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1 steal a glance at smb.
(steal a glance (glimpse или look) at smb. (или smth.))украдкой бросить взгляд на кого-л. (или что-л.), украдкой, исподтишка посмотреть на кого-л. (или что-л.)In fact he walked on so long without repaying that I stole a look at his face. (A. J. Cronin, ‘The Green Years’, book 3, ch. 5) — И так долго каноник Рош шел рядом не говоря ни слова, что я исподтишка взглянул на него.
...each glimpse I stole of Holly made my heart contract. (T., Capote, ‘Breakfast at Tiffany's’) —...каждый взгляд, который я украдкой бросал на Холли, заставлял мое сердце сжиматься.
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2 steal a glance at
Общая лексика: взглянуть украдкой на, украдкой взглянуть (на кого-л.), (smb.) украдкой бросить взгляд -
3 steal a glance at (smb.)
Общая лексика: украдкой бросить взглядУниверсальный англо-русский словарь > steal a glance at (smb.)
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4 steal a glance at
melirik -
5 steal a glance at a person
• pogledati koga krišom -
6 steal a glance
• vilkuilla -
7 steal a glance
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8 steal\ a\ glance\ at\ sy
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9 to steal a glance at
to steal a glance atlançar um olhar furtivo sobre. -
10 to steal a glance
Общая лексика: взглянуть украдкой (Having never heard her call Atticus “brother” before, I stole a glance at Jem, but he was not listening. (Nelle Harper Lee, To Kill a Mockingbird)) -
11 to steal a glance
sumulyap -
12 to steal a glance
zagšus uzlūkot -
13 to steal a glance
sumulyap -
14 to steal a glance at somebody/something
to steal a glance at somebody/somethingechar una mirada furtiva a alguien/algoEnglish-spanish dictionary > to steal a glance at somebody/something
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15 steal
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16 steal
A ○ n ( bargain) the watch was a steal! cette montre était une super affaire ○ ! ; 5 dollars, that's a steal! 5 dollars, c'est donné!1 ( thieve) voler (from sb à qn) ;2 fig ( take surreptitiously) to steal a few minutes sleep/peace s'offrir en douce quelque minutes de sommeil/de paix ; to steal the credit for sth s'attribuer le mérite de qch ; to steal a glance at sth jeter un coup d'œil à qch ; to steal a kiss voler un baiser ; to steal a scene from sb Theat, Cin voler la vedette à qn.1 ( thieve) voler ; to steal from sb voler qn ; to steal from a car/house cambrioler une voiture/maison ; our luggage was stolen from the car on nous a volé nos bagages dans la voiture ;2 ( creep) lit to steal into/out of the room entrer dans/quitter la pièce subrepticement ; to steal up on sb s'approcher de qn subrepticement ; fig a sad expression stole across her face une expression triste passa furtivement sur son visage ; the light stole through the curtains la lumière filtrait à travers les rideaux.to steal a march on sb prendre qn de vitesse ; to steal the show Theat éclipser tout le monde ; she stole the show on n'a eu d'yeux que pour elle.■ steal away [person] s'esquiver (from de). -
17 steal
(a) (money, property) voler;∎ to steal sth from sb voler qch à qn;∎ he stole money from her purse il a volé de l'argent dans son porte-monnaie;∎ I've had my purse stolen on m'a volé mon porte-monnaie;∎ several paintings have been stolen from the museum plusieurs tableaux ont été volés au musée;∎ they've stolen my idea! ils ont volé mon idée!∎ to steal sb's heart séduire qn;∎ to steal a kiss voler un baiser;∎ to steal all the credit for sth s'attribuer tout le mérite de qch;∎ may I steal a few moments of your precious time? pouvez-vous m'accorder quelques instants de votre temps si précieux?;∎ to steal a glance at sb jeter un regard furtif à qn;∎ British to steal a march on sb prendre qn de vitesse, couper l'herbe sous le pied à qn;∎ to steal the show from sb ravir la vedette à qn;∎ he really stole the show with that act of his! son numéro a été le clou du spectacle!;∎ to steal sb's thunder éclipser qn(a) (commit theft) voler;∎ he was caught stealing il a été pris en train de voler;∎ Bible thou shalt not steal tu ne voleras point∎ to steal in/out entrer/sortir à pas furtifs ou feutrés;∎ to steal into a room se glisser ou se faufiler dans une pièce;∎ she stole up on me from behind elle s'est approchée de moi par derrière sans faire de bruit;∎ figurative literary shadows began to steal across the courtyard des ombres commencèrent à envahir la cour;∎ literary a strange sadness stole over me une étrange tristesse m'envahit3 noun∎ it was a steal c'était une bonne affairepartir furtivement, s'esquiver -
18 steal
steal [sti:l]1. v (stole; stolen)1) ворова́ть, красть2) сде́лать (что-л.) незаме́тно, укра́дкой; тайко́м доби́ться (чего-л.);to steal a glance взгляну́ть укра́дкой
;to steal a ride е́хать за́йцем
3) кра́сться, прокра́дываться (тж. steal up)4) постепе́нно овладева́ть, захва́тывать ( о чувстве и т.п.);a sense of peace stole over him им овладе́ло чу́вство поко́я
steal away незаме́тно ускользну́ть;steal by проскользну́ть ми́мо;steal in войти́ кра́дучись;steal out улизну́ть;steal up подкра́сться◊to steal a march on smb. опереди́ть кого́-л. (в чём-л.)
