-
41 admiration
-
42 affection
[ə'fɛkʃən]nuczucie nt* * *[ə'fekʃən](liking or fondness: I have great affection for her, but she never shows any affection towards me.) uczucie- affectionately -
43 commonwealth
['kɔmənwɛlθ]n ( BRIT)the Commonwealth — (Brytyjska) Wspólnota f Narodów
* * *['komənwelƟ](an association of states who have joined together for their common good: the Commonwealth of Australia.) wspólnota, federacja -
44 domesticated
[də'mɛstɪkeɪtɪd]adjanimal oswojony* * *[-keitid]1) ((of animals) accustomed to living near and being used by people: Cows and sheep have been domesticated for many thousands of years.) oswojony, udomowiony2) (good at doing jobs associated with running a house: My husband has become very domesticated since I've been ill.) chętny do prac domowych -
45 firstly
['fəːstlɪ]adv* * *adverb (in the first place: I have three reasons for not going - firstly, it's cold, secondly, I'm tired, and thirdly, I don't want to!) po pierwsze -
46 frivolity
[frɪ'vɔlɪtɪ]n* * *[-'vo-]1) (frivolousness: The frivolity of his behaviour.) lekkomyślność2) (a frivolous action or thought: I have no time for frivolities.) żart -
47 gene
[dʒiːn]ngen m* * *[‹i:n](any of the basic elements of heredity, passed from parents to their offspring: If the children are red-haired, one of their parents must have a gene for red hair.) gen- genetic- genetic engineering
- genetics -
48 inessential
[ɪnɪ'sɛnʃl]adj* * *[inə'senʃəl]noun, adjective((something) which is not essential: We have no money for inessentials; inessential luxuries.) (problem) nieistotny -
49 justification
[dʒʌstɪfɪ'keɪʃən]n* * *[-fi-]1) ((the act of) justifying or excusing.) usprawiedliwienie2) (something that justifies: You have no justification for criticizing him in that way.) usprawiedliwienie -
50 message
['mɛsɪdʒ] 1. n( piece of information) wiadomość f; ( meaning) przesłanie nt; ( COMPUT) wiadomość f2. vt ( COMPUT)wysyłać (wysłać perf) wiadomość do +genhe finally got the message ( inf, fig) — wreszcie do niego dotarło (inf)
* * *['mesi‹]1) (a piece of information spoken or written, passed from one person to another: I have a message for you from Mr Johnston.) wiadomość2) (the instruction or teaching of a moral story, religion, prophet etc: What message is this story trying to give us?) przesłanie• -
51 overcharge
[əuvə'tʃɑːdʒ]vtliczyć (policzyć perf) za dużo +dat* * *(to charge too much: I have been overcharged for these goods.) przepłacić -
52 pigs might fly
(said of something very unlikely to happen: `We might have fine weather for our holidays.' `Yes, and pigs might fly!') kaktus mi na dłoni wyrośnie -
53 recreation
[rɛkrɪ'eɪʃən]n* * *[rekri'eiʃən]((a) pleasant activity which one enjoys doing in one's spare time (eg a sport, hobby): I have little time for recreation; amusements and recreations.) rekreacja- recreation ground -
54 reunion
[riː'juːnɪən]n(of school, class, family) zjazd m; ( of two people) spotkanie nt (po latach)* * *[ri:ju:njən]1) (a meeting of people who have not met for some time: We attended a reunion of former pupils of our school.) zjazd (absolwentów, rodzinny)2) (the act of reuniting or state of being reunited.) powtórne połączenie•- reunite -
55 run to
(to have enough money for: We can't run to a new car this year.) pozwolić sobie na -
56 secondly
['sɛkəndlɪ]advpo drugie, po wtóre (fml)* * *adverb (in the second place: I have two reasons for not buying the house - firstly, it's too big, and secondly it's too far from town.) po drugie -
57 tradesman
['treɪdzmən]( shopkeeper) handlowiec m* * *['trei‹-]1) (a shopkeeper.) sklepikarz2) (a workman in a skilled job: My husband cannot mend the television-set - I'll have to send for a tradesman.) fachowiec -
58 weak
[wiːk]adj* * *[wi:k]1) (lacking in physical strength: Her illness has made her very weak.) słaby, słabowity2) (not strong in character: I'm very weak when it comes to giving up cigarettes.) bezwolny3) ((of a liquid) diluted; not strong: weak tea.) cienki4) ((of an explanation etc) not convincing.) nieprzekonywający5) ((of a joke) not particularly funny.) kiepski•- weakly- weaken
- weakling
- weakness
- have a weakness for -
59 weakness
['wiːknɪs]n( frailty) osłabienie nt; ( of system etc) słabość f; ( of signal etc) niski poziom m* * *1) (the state of being weak.) słabość2) (something weak or faulty; a defect: weaknesses of character; Smoking is one of my weaknesses.) słabość -
60 yearning
['jəːnɪŋ]nto have a yearning for sth/to do sth — (bardzo) pragnąć czegoś/(z)robić coś
* * *noun ((a) strong desire.) tęsknota
См. также в других словарях:
To have the words for — Word Word, n. [AS. word; akin to OFries. & OS. word, D. woord, G. wort, Icel. or[eth], Sw. & Dan. ord, Goth. wa[ u]rd, OPruss. wirds, Lith. vardas a name, L. verbum a word; or perhaps to Gr. rh twr an orator. Cf. {Verb}.] [1913 Webster] 1. The… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
have an ear for — {v. phr.} To have a keen perception; have a taste or a talent for; be sensitive to something. * /I have no ear whatsoever for foreign languages or music./ … Dictionary of American idioms
have an ear for — {v. phr.} To have a keen perception; have a taste or a talent for; be sensitive to something. * /I have no ear whatsoever for foreign languages or music./ … Dictionary of American idioms
have an eye for — {v. phr.} To be able to judge correctly of; have good taste in. * /She has an eye for color and style in clothes./ * /He has an eye for good English usage./ … Dictionary of American idioms
have it in for — {v. phr.}, {informal} To wish or mean to harm; have a bitter feeling against. * /George has it in for Bob because Bob told the teacher that George cheated in the examination./ * /After John beat Ted in a fight, Ted always had it in for John./ … Dictionary of American idioms
have an eye for — {v. phr.} To be able to judge correctly of; have good taste in. * /She has an eye for color and style in clothes./ * /He has an eye for good English usage./ … Dictionary of American idioms
have it in for — {v. phr.}, {informal} To wish or mean to harm; have a bitter feeling against. * /George has it in for Bob because Bob told the teacher that George cheated in the examination./ * /After John beat Ted in a fight, Ted always had it in for John./ … Dictionary of American idioms
have something going for one — {v. phr.}, {slang}, {informal} To have ability, talent; good looks, and/or influence in important places helping one to be successful. * /Well now, Pat Jones, that s another story she s got something going for her./ … Dictionary of American idioms
have something going for one — {v. phr.}, {slang}, {informal} To have ability, talent; good looks, and/or influence in important places helping one to be successful. * /Well now, Pat Jones, that s another story she s got something going for her./ … Dictionary of American idioms
have eyes only for — {v. phr.} To see or want nothing else but; give all your attention to; be interested only in. * /Of all the horses in the show, John had eyes only for the big white one./ * /All the girls liked Fred, but he had eyes only for Helen./ … Dictionary of American idioms
have eyes only for — {v. phr.} To see or want nothing else but; give all your attention to; be interested only in. * /Of all the horses in the show, John had eyes only for the big white one./ * /All the girls liked Fred, but he had eyes only for Helen./ … Dictionary of American idioms