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1 schleifen
vt/i; schleift, schliff, hat geschliffen1. (schärfen) sharpen; (wetzen) auch whet; TECH. (glätten, abschmirgeln) grind, abrade; feiner: smooth, polish (auch fig.); (Edelsteine, Glas) cut2. MIL., umg. put through the mill; geschliffen—I v/t (hat geschleift)1. drag (along) (auch fig. jemanden); (Koffer etc.) auch lug; an den Haaren schleifen drag by the hair; einen Reiter über den Boden schleifen drag a rider along; jemanden ins Konzert etc. schleifen umg., fig. drag s.o. along to a concert etc.2. (niederreißen) pull down, demolishII v/i (hat oder ist) Schleppe etc.: trail ( am Boden along the ground); (reiben) rub (an +Dat against); Ihr Gürtel schleift am Boden your belt is trailing along the ground; das Rad schleift am Kotflügel the wheel is rubbing against the (inside of the) wing (Am. fender); schleifen lassen drag; die Füße schleifen lassen drag one’s feet, shuffle (one’s feet); die Kupplung schleifen lassen MOT. slip the clutch; er hat seine Arbeit in letzter Zeit schleifen lassen he has let things slide recently (as far as work is concerned); die haben alles schleifen lassen umg. they’ve just let everything go hang* * *(niederreißen) to raze;(schneiden) to cut;(schärfen) to grind; to whet; to hone; to sharpen* * *schlei|fen I ['ʃlaifn]1. vt1) (lit, fig) to drag; (= ziehen) to haul, to drag; (MUS) Töne, Noten to slurjdn vor Gericht schléífen (fig) — to drag or haul sb into court
jdn ins Konzert schléífen (hum inf) — to drag sb along to a concert
2) (= niederreißen) to raze (to the ground)2. vi1) aux sein or haben to trail, to drag2) (= reiben) to rubdie Kupplung schléífen lassen (Aut) — to slip the clutch
die Zügel schléífen lassen (lit, fig) — to slacken the reins
II pret schli\#ff [ʃlɪf] ptp geschli\#ffen [gə'ʃlɪfn]wir haben die Sache schléífen lassen (fig) — we let things slide
vt1) Rasiermesser, Messer, Schere to sharpen, to whet; Beil, Sense to grind, to whet; Werkstück, Linse to grind; Parkett to sand; Edelstein, Glas, Spiegel to cutSee:→ auch geschliffen2) (inf = drillen)jdn schléífen — to drill sb hard
* * *(to (cause to) move along the ground: His coat was so long it dragged on the ground at the back.) drag* * *schlei·fen1[ˈʃlaifn̩]I. vt Hilfsverb: haben▪ etw/jdn \schleifen to drag sth/sb▪ jdn \schleifen to drag sb▪ etw \schleifen to raze sth to the ground, to tear sth downII. vi1. Hilfsverb: haben (reiben) to rub [or scrape]die Kupplung \schleifen lassen AUTO to slip the clutch2. Hilfsverb: sein o haben (gleiten)3.schlei·fen2<schliff, geschliffen>[ˈʃlaifn̩]vt1. (schärfen)▪ etw \schleifen to sharpen [or grind] sthEdelsteine \schleifen to cut precious stones▪ jdn \schleifen to drill sb hard* * *Iunregelmäßiges transitives Verb1) (schärfen) sharpen; grind, sharpen < axe>3) (bes. Soldatenspr.): (drillen)II 1.transitives Verb1) (auch fig.) drag2.etwas schleifen — raze something [to the ground]
intransitives Verb; auch mit sein dragdie Kupplung schleifen lassen — (Kfz-W.) slip the clutch
etwas schleifen lassen — (fig.) let something slide; s. auch Zügel
* * *schleifen1 v/t & v/i; schleift, schliff, hat geschliffen1. (schärfen) sharpen; (wetzen) auch whet; TECH (glätten, abschmirgeln) grind, abrade; feiner: smooth, polish (auch fig); (Edelsteine, Glas) cutschleifen2A. v/t (hat geschleift)1. drag (along) (auch fig jemanden); (Koffer etc) auch lug;an den Haaren schleifen drag by the hair;einen Reiter über den Boden schleifen drag a rider along;2. (niederreißen) pull down, demolishB. v/i (hat oder ist) Schleppe etc: trail (an +dat against);Ihr Gürtel schleift am Boden your belt is trailing along the ground;das Rad schleift am Kotflügel the wheel is rubbing against the (inside of the) wing (US fender);schleifen lassen drag;die Füße schleifen lassen drag one’s feet, shuffle (one’s feet);die Kupplung schleifen lassen AUTO slip the clutch;er hat seine Arbeit in letzter Zeit schleifen lassen he has let things slide recently (as far as work is concerned);die haben alles schleifen lassen umg they’ve just let everything go hang* * *Iunregelmäßiges transitives Verb1) (schärfen) sharpen; grind, sharpen < axe>3) (bes. Soldatenspr.): (drillen)II 1.transitives Verb1) (auch fig.) drag2.etwas schleifen — raze something [to the ground]
intransitives Verb; auch mit sein dragdie Kupplung schleifen lassen — (Kfz-W.) slip the clutch
etwas schleifen lassen — (fig.) let something slide; s. auch Zügel
* * *v.to grind v.(§ p.,p.p.: ground)to sharpen v.
