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61 stage
I 1. stei‹ noun(a raised platform especially for performing or acting on, eg in a theatre.) scene; podium, plattform2. verb1) (to prepare and produce (a play etc) in a theatre etc: This play was first staged in 1928.) sette opp et skuespill2) (to organize (an event etc): The protesters are planning to stage a demonstration.) iscenesette, arrangere, lage•- staging- stage direction
- stage fright
- stagehand
- stage manager
- stagestruck II stei‹1) (a period or step in the development of something: The plan is in its early stages; At this stage, we don't know how many survivors there are.) stadium, fase, trinn2) (part of a journey: The first stage of our journey will be the flight to Singapore.) etappe3) (a section of a bus route.) sone4) (a section of a rocket.) trinn•fase--------plattform--------sceneIsubst. \/steɪdʒ\/1) ( teater) scene, podium, teater2) åsted, arena, skueplass, val, scene3) stadium, trinn, fase4) ( zoologi) (insekts)stadium5) etasje6) ( geologi) etasje (underavdeling av geologisk formasjon)7) plattform, stillas8) holdeplass, stasjon, stoppested, skysstasjon9) etappe10) (historisk, også stagecoach)diligence, postvogn11) objektbord (i mikroskop)12) landgangsbryggeapron stage se ➢ apronat a formative stage på et formende trinn, i en viktig utviklingsperiodebe on the stage være ved teateret, være skuespillerthe comic stage komedieteaterenter the stage tre inn på scenengo on the stage gå til scenenhiss an actor off stage pipe ut en skuespillerhold the stage dominere (en samtale e.l.) være forsamlingens midtpunkton stage på scenen, på teateretthe political stage den politiske arenaput on the stage sette oppquit the stage forlate teateret slutte som skuespillerstage setting ( om teater e.l.) kulisser, scenebilde, sted, tidstage version sceneversjontake centre stage tiltrekke seg oppmerksomheten, ta hovedrollen (overført)writer for the stage skuespillerforfatter, dramatikerIIverb \/steɪdʒ\/1) sette opp, iscenesette, oppføre2) gjøre seg på scenen3) arrangere, organisere, iscenesettestage a play sette opp et skuespill -
62 suck
1. verb1) (to draw liquid etc into the mouth: As soon as they are born, young animals learn to suck (milk from their mothers); She sucked up the lemonade through a straw.) suge, die, patte2) (to hold something between the lips or inside the mouth, as though drawing liquid from it: I told him to take the sweet out of his mouth, but he just went on sucking; He sucked the end of his pencil.) suge på3) (to pull or draw in a particular direction with a sucking or similar action: The vacuum cleaner sucked up all the dirt from the carpet; A plant sucks up moisture from the soil.) suge (opp)4) ((American) (slang) to be awful, boring, disgusting etc: Her singing sucks; This job sucks.) være helt elendig/ubrukelig2. noun(an act of sucking: I gave him a suck of my lollipop.) suging; slikk, slurk- sucker- suck up todie--------patte--------sugeIsubst. \/sʌk\/1) suging2) sugelyd3) klunk, slurkgive something a suck eller have\/take a suck at something ( overført) suge på noe (dvs. tenke på noe)give suck to ( gammeldags) ammesuck at sug ettersuck to (britisk, hverdagslig) æ bæ, ædda bædda• sucks to you!ædda bædda, der kan du se!IIverb \/sʌk\/1) suge (ut av)2) suge i seg, suge opp, suge inn• suck air3) suge på4) die, patte5) suge, dra med seg6) ( overført) suge ut7) (amer., slang) stinke, være bånn i bøtta• this film sucks!get sucked into something ( overført) bli innblandet i noesuck at something være veldig dårlig til noesuck (down) suge ned, trekke ned( slang) narre, ta ved nesen, luresuck in one's breath gispe etter pusten, trekke pusten rasktsuck in(to) ( overført) trekke inn (i), blande inn (i)suck it and see (britisk, hverdagslig) prøv og sesuck someone (off) ( om munnsex) suge noen, sokke noensuck one's thumb suge på tommelensuck out suge utsuck out of suge ut avsuck the blood out of ( overført) suge kraften ut avsuck up suge opp, suge til segsuck up to someone ( slang) smiske for noen, innynde seg hos noen
См. также в других словарях:
hold off — hold back / hold off [v] repress bit, bridle, check, control, curb, defer, delay, deny, forbear, hold down, hold in, inhibit, keep, keep back, keep out, postpone, prevent, put off, refrain, refuse, restrain, stop, suppress, withhold; concepts 121 … New thesaurus
hold off something — hold off (something) to delay something. They re hoping to hold off surgery until he s stronger. I hope the rain holds off until we get home … New idioms dictionary
hold off — (something) to delay something. They re hoping to hold off surgery until he s stronger. I hope the rain holds off until we get home … New idioms dictionary
hold off — ► hold off 1) resist (an attacker o r challenge). 2) postpone (an action or decision). 3) (of bad weather) fail to occur. Main Entry: ↑hold … English terms dictionary
hold off — index cease, counter, defer (put off), doubt (hesitate), forbear, parry, pause … Law dictionary
hold off — phrasal verb Word forms hold off : present tense I/you/we/they hold off he/she/it holds off present participle holding off past tense held off past participle held off 1) [intransitive] to deliberately delay doing something He may decide to hold… … English dictionary
hold off — UK US hold off Phrasal Verb with hold({{}}/həʊld/ verb (held, held) ► [I or T] to wait for a period of time before doing something: hold off on sth »Holding off on the product release meant missing sales targets for the year. »Let s hold off… … Financial and business terms
hold off — verb 1. resist and fight to a standoff (Freq. 3) Dallas had enough of a lead to hold the Broncos off • Hypernyms: ↑resist, ↑hold out, ↑withstand, ↑stand firm • Verb Frames … Useful english dictionary
hold off — 1) PHRASAL VERB If you hold off doing something, you delay doing it or delay making a decision about it. [V P ing] The hospital staff held off taking Rosenbaum in for an X ray... [V P] They have threatened military action but held off until now.… … English dictionary
hold off — verb a) To delay someone or something temporarily; to keep at bay. Lets try to hold off the lawyers until we are ready for them. b) To delay commencing (an action until some specified time or event has passed). Hold off the decision one more day… … Wiktionary
hold off — 1) delay, not begin The concert will be held off until next week. 2) keep away by force The man was able to hold off the police for several hours before he was arrested … Idioms and examples