;to steal the show затми́ть всех; оказа́ться в це́нтре внима́ния
2. n разг.1) амер. воровство́2) амер. укра́денный предме́т3) вы́годная поку́пка -
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20 steal
1. transitive verb,steal somebody's boyfriend/girlfriend — jemandem den Freund/die Freundin ausspannen (ugs.)
she was the star of the play, but the little dog stole the show — (fig.) sie war der Star des Stückes, aber der kleine Hund stahl ihr die Schau
the newcomer stole the show — ein Newcomer war der Star [des Abends]
steal the show from somebody — jemandem die Schau stehlen od. den Rang ablaufen
2) (get slyly) rauben (geh. scherzh.) [Kuss, Umarmung]; entlocken [Worte, Interview]; sich (Dat.) genehmigen (ugs. scherzh.) [Nickerchen]steal a glance [at somebody/something] — jemandem einen verstohlenen Blick zuwerfen/einen verstohlenen Blick auf etwas (Akk.) werfen
3) (fig.): (win)2. intransitive verb,stole, stolen1) stehlensteal from the till/supermarket — aus der Kasse/im Supermarkt stehlen
2) (move furtively) sich stehlensteal in/out/up — sich hinein-/hinaus-/hinaufstehlen
steal up [on somebody/something] — sich [an jemanden/etwas] heranschleichen
Phrasal Verbs:- academic.ru/111922/steal_away">steal away* * *[sti:l]past tense - stole; verb1) (to take (another person's property), especially secretly, without permission or legal right: Thieves broke into the house and stole money and jewellery; He was expelled from the school because he had been stealing (money).) stehlen2) (to obtain or take (eg a look, a nap etc) quickly or secretly: He stole a glance at her.) verstohlen3) (to move quietly: He stole quietly into the room.) sich stehlen* * *[sti:l]it's a \steal! das ist ja geschenkt! famII. vt<stole, stolen>1. (take illegally)to \steal [sb's] ideas [jds] Ideen klauen fam2. (gain artfully)to \steal sb's heart [away] jds Herz erobern3. (do surreptitiously)to \steal a glance [or look] [at sb/sth] verstohlen [zu jdm/etw] hinschauenshe stole a glance at her watch sie lugte heimlich auf ihre Armbanduhr4.▶ to \steal the limelight alles andere in den Schatten stellen▶ to \steal a march on sb jdm den Rang ablaufen▶ to \steal sb's thunder jdm den Wind aus den Segeln nehmenIII. vi<stole, stolen>1. (take things illegally) stehlenhe has been convicted of \stealing er ist des Diebstahls überführt wordenhe stole out of the room er stahl sich aus dem Zimmershe stole onto the balcony sie schlich auf den Balkonas the moon rose, moonlight stole over the scene als der Mond aufging, ergoss sich das Mondlicht über die Landschafta crafty expression stole over his face ein raffinierter Ausdruck huschte über sein Gesichtanxiety was \stealing over her sie überkam Angst* * *[stiːl] vb: pret stole, ptp stolen1. vtobject, idea, kiss, heart stehlenLabour have stolen the Tories' clothes —
2. vi1) (= thieve) stehlen2) (= move quietly etc) sich stehlen, (sich) schleichento steal into a room — sich in ein Zimmer stehlen
to steal up on sb — sich an jdn heranschleichen
the mood/feeling which was stealing over the country —
he could feel happiness stealing over him to steal home (Baseball) — er fühlte, wie ihn ein Glücksgefühl überkam ungehindert zur Ausgangsbase vorrücken
3. n (US inf= bargain) Geschenk nt (inf)a total steal — ein echtes Schnäppchen (inf)
it's a steal! — das ist (ja) geschenkt! (inf)
* * *steal [stiːl]A v/t prät stole [stəʊl], pperf stolen [ˈstəʊlən]steal sth from sb jemandem etwas stehlen;steal sb’s girlfriend fig jemandem die Freundin ausspannen umgb) etwas rauben2. fig stehlen, erlisten, erhaschen:steal a kiss from sb jemandem einen Kuss rauben;steal a look at einen verstohlenen Blick werfen auf (akk); → march1 Bes Redew, show A 3, thunder A 13. fig stehlen, plagiierenB v/i1. stehlen2. schleichen, sich stehlen ( beide:out of aus):steal away sich davonstehlenC s1. umg Diebstahl m2. at that price it’s a steal bes US umg zu dem Preis ist das fast geschenkt* * *1. transitive verb,steal somebody's boyfriend/girlfriend — jemandem den Freund/die Freundin ausspannen (ugs.)
