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1 hard
adj. hard--------adv. met inspanning; naast-hard1[ ha:d]1 hard ⇒ vast(staand); krachtig; taai, robuust3 moeilijk ⇒ hard, lastig♦voorbeelden:hard currency • harde valutahard drink/liquor • sterkedrankhard drug • harddrugtake some hard knocks • harde klappen krijgen, het zwaar te verduren hebbena hard winter • een felle/strenge winterhard and fast rule/line • vaste regel, stalen weta hard case • een onverbeterlijk/moeilijk geval〈Amerikaans-Engels; informeel〉 hard sell • harde/agressieve verkoopmethodelearn something the hard way • door bittere ervaring lerenbe hard (up)on someone • onaardig/streng zijn tegen iemandshe gave him a hard time • hij kreeg het zwaar te verduren van haar(fall on) hard times • moeilijke tijden (beleven)hard to believe • moeilijk te gelovenhard of hearing • slechthorend, hardhorend¶ hard cash • baar geld, kende munthard feelings • wrok(gevoelens), rancuneno hard feelings? • even goede vrienden?hard luck/ 〈 Brits-Engels〉 lines • pech, tegenslagas hard as nails • ongevoelig, onverzoenlijkplay hard to get • moeilijk doen, zich ongenaakbaar opstellenhard by • vlakbijbe hard on something • iets vlug verslijten→ hard up hard up/II 〈 bijvoeglijk naamwoord, attributief〉1 hard ⇒ ijverig, energiek♦voorbeelden:1 a hard drinker • een stevige/zware drinkera hard worker • een harde werker————————hard2〈 bijwoord〉1 hard ⇒ krachtig, inspannend, zwaar♦voorbeelden:be hard done by • te kort gedaan/benadeeld zijnlook hard • aandachtig kijkenthink hard • diep nadenkenbe hard on someone's heel(s)/trail • iemand op de hielen zittentraditions/old habits die hard • tradities/vaste gewoonten verdwijnen niet gauwtake something hard • iets zwaar opnemen, zwaar lijden onder iets
См. также в других словарях:
hit the bottle — (slang) To drink excessively • • • Main Entry: ↑hit * * * hit the bottle/take to the bottle/informal phrase to start drinking a lot of alcohol He hit the bottle after losing his job … Useful english dictionary
hit the spot — {v. phr.}, {informal} To refresh fully or satisfy you; bring back your spirits or strength. Used especially of food or drink. * /A cup of tea always hits the spot when you are tired./ * /Mother s apple pie always hits the spot with the boys./ … Dictionary of American idioms
hit the spot — {v. phr.}, {informal} To refresh fully or satisfy you; bring back your spirits or strength. Used especially of food or drink. * /A cup of tea always hits the spot when you are tired./ * /Mother s apple pie always hits the spot with the boys./ … Dictionary of American idioms
hit the bottle — drink liquor, get drunk to forget problems When Laura left him, he hit the bottle, drinking to forget her … English idioms
hit the bottle — drink alcohol (usually a negative meaning) She started to hit the bottle soon after her divorce … Idioms and examples
hit the bottle — ► hit the bottle informal start to drink alcohol heavily. Main Entry: ↑bottle … English terms dictionary
hit the spot — phrasal : to give complete or special satisfaction used especially of food or drink * * * hit the spot informal phrase to be exactly what you want or need A cool glass of beer would really hit the spot. Thesaurus: relevant and appropriatesynonym … Useful english dictionary
Hit the Ice — Infobox VG| title = Hit the Ice developer = Williams publisher = Williams, Taito designer = engine = released = 1990 genre = Sports game modes = Players: 1 4 ratings = platforms = Arcade, SNES, NES, Mega Drvie/Genesis, Game Boy, TurboGrafx 16… … Wikipedia
hit the bottle — to drink intoxicants to excess Of a single debauch or sustained drunkenness. Also as hit the hooch or hit it: I just wondered... whether he d planned to use the rest of the day to hit the bottle. (Gaarder, 1996) ... hitting the… … How not to say what you mean: A dictionary of euphemisms
hit the bottle — verb To drink alcohol steadily and in excess, particularly in response to a setback. Hes been hitting the bottle hard since his wife left him. Syn: hit the booze, hit the sauce … Wiktionary
hit the sauce — {v. phr.}, {slang} To drink alcoholic beverages especially heavily and habitually. * /When Sue left him, Joe began to hit the sauce./ … Dictionary of American idioms