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1 hollow
['holəu] 1. adjective1) (having an empty space in it: a hollow tree; Bottles, pipes and tubes are hollow.) oco2) ((of a sound) strangely deep, as if made in something hollow: a hollow voice.) cavo2. noun1) (something hollow: hollows in her cheeks.) covinha2) (a small valley; a dip in the ground: You can't see the farm from here because it's in a hollow.) vale•- beat hollow
- hollow out* * *hol.low[h'ɔlou] n 1 concavidade, buraco. 2 espaço vazio. 3 vale. 4 cavidade, depressão. • vt tornar oco ou côncavo. • adj 1 oco, vazio. 2 côncavo. 3 profundo. 4 irreal, insincero. 5 sem valor. 6 pouco sonoro. the hollow of the hand a concha da mão. -
2 hollow
['holəu] 1. adjective1) (having an empty space in it: a hollow tree; Bottles, pipes and tubes are hollow.) oco2) ((of a sound) strangely deep, as if made in something hollow: a hollow voice.) cavernoso2. noun1) (something hollow: hollows in her cheeks.) buraco, cova, covinha2) (a small valley; a dip in the ground: You can't see the farm from here because it's in a hollow.) vale•- beat hollow - hollow out -
3 luck
1) (the state of happening by chance: Whether you win or not is just luck - there's no skill involved.) sorte2) (something good which happens by chance: She has all the luck!) sorte•- luckless- lucky
- luckily
- luckiness
- lucky dip
- bad luck!
- good luck!
- worse luck!* * *[l∧k] n 1 acaso, ventura. 2 sorte. 3 sucesso. • vi prosperar, ter sucesso. a great piece of luck muita sorte. bad luck azar. good luck sorte, boa sorte! hard luck azar. ill luck azar. in luck de boa sorte, feliz. out of luck de má sorte, infeliz. to be down one’s luck ter má sorte. to try one’s luck tentar a sorte. -
4 luck
1) (the state of happening by chance: Whether you win or not is just luck - there's no skill involved.) sorte, acaso2) (something good which happens by chance: She has all the luck!) sorte•- luckless- lucky - luckily - luckiness - lucky dip - bad luck! - good luck! - worse luck!
См. также в других словарях:
dip something in/into — put or let something down quickly or briefly in or into (liquid). → dip … English new terms dictionary
dip — dip1 [ dıp ] verb ** 1. ) transitive to lower something into a liquid for a moment before taking it back out again: dip in/into: She dipped her handkerchief in the water and gently began to wipe the dirt from his face. a ) transitive to put an… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
dip — [[t]dɪ̱p[/t]] dips, dipping, dipped 1) VERB If you dip something into a liquid, you put it into the liquid for a short time, so that only part of it is covered, and take it out again. [V n into/in n] They dip the food into the sauce... [V n… … English dictionary
dip into — phrasal verb [transitive] Word forms dip into : present tense I/you/we/they dip into he/she/it dips into present participle dipping into past tense dipped into past participle dipped into 1) dip into something to read, watch, or listen to small… … English dictionary
dip — I UK [dɪp] / US verb Word forms dip : present tense I/you/we/they dip he/she/it dips present participle dipping past tense dipped past participle dipped ** 1) a) [transitive] to lower something into a liquid for a moment before taking it back out … English dictionary
dip — verb (dips, dipping, dipped) 1》 (dip something in/into) put or let something down quickly or briefly in or into (liquid). ↘make (a candle) by immersing a wick repeatedly in hot wax. 2》 sink, drop, or slope downwards. ↘(of a level or… … English new terms dictionary
dip — vb 1 Dip, immerse, submerge, duck, souse, dunk are comparable when meaning to plunge a person or thing into or as if into liquid. Dip implies a momentary or partial plunging into a liquid or a slight or cursory entrance into a subject {the priest … New Dictionary of Synonyms
dip a toe into something — dip your/a toe into something dip your/a toe in the water phrase to try doing something, in order to test whether it will be successful or suitable They have dipped a toe into the computer games market. Thesaurus: to test something or… … Useful english dictionary
dip — [dip] vt. dipped or occas.Now Rare dipt, dipping [ME dippen < OE dyppan, to immerse < Gmc * dup , to be deep: see DIMPLE] 1. to put into or under liquid for a moment and then quickly take out; immerse 2. to dye in this way 3. to clean… … English World dictionary
dip your toe into something — dip your/a toe into something dip your/a toe in the water phrase to try doing something, in order to test whether it will be successful or suitable They have dipped a toe into the computer games market. Thesaurus: to test something or… … Useful english dictionary
dip into something — dip into (something) to use a small amount of something. The local government voted to dip into the emergency fund to pay for repairing the old town hall … New idioms dictionary