-
21 elbow
['elbəu] 1. noun(the joint where the arm bends: He leant forward on his elbows.) alkūnė2. verb(to push with the elbow: He elbowed his way through the crowd.) stumtis alkūnėmis- at one's elbow -
22 extra
['ekstrə] 1. adjective(additional; more than usual or necessary: They demand an extra $10 a week; We need extra men for this job.) papildomas2. adverb(unusually: an extra-large box of chocolates.) nepaprastai3. pronoun(an additional amount: The book costs $6.90 but we charge extra for postage.) papildomas mokestis4. noun1) (something extra, or something for which an extra price is charged: The college fees cover teaching only - stationery and other equipment are extras.) kas nors papildoma, priedas2) (in cinema or television, an actor employed in a small part, eg as a person in a crowd.) statistas3) (a special edition of a newspaper containing later or special news.) specialus laikraščio numeris -
23 fall away
1) (to become less in number: The crowd began to fall away.) mažėti, nykti2) (to slope downwards: The ground fell away steeply.) staigiai leistis žemyn -
24 fight one's way
(to make one's way with difficulty: She fought her way through the crowd.) skintis kelią -
25 flock
-
26 gather
['ɡæðə] 1. verb1) (to (cause to) come together in one place: A crowd of people gathered near the accident.) su(si)rinkti2) (to learn (from what has been seen, heard etc): I gather you are leaving tomorrow.) suprasti3) (to collect or get: He gathered strawberries from the garden; to gather information.) (su)rinkti4) (to pull (material) into small folds and stitch together: She gathered the skirt at the waist.) suraukti, suklostyti2. noun(a fold in material, a piece of clothing etc.) rauktė, klostė- gather round
- gather together -
27 get back
1) (to move away: The policeman told the crowd to get back.) atsitraukti2) (to retrieve: She eventually got back the book she had lent him.) atgauti -
28 great
[ɡreit]1) (of a better quality than average; important: a great writer; Churchill was a great man.) didis, didelis2) (very large, larger etc than average: a great crowd of people at the football match.) didžiulis3) (of a high degree: Take great care of that book.) didžiausias4) (very pleasant: We had a great time at the party.) nuostabus, puikus5) (clever and expert: John's great at football.) talentingas, sumanus, puikus•- greatly- greatness -
29 hiss
[his] 1. verb((of snakes, geese, people etc) to make a sound like that of the letter s [s], eg to show anger or displeasure: The children hissed (at) the witch when she came on stage; The geese hissed at the dog.) šnypšti2. noun(such a sound: The speaker ignored the hisses of the angry crowd.) šnypštimas -
30 horde
[ho:d](a crowd or large number (of people etc): Hordes of tourists thronged the temple.) minia, orda -
31 huddle
1. verb1) ((often with together) to crowd closely together: The cows (were) huddled together in the corner of the field.) susispiesti (į krūvą)2) (to curl up in a sitting position: The old man (was) huddled near the fire to keep warm.) susiriesti2. noun(a number of people, things etc crowded together: a huddle of people round the injured man.) būrys, pulkas, krūva -
32 hushed
adjective (silent, still: a hushed room/crowd.) nutilęs, nuščiuvęs -
33 hysteria
[hi'stiəriə]1) (a severe nervous upset which causes eg uncontrolled laughing or crying, imaginary illnesses etc.) isterija2) (uncontrolled excitement, eg of a crowd of people: mass hysteria.) isterija•- hysterically
- hysterics
- go into hysterics -
34 in the midst of
1) (among or in the centre of: in the midst of a crowd of people.) viduryje, tarp2) (at the same time as: in the midst of all these troubles.) vienu metu su -
35 incite
1) (to urge (someone) to do something: He incited the people to rebel against the king.) kurstyti, skatinti2) (to stir up or cause: They incited violence in the crowd.) kurstyti• -
36 insecure
[insi'kjuə]1) (unsure of oneself or lacking confidence: Whenever he was in a crowd of people he felt anxious and insecure.) nesaugus2) (not safe or firmly fixed: This chair-leg is insecure; an insecure lock.) nepatikimas, netvirtas•- insecurity -
37 jam
[‹æm] I noun(a thick sticky substance made of fruit etc preserved by being boiled with sugar: raspberry jam; ( also adjective) a jam sandwich.) džemas- jammyII 1. past tense, past participle - jammed; verb1) (to crowd full: The gateway was jammed with angry people.) pri(si)grūsti2) (to squeeze, press or wedge tightly or firmly: He jammed his foot in the doorway.) (į)sprausti, (į)brukti3) (to stick and (cause to) be unable to move: The door / steering-wheel has jammed.) užstrigti, užsikirsti4) ((of a radio station) to cause interference with (another radio station's broadcast) by sending out signals on a similar wavelength.) trukdyti2. noun1) (a crowding together of vehicles, people etc so that movement is difficult or impossible: traffic-jams.) grūstis2) (a difficult situation: I'm in a bit of a jam - I haven't got enough money to pay for this meal.) bėda, sunki padėtis•- jam on -
38 jostle
['‹osl](to push roughly: We were jostled by the crowd; I felt people jostling against me in the dark.) stumdyti -
39 keep back
1) (not to (allow to) move forward: She kept the child back on the edge of the crowd; Every body keep back from the door!) nesiartinti, pasitraukti, laikyti(s) toliau (nuo)2) (not to tell or make known: I feel he's keeping the real story back for some reason.) nutylėti3) (not to give or pay out: Part of my allowance is kept back to pay for my meals; Will they keep it back every week?) išskaičiuoti -
40 kindle
['kindl](to (cause to) catch fire: I kindled a fire using twigs and grass; The fire kindled easily; His speech kindled the anger of the crowd.) už(si)degti- kindling
См. также в других словарях:
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