-
21 dose
[dəus] 1. noun1) (the quantity of medicine etc to be taken at one time: It's time you had a dose of your medicine.) dozė, porcija2) (an unpleasant thing (especially an illness) which one is forced to suffer: a nasty dose of flu.) porcija2. verb(to give medicine to: She dosed him with aspirin.) duoti (vaistus)- dosage -
22 end up
1) (to reach or come to an end, usually unpleasant: I knew that he would end up in prison.) (už)baigti2) (to do something in the end: He refused to believe her but he ended up apologizing.) galų gale ką nors padaryti -
23 escapism
noun (the tendency to escape from unpleasant reality into day-dreams etc.) bėgimas nuo tikrovės -
24 euphemism
['ju:fəmizəm](a pleasant name for something that is unpleasant: `Pass on' is a euphemism for `die'.) eufemizmas -
25 extreme
[ik'stri:m] 1. adjective1) (very great, especially much more than usual: extreme pleasure; He is in extreme pain.) didžiulis, nepaprastai didelis2) (very far or furthest in any direction, especially out from the centre: the extreme south-western tip of England; Politically, he belongs to the extreme left.) tolimiausias, kraštutinis3) (very violent or strong; not ordinary or usual: He holds extreme views on education.) kraštutinis2. noun1) (something as far, or as different, as possible from something else: the extremes of sadness and joy.) kraštutinumas, priešingybė2) (the greatest degree of any state, especially if unpleasant: The extremes of heat in the desert make life uncomfortable.) aukščiausias laipsnis•- extremism
- extremist
- extremity
- in the extreme
- to extremes -
26 foul
1. adjective1) ((especially of smell or taste) causing disgust: a foul smell.) bjaurus2) (very unpleasant; nasty: a foul mess.) šlykštus2. noun(an action etc which breaks the rules of a game: The other team committed a foul.) pražanga3. verb1) (to break the rules of a game (against): He fouled his opponent.) prasižengti2) (to make dirty, especially with faeces: Dogs often foul the pavement.) teršti• -
27 free
[fri:] 1. adjective1) (allowed to move where one wants; not shut in, tied, fastened etc: The prison door opened, and he was a free man.) laisvas2) (not forced or persuaded to act, think, speak etc in a particular way: free speech; You are free to think what you like.) laisvas3) ((with with) generous: He is always free with his money/advice.) dosnus4) (frank, open and ready to speak: a free manner.) laisvas, nesuvaržytas5) (costing nothing: a free gift.) nemokamas6) (not working or having another appointment; not busy: I shall be free at five o'clock.) laisvas7) (not occupied, not in use: Is this table free?) laisvas, neužimtas8) ((with of or from) without or no longer having (especially something or someone unpleasant etc): She is free from pain now; free of charge.) ne(be)turintis2. verb1) (to make or set (someone) free: He freed all the prisoners.) išlaisvinti2) ((with from or of) to rid or relieve (someone) of something: She was able to free herself from her debts by working at an additional job.) iš(si)vaduoti•- freedom- freely
- free-for-all
- freehand
- freehold
- freelance 3. verb(to work in this way: He is freelancing now.) dirbti laisvu/neetatiniu darbuotoju- Freepost- free skating
- free speech
- free trade
- freeway
- freewheel
- free will
- a free hand
- set free -
28 glare
[ɡleə] 1. verb1) (to stare fiercely and angrily: She glared at the little boy.) dėbsoti, dėbtelėti2) (to shine very brightly, usually to an unpleasant extent: The sun glared down on us as we crossed the desert.) plieksti2. noun1) (a fierce or angry look: a glare of displeasure.) dėbtelėjimas2) (unpleasantly bright light: the glare of the sun.) akinantis spindėjimas, plieskimas•- glaring- glaringly -
29 glutton
1) (a person who eats too much: That child is fat because he is such a glutton.) rajūnas, ėdrūnas2) (a person who is always eager for more of something usually unpleasant: He's a glutton for work.) besotis•- gluttony -
30 grating
adjective ((of sounds) unpleasant.) džeržgiantis, erzinantis -
31 grim
[ɡrim]1) (horrible; very unpleasant: The soldiers had a grim task looking for bodies in the wrecked houses.) siaubingas, bjaurus, atgrasus2) (angry; fierce-looking; not cheerful: The boss looks a bit grim this morning.) rūstus3) (stubborn, unyielding: grim determination.) tvirtas, nepalenkiamas•- grimness- grimly
