Sitzplatz schnappen2. figa) an sich reißen, sich etwas (rücksichtslos) aneignen, einheimsenb) eine Gelegenheit beim Schopf ergreifen3. umg Zuhörer etc packen, fesseln:how did that grab him? wie hat er darauf reagiert?C s1. (hastiger oder gieriger) Griff:make a grab at → A 1, Bthe grab for power der Griff nach der Machtthe job is up for grabs die Stelle ist noch frei oder zu haben;there are £1,000 up for grabs es sind 1000 Pfund zu gewinnen4. TECH (Bagger-, Kran) Greifer m:grab crane Greiferkran m;grab dredger Greifbagger m* * *1. transitive verb,grab somebody by the arm — etc. jemanden am Arm usw. packen
grab some food or a bite to eat — (coll.) schnell etwas essen
2. intransitive verb,grab hold of somebody/something — sich (Dat.) jemanden/etwas schnappen (ugs.)
- bb-3. noun1)make a grab at or for somebody/something — nach jemandem/etwas greifen od. (ugs.) grapschen
be up for grabs — (coll.) zu erwerben sein; [Posten:] frei sein
2) (Mech.) Greifer, der* * *v.aufbereiten v.grabschen v.greifen v.kapern v.
См. также в других словарях:
snatch — snatch1 [snætʃ] v [T] [Date: 1100 1200; Origin: Perhaps from Middle Dutch snacken; SNACK2] 1.) to take something away from someone with a quick, often violent, movement = ↑grab ▪ The thief snatched her purse and ran. snatch sth away/back from sb… … Dictionary of contemporary English
snatch — 1 verb (T) 1 to take something away from someone with a quick violent movement; grab 1 (1): The thief snatched her purse and ran. 2 to quickly take the opportunity to do something for an hour etc because you do not have much time: I managed to… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
conversation — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ brief, short ▪ lengthy, long ▪ We engaged in a long conversation. ▪ endless, pointless … Collocations dictionary
rob — S3 [rɔb US ra:b] v past tense and past participle robbed present participle robbing [T] [Date: 1200 1300; : Old French; Origin: rober] 1.) to steal money or property from a person, bank etc →↑steal, burgle ↑burgle ▪ They killed four policemen… … Dictionary of contemporary English
rob — verb robbed, robbing (T) 1 to steal money or property from a person, bank etc: The gang tried to rob a bank using a sawn off shotgun. | rob sb of sth: Mrs Clegg was severely beaten and robbed of all her possessions. | The company director robbed… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
bag — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun ADJECTIVE ▪ strong ▪ heavy ▪ empty ▪ small ▪ burlap (AmE), canvas … Collocations dictionary
draw — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun (esp. BrE) ADJECTIVE ▪ goalless, scoreless ▪ one all, three three, etc. ▪ creditable, honorable ▪ … Collocations dictionary