См. также в других словарях:
drag — 1 verb dragged, dragging 1 PULL ALONG THE GROUND (T) to pull someone or something along the ground, often because they are too heavy to carry: drag sth away/along/through etc: Inge managed to drag the table into the kitchen. | Angry protesters… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
drag — drag1 W3S3 [dræg] v past tense and past participle dragged present participle dragging ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(pull something)¦ 2¦(pull somebody)¦ 3 drag yourself to/into/out of etc something 4¦(persuade somebody to come)¦ 5¦(computer)¦ 6¦(be boring)¦… … Dictionary of contemporary English
drag — [drag] vt. dragged, dragging [ME draggen < ON draga (or OE dragan): see DRAW] 1. to pull or draw with force or effort, esp. along the ground; haul 2. a) to move (oneself) with effort b) to force into some situation, action, etc … English World dictionary
Drag — Drag, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Dragged}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Dragging}.] [OE. draggen; akin to Sw. dragga to search with a grapnel, fr. dragg grapnel, fr. draga to draw, the same word as E. draw. ? See {Draw}.] 1. To draw slowly or heavily onward; to… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
drag — ► VERB (dragged, dragging) 1) pull along forcefully, roughly, or with difficulty. 2) trail along the ground. 3) take (someone) somewhere, despite their reluctance. 4) (of time) pass slowly. 5) (drag out) protract (something) unnecessaril … English terms dictionary
drag — drag1 [ dræg ] verb ** ▸ 1 pull with difficulty ▸ 2 pull someone against will ▸ 3 make someone do something ▸ 4 touch ground ▸ 5 when time seems slow ▸ 6 in computing ▸ 7 search water with net ▸ + PHRASES 1. ) transitive to pull something or… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
drag — I UK [dræɡ] / US verb Word forms drag : present tense I/you/we/they drag he/she/it drags present participle dragging past tense dragged past participle dragged ** 1) [transitive] to pull something or someone along with difficulty, for example… … English dictionary
drag*/ — [dræg] verb I 1) [T] to pull something along with difficulty, especially something heavy She dragged her suitcase down the path.[/ex] 2) [T] to pull someone strongly or violently when they do not want to go with you I grabbed his arm and dragged… … Dictionary for writing and speaking English
drag — [[t]dræ̱g[/t]] ♦♦♦ drags, dragging, dragged 1) VERB If you drag something, you pull it along the ground, often with difficulty. [V n prep/adv] He got up and dragged his chair towards the table. 2) VERB If someone drags you somewhere, they pull… … English dictionary
drag — verb (drags, dragging, dragged) 1》 pull along forcefully, roughly, or with difficulty. ↘take (someone) somewhere, despite their reluctance. ↘move (an image) across a computer screen using a mouse. 2》 trail along the ground. ↘search… … English new terms dictionary
drag — /drag/, v., dragged, dragging, n., adj. v.t. 1. to draw with force, effort, or difficulty; pull heavily or slowly along; haul; trail: They dragged the carpet out of the house. 2. to search with a drag, grapnel, or the like: They dragged the lake… … Universalium