- like grim death -
32 grin and bear it
(to put up with something unpleasant without complaining: He doesn't like his present job but he'll just have to grin and bear it till he finds another.) šypsotis sukandus dantis -
33 grind
1. past tense, past participle - ground; verb1) (to crush into powder or small pieces: This machine grinds coffee.) malti, grūsti2) (to rub together, usually producing an unpleasant noise: He grinds his teeth.) brūžinti, griežti3) (to rub into or against something else: He ground his heel into the earth.) įtrinti, sutrinti2. noun(boring hard work: Learning vocabulary is a bit of a grind.) ilgas varginantis darbas, kalimas- grinder- grinding
- grindstone
- grind down
- grind up
- keep someone's nose to the grindstone
- keep one's nose to the grindstone -
34 hangover
noun (the unpleasant after effects of having had too much alcohol: He woke up with a hangover.) pagirios -
35 harsh
-
36 hateful
adjective (very bad; very unpleasant: That was a hateful thing to do to her; What a hateful person!) šlykštus, pasibjaurėtinas -
37 haunt
[ho:nt] 1. verb1) ((of a ghost) to inhabit: A ghost is said to haunt this house.) vaidentis (kur)2) ((of an unpleasant memory) to keep coming back into the mind of: Her look of misery haunts me.) persekioti, neduoti ramybės3) (to visit very often: He haunts that café.) dažnai lankytis2. noun(a place one often visits: This is one of my favourite haunts.) mėgstama vieta- haunted -
38 home truth
(a plain statement of something which is unpleasant but true (about a person, his behaviour etc) said directly to the person: It's time someone told him a few home truths.) karti tiesa -
39 imminent
['iminənt]((especially of something unpleasant) likely to happen etc very soon: A storm is imminent.) artėjantis, gresiantis -
40 incur
[in'kə:]past tense, past participle - incurred; verb1) (to bring (something unpleasant) on oneself: to incur someone's displeasure.) užsitraukti2) (to become liable to pay (a debt): to incur enormous debts.) įsiskolinti
См. также в других словарях:
Unpleasant — Un*pleas ant, a. Not pleasant; not amiable or agreeable; displeasing; offensive. {Un*pleas ant*ly}, adv. {Un*pleas ant*ness}, n. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
unpleasant — index bitter (acrid tasting), deplorable, invidious, loathsome, objectionable, obnoxious, odious, offensive ( … Law dictionary
unpleasant sound — index noise Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
unpleasant — (adj.) 1530s, from UN (Cf. un ) (1) not + PLEASANT (Cf. pleasant). Related: Unpleasantly; unpleasantness … Etymology dictionary
unpleasant — [adj] bad abhorrent, bad news*, bad scene*, disagreeable, displeasing, distasteful, fierce, grody*, gross, hard time*, icky*, irksome, lousy, nasty, objectionable, obnoxious, poisonous, repulsive, rotten, sour, troublesome, unacceptable,… … New thesaurus
unpleasant — ► ADJECTIVE ▪ not pleasant; disagreeable. DERIVATIVES unpleasantly adverb … English terms dictionary
unpleasant — [un plez′ənt] adj. not pleasant; offensive; disagreeable unpleasantly adv … English World dictionary
unpleasant — adj. 1) unpleasant to (he is unpleasant to everyone) 2) unpleasant to + inf. (it s unpleasant to talk to him = it s unpleasant talking to him = he s unpleasant to talk to = he s an unpleasant person to talk to) * * * [ʌn plez(ə)nt] unpleasant to… … Combinatory dictionary
unpleasant — adj. VERBS ▪ be, feel, look, seem, smell, sound, taste ▪ become, get, turn … Collocations dictionary
unpleasant — [[t]ʌnple̱z(ə)nt[/t]] 1) ADJ GRADED If something is unpleasant, it gives you bad feelings, for example by making you feel upset or uncomfortable. The symptoms can be uncomfortable, unpleasant and serious... The vacuum has an unpleasant smell...… … English dictionary
unpleasant */*/ — UK [ʌnˈplez(ə)nt] / US adjective 1) if something is unpleasant, you do not like or enjoy it The smell was very unpleasant. an unpleasant experience We were all ignoring the unpleasant truth. 2) a) not friendly or kind She was really unpleasant on … English dictionary