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1 drink in
drink in [sth.] [ person] respirare, assaporare [ air]; assaporare [ atmosphere]; [plant, roots] assorbire [ water]* * *(to take in eagerly: They listened eagerly, drinking in every detail.) ascoltare con interesse* * *vt + adv(subj: person: fresh air) aspirare, (story) ascoltare avidamente, (sight) ammirare, bersi con gli occhi* * *drink in [sth.] [ person] respirare, assaporare [ air]; assaporare [ atmosphere]; [plant, roots] assorbire [ water] -
2 lap up
lap [sth.] up, lap up [sth.]1) lappare, leccare [milk, water]2) fig. bearsi di [compliment, flattery]* * *(to drink eagerly by lapping: The dog lapped up the water.) leccare* * *vt + adv* * *lap [sth.] up, lap up [sth.]1) lappare, leccare [milk, water]2) fig. bearsi di [compliment, flattery] -
3 hang on
1) colloq. (wait) aspettarecan you hang on? — (on phone) può rimanere in linea?
2) colloq. (survive) resisterehang on in there! — tieni duro! hang on [sth.]
3) (depend on) dipendere dato hang on sb.'s every word — pendere dalle labbra di qcn
* * *1) (to wait: Will you hang on a minute - I'm not quite ready.) aspettare2) ((often with to) to hold: Hang on to that rope.) aggrapparsi3) (to keep; to retain: He likes to hang on to his money.) tenersi stretto* * *1. vi + prep1) (depend on: decision) dipendere da2) (listen eagerly) bersi le parole di2. vi + adv1)to hang on (to) — aggrapparsi (a), attaccarsi (a)to hang on to — (keep) tenere
2) (fam: wait) aspettarehang on a minute! — aspetta un momento!, (polite: on phone) attenda un attimo!
* * *1) colloq. (wait) aspettarecan you hang on? — (on phone) può rimanere in linea?
2) colloq. (survive) resisterehang on in there! — tieni duro! hang on [sth.]
3) (depend on) dipendere dato hang on sb.'s every word — pendere dalle labbra di qcn
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4 snap up
snap up [sth.] portare via, soffiare [ bargain]* * *(to grab eagerly: I saw this bargain in the shop and snapped it up straight away; The bargains were snapped up.) (non lasciarsi sfuggire)* * *vt + advto snap up a bargain fig — accaparrarsi un affare, non lasciarsi sfuggire un affare
* * *snap up [sth.] portare via, soffiare [ bargain] -
5 leap
I [liːp]1) salto m. (anche sport), balzo m.to take a leap — fare un salto, saltare
2) fig. (big step) passo m. (in avanti)3) (in price, demand) aumento m. improvviso••II 1. [liːp] 2.1) [person, animal] saltare, balzareto leap out of bed — saltare o schizzare fuori dal letto
to leap to one's feet — saltare o balzare in piedi
to leap across o over sth. saltare qcs., superare qcs. con un salto; to leap to sb.'s defence — fig. accorrere in difesa di qcn
3) [price, stock market] balzare, aumentare improvvisamente (by di)•- leap at- leap in- leap out- leap up••look before you leap — prov. rifletti prima di agire
* * *[li:p] 1. past tense, past participles - leapt; verb1) (to jump: He leapt into the boat.) saltare2) (to jump over: The dog leapt the wall.) saltare3) (to rush eagerly: She leaped into his arms.) lanciarsi2. noun(an act of leaping: The cat jumped from the roof and reached the ground in two leaps.) salto, balzo- leap year
- by leaps and bounds* * *I [liːp]1) salto m. (anche sport), balzo m.to take a leap — fare un salto, saltare
2) fig. (big step) passo m. (in avanti)3) (in price, demand) aumento m. improvviso••II 1. [liːp] 2.1) [person, animal] saltare, balzareto leap out of bed — saltare o schizzare fuori dal letto
to leap to one's feet — saltare o balzare in piedi
to leap across o over sth. saltare qcs., superare qcs. con un salto; to leap to sb.'s defence — fig. accorrere in difesa di qcn
3) [price, stock market] balzare, aumentare improvvisamente (by di)•- leap at- leap in- leap out- leap up••look before you leap — prov. rifletti prima di agire
См. также в других словарях:
half — half1 W1S1 [ha:f US hæf] predeterminer, pron, adj [only before noun] ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(50%)¦ 2¦(most of)¦ 3¦(time)¦ 4¦(combination)¦ 5 half a dozen 6 half a/the chance 7 half an eye/ear 8 be half the battle 9 half a minute/moment/second etc … Dictionary of contemporary English
seize — verb 1 take hold of sb/sth suddenly and firmly ADVERB ▪ immediately, suddenly ▪ He was immediately seized and thrown into prison. PREPOSITION ▪ by ▪ She sei … Collocations dictionary
tuck — 1 verb 1 (transitive always + adv/prep) to push the edge of a piece of cloth or paper into something so that it looks tidier or stays in place: tuck sth into/under: Nick was tucking his shirt into his trousers when she walked in. 2 (transitive… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
snap something up — BUY EAGERLY, accept eagerly, jump at, take advantage of, grab, seize (on), grasp with both hands, pounce on. → snap * * * quickly and eagerly buy or secure something that is in short supply or being sold cheaply all the tickets have been snapped… … Useful english dictionary
set — set1 W1S1 [set] v past tense and past participle set present participle setting ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(put)¦ 2¦(put into surface)¦ 3¦(story)¦ 4¦(consider)¦ 5¦(establish something)¦ 6¦(start something happening)¦ 7¦(decide something)¦ … Dictionary of contemporary English
make — 1 verb past tense and past participle made, PRODUCE STH 1 (T) to produce something by working: I m going to make a cake for Sam s birthday. | Did you make that dress yourself? | a car made in Japan | They re making a documentary about the Civil… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
set — 1 /set/ verb past tense and past participle set PUT DOWN 1 PUT (transitive always + adv/prep) to carefully put something down somewhere, especially something that is difficult to carry: set sth down/on etc: She set the tray down on a table next… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
fall — fall1 W1S1 [fo:l US fo:l] v past tense fell [fel] past participle fallen [ˈfo:lən US ˈfo:l ] ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(move downwards)¦ 2¦(stop standing/walking etc)¦ 3¦(decrease)¦ 4¦(become)¦ 5¦(belong to a group)¦ 6 fall short of something 7 fall victim/prey… … Dictionary of contemporary English
throw — 1 verb past threw past participle thrown 1 THROW A BALL/STONE ETC (I, T) to make an object such as a ball move quickly through the air by moving your hand quickly: throw sth at/to/towards etc: Someone threw a stone at the car. | Cromartie throws… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
pitch — pitch1 W3 [pıtʃ] n ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(sports field)¦ 2¦(strong feelings/activity)¦ 3¦(music)¦ 4¦(persuading)¦ 5¦(baseball)¦ 6¦(black substance)¦ 7¦(ship/aircraft)¦ 8¦(slope)¦ 9¦(street/market)¦ ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ [Sense: 1 … Dictionary of contemporary English
rush — 1 /rVS/ verb 1 MOVE QUICKLY (intransitive always + adv/prep) to move very quickly, especially because you need to be somewhere very soon (+ out/past/through/along etc): We rushed home to find out what had happened to Julie. | One of the pipes… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English