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to+drive+a+car

  • 1 drive

    1. past tense - drove; verb
    1) (to control or guide (a car etc): Do you want to drive (the car), or shall I?) vairuoti, važiuoti
    2) (to take, bring etc in a car: My mother is driving me to the airport.) nuvežti, atvežti
    3) (to force or urge along: Two men and a dog were driving a herd of cattle across the road.) varyti
    4) (to hit hard: He drove a nail into the door; He drove a golf-ball from the tee.) įvaryti, išvaryti
    5) (to cause to work by providing the necessary power: This mill is driven by water.) varyti
    2. noun
    1) (a journey in a car, especially for pleasure: We decided to go for a drive.) pasivažinėjimas
    2) (a private road leading from a gate to a house etc: The drive is lined with trees.) kelias, alėja
    3) (energy and enthusiasm: I think he has the drive needed for this job.) energija, veržlumas
    4) (a special effort: We're having a drive to save electricity.) kampanija, žygis
    5) (in sport, a hard stroke (with a golf-club, a cricket bat etc).) smūgis
    6) ((computers) a disk drive.) diskavedis
    - driver's license
    - drive-in
    - drive-through
    - driving licence
    - be driving at
    - drive off
    - drive on

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > drive

  • 2 drive off

    1) (to leave or go away in a car etc: He got into a van and drove off.) nuvažiuoti
    2) (to keep away: to drive off flies.) nuvaikyti
    3) (in golf, to make the first stroke from the tee.) smogti pirmą kartą

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > drive off

  • 3 drive on

    1) (to carry on driving a car etc: Drive on - we haven't time to stop!) važiuoti toliau
    2) (to urge strongly forward: It was ambition that drove him on.) neleisti sustoti, skatinti veikti toliau

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > drive on

  • 4 drive-through

    adjective (that one may drive through (and do something without getting out of the car): a drivethrough bank/restaurant/zoo.) privažiuojamas automobiliu

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > drive-through

  • 5 can

    [kæn] I negative - can't; verb
    1) (to be able to: You can do it if you try hard.) galėti
    2) (to know how to: Can you drive a car?) mokėti
    3) ((usually may) to have permission to: You can go if you behave yourself.) galėti
    4) (used in questions to indicate surprise, disbelief etc: What can he be doing all this time?) galėtų
    II 1. noun
    (a metal container for liquids and many types of food: oil-can; beer-can; six cans of beer.) skardinė
    2. verb
    (to put (especially food) into cans, usually to preserve it: a factory for canning raspberries.) konservuoti
    - cannery

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > can

  • 6 competent

    ['kompətənt]
    (capable; skilled: a competent pianist; competent to drive a car.) kompetentingas, geras, kvalifikuotas
    - competently

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > competent

  • 7 could

    [kud]
    negative short form - couldn't; verb
    1) (past tense of can: They asked if I could drive a car; I said I couldn't; She asked if she could go.)
    2) (used to express a possibility: I could go but I'm not going to; I could do it next week if you helped me.) galėčiau, galėtum...

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > could

  • 8 licence

    (a (printed) form giving permission to do something (eg to keep a television set etc, drive a car, sell alcohol etc): a driving licence.) licencija, leidimas
    - licensed
    - licensee

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > licence

  • 9 speed

    [spi:d] 1. noun
    1) (rate of moving: a slow speed; The car was travelling at high speed.) greitis
    2) (quickness of moving.) greitis
    2. verb
    1) ((past tense, past participles sped [sped] speeded) to (cause to) move or progress quickly; to hurry: The car sped/speeded along the motorway.) lėkti, dumti, skubėti
    2) ((past tense, past participle speeded) to drive very fast in a car etc, faster than is allowed by law: The policeman said that I had been speeding.) viršyti greitį
    - speedy
    - speedily
    - speediness
    - speed bump
    - speed trap
    - speedometer
    - speed up

