-
121 hug
1. past tense, past participle - hugged; verb1) (to hold close to oneself with the arms, especially to show love: She hugged her son when he returned from the war.) objeti2) (to keep close to: During the storm, the ships all hugged the shore.) držati se2. noun(a tight grasp with the arms, especially to show love: As they said good-bye she gave him a hug.) objem* * *I [hʌg]nounobjem; sport prijem v rokoborbiII [hʌg]transitive verbobjeti, priviti k sebi, držati se česa; laskati komuto hug o.s. on ( —ali for) — čestitati si za kaj, k čemu; biti zadovoljen s seboj zaradito hug the shore (bank, wall) — držati se ob obali (pri bregu, ob zidu)figuratively to hug one's chains — dobro se počutiti v hlapčevstvu -
122 humble
1. adjective1) (not having a high opinion of oneself etc: You have plenty of ability but you're too humble.) ponižen2) (unimportant; having a low position in society etc: a man of humble origins.) skromen2. verb(to make (someone) humble: He was humbled by his failure.) ponižati- humbly- humbleness See also:- humility* * *I [hʌmbl]adjective ( humbly adverb)ponižen, skromento eat humble pie — ponižno se opravičiti, ponižati se, iti v KanosoII [hʌmbl]transitive verbponižati -
123 identify
1) (to recognize as being a certain person etc: Would you be able to identify the man who robbed you?; He identified the coat as his brother's.) prepoznati2) (to think of as being the same: He identifies beauty with goodness.) istovetiti•- identify with
- identify oneself with / be identified with* * *[aidéntifai]transitive verbidentificirati, dognati identiteto; istovetiti ( with s, z); legitimiratito identify o.s. with — potegniti, povleči s kom; vezati se (na politično stranko) -
124 impose
[im'pouz]1) (to place (a tax, fine, task etc) on someone or something: The government have imposed a new tax on cigarettes.) naložiti2) (to force (oneself, one's opinions etc) on a person: The headmaster liked to impose his authority on the teachers.) vsiliti3) ((often with on) to ask someone to do something which he should not be asked to do or which he will find difficult to do: I hope I'm not imposing (on you) by asking you to help.) vsiljevati (se)•* * *[impóuz]1.transitive verbnaložiti, naprtiti (davke, pokoro itd; to komu); vsiliti komu svoje mišljenje; natvesti, (pre)varati; vzdeti komu priimek; printing razvrstiti rubrike, stolpce;2.intransitive verbimponirati, napraviti vtis (on, upon na, komu); varati; štuliti se, vsiljevati se (on, upon komu)printing to impose anew — preurediti (stolpce, rubrike)printing to impose wrong — zamešati (stolpce, rubrike)to impose upon o.s. — varati seto impose o.s (up)on — vsiljevati se komuto impose upon s.o.'s good nature — zlorabiti dobroto kogaecclesiastic to impose hands — položiti roke (pri blagoslavljanju) -
125 incur
[in'kə:]past tense, past participle - incurred; verb1) (to bring (something unpleasant) on oneself: to incur someone's displeasure.) nakopati si2) (to become liable to pay (a debt): to incur enormous debts.) nakopati si* * *[inkɜ:]transitive verbnakopati si, naprtiti si; izpostaviti seeconomy to incur debts — lesti v dolgove -
126 independent
[indi'pendənt]1) (not controlled by other people, countries etc: an independent country; That country is now independent of Britain.) neodvisen2) (not willing to accept help: an independent old lady.) neodvisen3) (having enough money to support oneself: She is completely independent and receives no money from her family; She is now independent of her parents.) neodvisen4) (not relying on, or affected by, something or someone else: an independent observer; to arrive at an independent conclusion.) neodvisen•- independently* * *I [indipéndənt]adjective ( independently adverb)neodvisen (of od), samostojen, svoboden, nevezan, samozavesten; denarno neodvisen; svobodoljuben; grammar neodvisen, glavnigrammar independent clause — glavni stavekmilitary independent fire — hitro streljanje, posamično streljanjeII [indipéndənt]nounneodvisnež, -nica; kdor ne prizna cerkvene oblasti; kdor ni v nobeni politični stranki -