she was the star of the play, but the little dog stole the show — (fig.) sie war der Star des Stückes, aber der kleine Hund stahl ihr die Schau
the newcomer stole the show — ein Newcomer war der Star [des Abends]
steal the show from somebody — jemandem die Schau stehlen od. den Rang ablaufen
2) (get slyly) rauben (geh. scherzh.) [Kuss, Umarmung]; entlocken [Worte, Interview]; sich (Dat.) genehmigen (ugs. scherzh.) [Nickerchen]steal a glance [at somebody/something] — jemandem einen verstohlenen Blick zuwerfen/einen verstohlenen Blick auf etwas (Akk.) werfen
3) (fig.): (win)2. intransitive verb,stole, stolen1) stehlensteal from the till/supermarket — aus der Kasse/im Supermarkt stehlen
2) (move furtively) sich stehlensteal in/out/up — sich hinein-/hinaus-/hinaufstehlen
steal up [on somebody/something] — sich [an jemanden/etwas] heranschleichen
Phrasal Verbs:* * *(from) v.bestehlen v.entwenden v.stehlen v.(§ p.,pp.: stahl, gestohlen)
См. также в других словарях:
steal a glance — steal a glance/look/ phrase to look at someone or something secretly and quickly Bored, he stole a glance at his watch. Thesaurus: to look at someone or something quicklysynonym Main entry: steal … Useful english dictionary
steal a glance (at somebody) — steal a ˈglance/ˈlook (at sb/sth) idiom to look at sb/sth quickly so that nobody sees you doing it Main entry: ↑stealidiom … Useful english dictionary
steal a glance (at something) — steal a ˈglance/ˈlook (at sb/sth) idiom to look at sb/sth quickly so that nobody sees you doing it Main entry: ↑stealidiom … Useful english dictionary
steal a glance — verb To look quickly at someone or something, hoping that nobody notices the action. Each boy stole a glance at the other and met the same look of disbelief … Wiktionary
steal a look — steal a glance/look/ phrase to look at someone or something secretly and quickly Bored, he stole a glance at his watch. Thesaurus: to look at someone or something quicklysynonym Main entry: steal … Useful english dictionary
steal — steal, *pilfer, filch, purloin, lift, pinch, snitch, swipe, cop are comparable when they mean to take another s possession without right and without his knowledge or permission. Steal, the commonest and most general of the group, can refer to any … New Dictionary of Synonyms
steal a look (at somebody) — steal a ˈglance/ˈlook (at sb/sth) idiom to look at sb/sth quickly so that nobody sees you doing it Main entry: ↑stealidiom … Useful english dictionary
steal a look (at something) — steal a ˈglance/ˈlook (at sb/sth) idiom to look at sb/sth quickly so that nobody sees you doing it Main entry: ↑stealidiom … Useful english dictionary
glance — I n. 1) to cast, dart, shoot; steal a glance at 2) to exchange glances 3) an admiring; amused; casual, cursory, fleeting, passing; conspiratorial; disapproving, indignant; furtive, stolen, surreptitious; imploring; knowing; meaningful,… … Combinatory dictionary
steal — I UK [stiːl] / US [stɪl] verb Word forms steal : present tense I/you/we/they steal he/she/it steals present participle stealing past tense stole UK [stəʊl] / US [stoʊl] past participle stolen UK [ˈstəʊlən] / US [ˈstoʊlən] *** Other ways of saying … English dictionary
steal — v. 1) (D; tr.) ( to give surreptitiously ) to steal at (to steal a glance at smb.) 2) (D; intr., tr.) ( to take illegally ) to steal from (to steal from the rich; he stole money from his employer) 3) (d; intr.) ( to depart silently ) to steal… … Combinatory dictionary