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > speed

  • 10 crash

    [kræʃ] 1. noun
    1) (a noise as of heavy things breaking or falling on something hard: I heard a crash, and looked round to see that he'd dropped all the plates.) trenksmas
    2) (a collision: There was a crash involving three cars.) avarija, sudužimas, susidūrimas
    3) (a failure of a business etc: the Wall Street crash.) krachas, bankrotas
    4) (a sudden failure of a computer: A computer crash is very costly.)
    2. verb
    1) (to (cause to) fall with a loud noise: The glass crashed to the floor.) su trenksmu (nu)kristi, sudaužyti
    2) (to drive or be driven violently (against, into): He crashed (his car); His car crashed into a wall.) su- daužyti, trenktis
    3) ((of aircraft) to land or be landed in such a way as to be damaged or destroyed: His plane crashed in the mountains.) sudužti, numušti
    4) ((of a business) to fail.) patirti bankrotą
    5) (to force one's way noisily (through, into): He crashed through the undergrowth.) brautis
    6) ((of a computer) to stop working suddenly: If the computer crashes, we may lose all our files.)
    3. adjective
    (rapid and concentrated: a crash course in computer technology.) intensyvus
    - crash-land

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > crash

  • 11 know

    [nəu]
    past tense - knew; verb
    1) (to be aware of or to have been informed about: He knows everything; I know he is at home because his car is in the drive; He knows all about it; I know of no reason why you cannot go.) žinoti
    2) (to have learned and to remember: He knows a lot of poetry.) mokėti
    3) (to be aware of the identity of; to be friendly with: I know Mrs Smith - she lives near me.) pažinti
    4) (to (be able to) recognize or identify: You would hardly know her now - she has become very thin; He knows a good car when he sees one.) atpažinti
    - knowingly
    - know-all
    - know-how
    - in the know
    - know backwards
    - know better
    - know how to
    - know the ropes

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > know

  • 12 gain on

    (to get or come closer to (a person, thing etc that one is chasing): Drive faster - the police car is gaining on us.) prisivyti, artintis

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > gain on

  • 13 navigate

    ['næviɡeit]
    1) (to direct, guide or move (a ship, aircraft etc) in a particular direction: He navigated the ship through the dangerous rocks.) vairuoti (lėktuvą), vesti (laivą)
    2) (to find or follow one's route when in a ship, aircraft, car etc: If I drive will you navigate?) rodyti kelią
    - navigation
    - navigator

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > navigate

См. также в других словарях:

  • Drive My Car — Song by The Beatles from the album Rubber Soul Released 3 December 1965 Recorded 13 October 1965, EMI Studios, London Genre Folk rock …   Wikipedia

  • Drive My Car — Saltar a navegación, búsqueda «Drive My Car» Canción de The Beatles Álbum Rubber Soul Publicación 3 de diciembre de 19 …   Wikipedia Español

  • Drive My Car — Исполнитель The Beatles Альбом Rubber Soul Дата выпуска 3 декабря 1965 (Великобритания) 14 июня 1966 (США …   Википедия

  • Drive My Car — Chanson par The Beatles extrait de l’album Rubber Soul Pays  Royaume Uni Sorti …   Wikipédia en Français

  • drive a car — conduct a car, drive an automobile …   English contemporary dictionary

  • car — W1S1 [ka: US ka:r] n ↑fog lamp, ↑headlight, ↑indicator, ↑mirror [Date: 1800 1900; Origin: car carriage (14 19 centuries), from Anglo French carre, from Latin carrus] 1.) a vehicle with four wheels and an en …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • car — [ kar ] noun count *** 1. ) a road vehicle for one driver and a few passengers. Someone who drives a car is called a driver: She s learning to drive a car. I ll take you to the train station in the car. She got into her car and drove away. a car… …   Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • drive-through — a. arranged to allow business to be transacted or sights to be seen while patrons remain in their vehicles; as, a drive through car wash; a drive through safari park. [WordNet 1.5] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • car tax — UK US noun [countable/uncountable] [singular car tax plural car taxes] money that you pay to the government so that you can drive your car on the roads Thesaurus: types of tax and taxationhyponym …   Useful english dictionary

  • car tax — n [U] money that people in Britain must pay if they want to drive a car on the roads = ↑road tax …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • drive around — drive a car up and down the streets, tooling around    At night we drove around town, looking for something to do …   English idioms

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