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1 sticking-plaster
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2 stick
I [stik] past tense, past participle - stuck; verb1) (to push (something sharp or pointed) into or through something: She stuck a pin through the papers to hold them together; Stop sticking your elbow into me!) (į)smeigti, (per)durti2) ((of something pointed) to be pushed into or through something: Two arrows were sticking in his back.) kyšoti3) (to fasten or be fastened (by glue, gum etc): He licked the flap of the envelope and stuck it down; These labels don't stick very well; He stuck (the broken pieces of) the vase together again; His brothers used to call him Bonzo and the name has stuck.) klijuoti(s), priklijuoti, suklijuoti, prilipti4) (to (cause to) become fixed and unable to move or progress: The car stuck in the mud; The cupboard door has stuck; I'll help you with your arithmetic if you're stuck.) įstrigti, užsikirsti, įklimpti•- sticker- sticky
- stickily
- stickiness
- sticking-plaster
- stick-in-the-mud
- come to a sticky end
- stick at
- stick by
- stick it out
- stick out
- stick one's neck out
- stick to/with
- stick together
- stick up for II [stik] noun1) (a branch or twig from a tree: They were sent to find sticks for firewood.) pagalys, šakalys2) (a long thin piece of wood etc shaped for a special purpose: She always walks with a stick nowadays; a walking-stick / hockey-stick; a drumstick.) lazda, lazdelė3) (a long piece: a stick of rhubarb.) lazda, stiebas•- get hold of the wrong end of the stick- get the wrong end of the stick -
3 acupuncture
(a method of treating illness etc by sticking needles into the patient's skin at certain points.) akupunktūra -
4 Band-Aid
((American) (a piece of) sticking plaster with a dressing used to cover a wound etc: You should put a Band-Aid on that cut.) pleistras -
5 cape
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6 cement
[sə'ment] 1. noun1) (a mixture of clay and lime (usually with sand and water added) used for sticking things (eg bricks) together in building and to make concrete for making very hard surfaces.) cementas2) (any of several types of glue.) rišamoji medžiaga3) (a substance used to fill cavities in teeth.) plomba2. verb(to join firmly with cement.) cementuoti -
7 come unstuck
1) (to stop sticking: The label has come unstuck.) atsiklijuoti2) (to fail: Our plans have come unstuck.) sužlugti -
8 eaves
[i:vz](the edge of the roof sticking out beyond the wall: There are birds nesting under the eaves.) pastogė -
9 glue
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10 paste
[peist]1) (a soft, damp mixture, especially one made up of glue and water and used for sticking pieces of paper etc together.) klijai2) (a mixture of flour, fat etc used for making pies, pastry etc.) tešla3) (a mixture made from some types of food: almond paste.) pasta, paštetas -
11 plaster
1. noun1) (( also adjective) (of) a substance put on walls, ceilings etc which dries to form a hard smooth surface: He mixed up some plaster to repair the wall; a plaster ceiling.) tinkas; tinkuotas2) (( also adjective) (also plaster of Paris) (of) a similar quick-drying substance used for supporting broken limbs, making models etc: She's got her arm in plaster; a plaster model.) gipsas; gipsinis3) ((also sticking-plaster; American Band-Aid) (a piece of) sticky tape (sometimes with a dressing) used to cover a wound etc: You should put a plaster on that cut.) pleistras2. verb1) (to put plaster on: They plastered the walls.) (iš)tinkuoti, (su)gipsuoti2) (to spread or apply rather too thickly: She'd look nicer if she didn't plaster so much make-up on her face.) (už)tepti•- plastic 3. adjective(easily made into different shapes.) plastinis, plastiškas -
12 poster
['pəustə](a large notice or advertisement for sticking on a wall etc: Have you seen the posters advertising the circus?) (didelis) skelbimas, plakatas, afiša -
13 scrap
I 1. [skræp] noun1) (a small piece or fragment: a scrap of paper.) skiautelė2) ((usually in plural) a piece of food left over after a meal: They gave the scraps to the dog.) išėdos, likučiai3) (waste articles that are only valuable for the material they contain: The old car was sold as scrap; ( also adjective) scrap metal.) laužas4) (a picture etc for sticking into a scrapbook.) iškarpa2. verb(to discard: They scapped the old television set; She decided to scrap the whole plan.) išmesti, atsisakyti, palaidoti- scrappy- scrappily
- scrappiness
- scrapbook
- scrap heap II 1. [skræp] noun(a fight: He tore his jacket in a scrap with another boy.) peštynės2. verb(to fight: The dogs were scrapping over a bone.) kniautis, peštis -
