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21 floor ****
[flɔː]1. n(
fig: at meeting) the floor — il pubblicoon the floor — per terra, sul pavimento
to take the floor — (dancer) mettersi a ballare
to have the floor — (speaker) prendere la parola
2) (storey) pianoground floor Brit — pianterreno, piano terra
on the first floor Brit — al primo piano, Am al pianterreno
2. vt1)to floor (with) — pavimentare (con)2) (fam: knock down: opponent) atterrare, (baffle) confondere -
22 week ***** n
[wiːk]once/twice a week — una volta/due volte alla settimana
next/last week — la settimana prossima/scorsa
a week today — oggi a otto, una settimana a oggi
in 2 weeks' time — fra 2 settimane, fra 15 giorni
Tuesday week; a week on Tuesday — martedì a otto
week in, week out; week after week — settimana dopo settimana
every other week — una settimana sì e una no, a settimane alterne
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См. также в других словарях:
take a knock — to be badly affected by something. His reputation has taken quite a knock following the revelations published in his recent biography … New idioms dictionary
Take a knock — suffer a reverse, especially a financial one … Dictionary of Australian slang
Take the knock — (horseracing etc.) (of a punter) admit that one is unable to settle one s debts with one s bookmaker … Dictionary of Australian slang
take a knock — Australian Slang suffer a reverse, especially a financial one … English dialects glossary
take the knock — Australian Slang (horseracing etc.) (of a punter) admit that one is unable to settle one s debts with one s bookmaker … English dialects glossary
take the knock (to) — Sell at a loss … American business jargon
take a knock — Suffer a loss (usu. financial) … A concise dictionary of English slang
knock — /nɒk / (say nok) verb (i) 1. to strike a sounding blow with the fist, knuckles, or anything hard, especially on a door, window, or the like, as in seeking admittance, calling attention, giving a signal, etc. 2. (of an internal combustion engine)… …
knock — 1 verb 1 DOOR/WINDOW (T) to hit a door or window with your closed hand to attract the attention of the people inside: Why don t you knock before you come in? (+ at/on): I turned to see Jane knocking frantically on the taxi window. 2 HIT/MAKE STH… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
knock — knock1 W3S1 [nɔk US na:k] v ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(door)¦ 2¦(hit and move something)¦ 3¦(hit somebody hard)¦ 4¦(hit part of your body)¦ 5 knock on doors 6 be knocking on the door 7¦(remove wall)¦ 8 knock a hole in/through something 9¦(criticize)¦ … Dictionary of contemporary English
knock — I. vb British 1. to kill. A recent, racier variant of knock off or hit. ► I ve never spoken to anyone I m going to knock. (Hitman quoted in the Observer, 31 May 1987) 2. to have sex (with). A 300 year old usage which has been rare since the early … Contemporary slang