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1 shoulder
'ʃəuldə 1. noun1) (the part of the body between the neck and the upper arm: He was carrying the child on his shoulders.) skulder2) (anything that resembles a shoulder: the shoulder of the hill.) bryst, skråning; veikant3) (the part of a garment that covers the shoulder: the shoulder of a coat.) skulder4) (the upper part of the foreleg of an animal.) bog(parti)2. verb1) (to lift on to the shoulder: He shouldered his pack and set off on his walk.) ta på (ryggen)2) (to bear the full weight of: He must shoulder his responsibilities.) legge på sine skuldre, ta på seg skylden3) (to make (one's way) by pushing with the shoulder: He shouldered his way through the crowd.) trenge seg fram, bane seg vei•- put one's shoulder to the wheel
- shoulder to shoulderaksel--------skulderIsubst. \/ˈʃəʊldə\/1) skulder, aksel2) ( matlaging) bog3) ( langs veibane) skulder, veikant, bankett4) (fjell)utspring, avsats, brystning5) (typografi, bildekk) skulder6) ( murerfag) vederlaggive someone the cold shoulder gi noen en kald skulderhave broad shoulders være bredskuldretrub shoulders with omgås, ha (mye) å gjøre medshoulder to shoulder skulder ved skulderspeak straight from the shoulder si ting rett utsquare one's shoulder trekke skuldrene tilbake, aksle seg vise standhaftighet, vise kampviljetake something on one's shoulders ta ansvar for noe, ta noe på sin kappeIIverb \/ˈʃəʊldə\/1) ( også overført) legge på skuldrene, legge over skuldrene• he was small, but shouldered the backpack without complainthan var liten, men bar ryggsekken på skuldrene uten å klage2) dytte (med skuldrene), albue3) ( også overført) ta på seg, påta segshoulder arms ( militærvesen) på aksel gevær
См. также в других словарях:
put one's shoulder to the wheel — GET (DOWN) TO WORK, apply oneself, set to work, buckle down, roll up one s sleeves; work hard, be diligent, be industrious, exert oneself. → shoulder * * * put one s shoulder to the wheel To set to work in earnest • • • Main Entry: ↑shoulder put… … Useful english dictionary
put one's shoulder to the wheel — ► put one s shoulder to the wheel set to work vigorously. Main Entry: ↑shoulder … English terms dictionary
put one's shoulder to the wheel — it s time to stop talking and start putting your shoulder to the wheel Syn: get (down) to work, apply oneself, set to work, buckle down, roll up one s sleeves; work hard, be diligent, be industrious, exert oneself … Thesaurus of popular words
put one's shoulder to the wheel — set to work vigorously. → shoulder … English new terms dictionary
set one's shoulder to the wheel — verb To start hard work; to begin to toil … Wiktionary
set one's shoulder to the wheel — lent a hand, helped out, aided … English contemporary dictionary
Places in the Wheel of Time series — This article is about the countries, cities, towns, and other important locations in Robert Jordan’s The Wheel of Time fantasy fiction series. With the publication in 1997 of The World of Robert Jordan s The Wheel of Time (often called World ),… … Wikipedia
shoulder — [shōl′dər] n. [ME schuldere < OE sculdor, akin to Ger schulter < IE * skḷdhrā, shoulder blade used as a spade < base * (s)kel , to cut > SHELL, SHILLING, SKULL] 1. a) the joint connecting the arm or forelimb with the body b) the part… … English World dictionary
wheel — wheel1 W3S2 [wi:l] n ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(on a vehicle)¦ 2¦(for controlling a vehicle)¦ 3¦(in a machine)¦ 4 the wheels of something 5 the wheel of fortune/life/time etc 6 (set of) wheels 7 wheels within wheels 8 set the wheels in motion/set the wheels… … Dictionary of contemporary English
wheel — 1 /wi:l/ noun (C) 1 ON A VEHICLE (C) one of the round things under a car, bus, bicycle etc that turn when it moves 2 IN A MACHINE (C) a flat round part in a machine that turns round when the machine operates: a gear wheel 3 FOR CONTROLLING A… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
shoulder — n. & v. n. 1 a the part of the body at which the arm, foreleg, or wing is attached. b (in full shoulder joint) the end of the upper arm joining with the collar bone and blade bone. c either of the two projections below the neck from which the… … Useful english dictionary