14 Sellotape
['seləteip]((also no capital) a type of transparent adhesive tape, used eg for sticking pieces of paper together.) lipnioji juostelë -
15 stick together
1) (to (cause to) be fastened together: We'll stick the pieces together; The rice is sticking together.) suklijuoti, sulipti2) ((of friends etc) to remain loyal to each other: They've stuck together all these years.) būti drauge, nesiskirti -
16 sticker
noun (an adhesive label or sign bearing eg a design, political message etc, for sticking eg on a car's window etc: The car sticker read `Blood donors needed'.) lipdukas -
17 tape
[teip] 1. noun1) ((a piece of) a narrow strip or band of cloth used for tying etc: bundles of letters tied with tape.) juostelė2) (a piece of this or something similar, eg a string, stretched above the finishing line on a race track: The two runners reached the tape together.) (finišo) juostelė3) (a narrow strip of paper, plastic, metal etc used for sticking materials together, recording sounds etc: adhesive tape; insulating tape; I recorded the concert on tape.) juostelė4) (a tape-measure.) metras, matavimo juosta2. verb1) (to fasten or seal with tape.) surišti/užklijuoti juostele2) (to record (the sound of something) on tape: He taped the concert.) įrašyti į juostą•- measuring-tape
- tape-recorder
- tape-record
- tape-recording -
18 thorn
[Ɵo:n](a hard, sharp point sticking out from the stem of certain plants: She pricked her finger on a thorn.) spyglys- thorny
См. также в других словарях:
Sticking — Stick ing, a. & n. from {Stick}, v. [1913 Webster] {Sticking piece}, a piece of beef cut from the neck. [Eng.] {Sticking place}, the place where a thing sticks, or remains fast; sticking point. [1913 Webster] But screw your courage to the… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Sticking piece — Sticking Stick ing, a. & n. from {Stick}, v. [1913 Webster] {Sticking piece}, a piece of beef cut from the neck. [Eng.] {Sticking place}, the place where a thing sticks, or remains fast; sticking point. [1913 Webster] But screw your courage to… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Sticking place — Sticking Stick ing, a. & n. from {Stick}, v. [1913 Webster] {Sticking piece}, a piece of beef cut from the neck. [Eng.] {Sticking place}, the place where a thing sticks, or remains fast; sticking point. [1913 Webster] But screw your courage to… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Sticking plaster — Sticking Stick ing, a. & n. from {Stick}, v. [1913 Webster] {Sticking piece}, a piece of beef cut from the neck. [Eng.] {Sticking place}, the place where a thing sticks, or remains fast; sticking point. [1913 Webster] But screw your courage to… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Sticking point — Sticking Stick ing, a. & n. from {Stick}, v. [1913 Webster] {Sticking piece}, a piece of beef cut from the neck. [Eng.] {Sticking place}, the place where a thing sticks, or remains fast; sticking point. [1913 Webster] But screw your courage to… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
sticking point — sticking points also sticking point N COUNT: usu sing A sticking point in a discussion or series of negotiations is a point on which the people involved cannot agree and which may delay or stop the talks. A sticking point is also one aspect of a… … English dictionary
sticking place — sticking place, sticking point The phrase sticking point is first recorded in 1826, and in its common modern meaning ‘the limit reached of progress, agreement, etc.’ not until the 1960s. The allusion is to a line in Shakespeare s Macbeth… … Modern English usage
sticking point — sticking place, sticking point The phrase sticking point is first recorded in 1826, and in its common modern meaning ‘the limit reached of progress, agreement, etc.’ not until the 1960s. The allusion is to a line in Shakespeare s Macbeth… … Modern English usage
Sticking — may refer to:* Sticking coefficient, a surface physics concept * Sticking knife, an agricultural tool used for bleeding out livestock in home butcheringee also* Stick * Stuck (disambiguation) … Wikipedia
sticking plaster — sticking plasters N VAR Sticking plaster is material that you can stick over a cut or wound in order to protect it. A sticking plaster is a piece of this material. [BRIT] (in AM, use Band Aid) … English dictionary
Sticking coefficient — is the term used in surface physics to describe the ratio of the number of adsorbate atoms (or molecules) that do adsorb, or stick , to a surface to the total number of atoms that impinge upon that surface during the same period of time. [… … Wikipedia