Перевод: с норвежского на все языки
to+lose+control+of+oneself
Ничего не найдено.
Попробуйте поискать во всех возможных языках
или измените свой поисковый запрос.
См. также в других словарях:
lose one's temper — become angry He lost his temper when the child broke the dish. (from Idioms in Speech) to lose control of oneself in a moment of anger; to get angry or impatient She frowned. I shall lose my temper. You ll make me lose my temper. Why do you hide… … Idioms and examples
lose one's rag — vb British to lose one s temper, lose control of oneself. This mainly working class expression is of obscure origin; the word rag has meant variously one s tongue, a flag, to tease and to bluster or rage, but none of these senses can be… … Contemporary slang
lose — v 1. misplace, mislay; forget, Inf. clean forget, not remember, disremember, have no remembrance or recollection of, Inf. draw a blank; lose sight of, lose in the crowd. 2. outstrip, overtake, overhaul, pass, lap, leave behind, leave in the dust … A Note on the Style of the synonym finder
lose — [c]/luz / (say loohz) verb (lost, losing) –verb (t) 1. to come to be without, by some chance, and not know the whereabouts of: to lose a ring. 2. to suffer the loss or deprivation of: to lose one s life. 3. to be bereaved of by death: to lose a… …
lose — [lu:z] verb (past and past participle lost) 1》 be deprived of or cease to have or retain. ↘be deprived of (a relative or friend) through their death. ↘(of a pregnant woman) miscarry (a baby). ↘(be lost) be destroyed or killed.… … English new terms dictionary
lose it — vb 1. to lose one s temper or control over oneself 2. See lose the plot … Contemporary slang
lose — verb (lost; losing) Etymology: Middle English, from Old English losian to perish, lose, from los destruction; akin to Old English lēosan to lose; akin to Old Norse losa to loosen, Latin luere to atone for, Greek lyein to loosen, dissolve, destroy … New Collegiate Dictionary
lose — v. (past and past part. lost) 1 tr. be deprived of or cease to have, esp. by negligence or misadventure. 2 tr. a be deprived of (a person, esp. a close relative) by death. b suffer the loss of (a baby) in childbirth. 3 tr. become unable to find;… … Useful english dictionary
forget oneself — MISBEHAVE, behave badly, be naughty, be disobedient, get up to mischief, get up to no good; be bad mannered, be rude; informal carry on, act up. → forget * * * phrasal : to do something or behave in a manner unworthy of one : lose one s dignity,… … Useful english dictionary
shit oneself — verb a) To soil oneself. b) To be very frightened or astonished (to the extent that one might lose control of ones bowels). Syn: soil oneself, pants, shit ones pants, petrified, terrified, wet oneself … Wiktionary
piss oneself — verb a) To wet oneself. b) To be very scared (to the extent that one might lose control of ones bladder). Syn: wet oneself, pants, trousers, piss, petrified, terrified, shit bricks, shit oneself … Wiktionary