127 indignant
[in'diɡnənt](angry, usually because of some wrong that has been done to oneself or others: I feel most indignant at the rude way I've been treated; The indignant customer complained to the manager.) ogorčen- indignation* * *[indígnənt]adjective ( indignantly adverb)užaljen, razkačen, ogorčen, jezen ( with na koga, at na kaj); prizadet -
128 indulge
1) (to allow (a person) to do or have what he wishes: You shouldn't indulge that child.) razvajati2) (to follow (a wish, interest etc): He indulges his love of food by dining at expensive restaurants.) vdajati se čemu3) (to allow (oneself) a luxury etc: Life would be very dull if we never indulged (ourselves).) privoščiti si•- indulgent
- indulge in* * *[indʌldž]1.transitive verbpopuščati komu, popustiti, ugoditi, dopustiti, razvajati (otroka); vdajati se čemu, uživati v čem; economy pristati na odlog plačila, odložiti plačilo;2.intransitive verbprivoščiti si (npr. dobro kapljico)to indulge s.o. in s.th. — spregledati komu kajto indulge o.s. in s.th. — privoščiti si kajto indulge o.s. with — uživati v čem
См. также в других словарях:
Oneself (artist) — Oneself Origin United States Genres Hip hop Years active 1995–present Members Oneself Oneself is an America … Wikipedia
oneself — [wun΄self′, wunz΄self′] pron. a person s own self: also one s self be oneself 1. to function physically and mentally as one normally does 2. to be natural or sincere by oneself alone; unaccompanied; withdrawn come to oneself 1 … English World dictionary
Oneself — One self (w[u^]n s[e^]lf ), pron. A reflexive form of the indefinite pronoun one. Commonly written as two words, one s self. [1913 Webster] One s self (or more properly oneself), is quite a modern form. In Elizabethan English we find a man s self … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
oneself — 1540s, one s self. Hyphenated 18c.; written as one word from c.1827, on model of himself, itself, etc … Etymology dictionary
oneself — ► PRONOUN (third person sing. ) 1) (reflexive ) used as the object of a verb or preposition when this is the same as the subject of the clause and the subject is ‘one’. 2) (emphatic ) used to emphasize that one does something individually or… … English terms dictionary
oneself to thank for — To be the cause of (one s own misfortune) ● thank … Useful english dictionary
oneself — [[t]wʌnse̱lf[/t]] (Oneself is a third person singular reflexive pronoun.) 1) PRON REFL A speaker or writer uses oneself as the object of a verb or preposition in a clause where oneself meaning me or any person in general refers to the same person … English dictionary
oneself */ — UK [wʌnˈself] / US pronoun formal Summary: Oneself is a reflexive pronoun, which can be used in the following ways: as an object that refers back to the pronoun one when it is the subject of the sentence: One should be careful not to hurt oneself … English dictionary
oneself — one|self [ wʌn self ] pronoun MAINLY BRITISH FORMAL Oneself is a reflexive pronoun, which can be used in the following ways: as an object that refers back to the pronoun one when it is the subject of the sentence: One should be careful not to… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
oneself — /wun self , wunz /, pron. 1. a person s self (used for emphasis or reflexively): One often hurts oneself accidentally. 2. be oneself, a. to be in one s normal state of mind or physical condition. b. to be unaffected and sincere: One makes more… … Universalium
oneself, one's self — These expressions may be spelled and pronounced as oneself or one s self (wuhn SELF, wunz SELF). Oneself is generally preferred because it is shorter and easier to spell and pronounce: On this firing range, it is easy to hurt oneself. It s… … Dictionary of problem words and expressions