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121 despedirse a la francesa
• go off to sleep• go offstage• leave waiting• leave without effect• take French leaveDiccionario Técnico Español-Inglés > despedirse a la francesa
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122 meglép
(DE) aufbrechen; davongemacht; durchbrennen; s. davonmachen; durchwitschen; dünnemachen; (EN) abscond; absquatulate; beat the air; bundle off; bundle out; bunk off; bust out; clear out; cut it; cut one's stick; decamp; do a bunk; do a get; do a shift; effect one's escape; get an offing; get out of the rain; hop it; hop off; hop the stick; hop the twig; jink; make an offing; make away with; make off; make one's getaway; make tracks; mog; nip off; nip out; scram; shin it; shin off; skedaddle; skip it; skip off; slip away; slip by; slip-away; smoke; sting one's hook; streek; take a powder; take french leave; take one's hook; take the back track; tommy; vamoose -
123 отлъча
отлъ̀ча,отлъ̀чвам гл.1. separate, part; exclude (от from); църк. excommunicate; unchurch; (от обществото) ostracize; -
124 weggehen
- {to depart} rời khỏi, ra đi, khởi hành, chết, sao lãng, đi trệch, lạc, cáo biệt, ra về, từ giã = weggehen (ging weg,wegegangen) {to go off}+ = weggehen (ging weg,weggegangen) {to go (went,gone); to remove}+ = heimlich weggehen {to take French leave}+ = für immer weggehen {to leave for good}+ -
125 уйти не попрощавшись
Универсальный русско-английский словарь > уйти не попрощавшись
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126 духна
ду̀хна,ду̀хвам гл.3. разг. ( побягвам) make off, scoot, bunk, scram, take to o.’s heels, show a clean pair of heels; разг. cut away, cut loose; sl. mizzle, vamoose; ( изчезвам) take French leave; амер., разг. fly the coop; англ., разг. do a flit; • да го духнеш ще падне he’s as thin as a lath/as a shadow/as a wafer; \духна някому под опашката kick s.o. out, fire s.o., sack s.o. -
127 anglaise
adj. f.2. Capote anglaise: 'French letter', condom. -
128 уйти не прощаясь
General subject: take French leave
См. также в других словарях:
take French leave — 1. To depart without notice or permission 2. To disappear suspiciously • • • Main Entry: ↑French * * * take French leave phrase to take time away from your job without asking for permission Thesaurus: time off from workhyponym … Useful english dictionary
take French leave — {v. phr.} To leave secretly; abscond. * /The party was so boring that we decided to take French leave./ * /While the Smith family was in Europe, the house sitter packed up all the silver and took French leave./ See: SLIP AWAY … Dictionary of American idioms
take French leave — {v. phr.} To leave secretly; abscond. * /The party was so boring that we decided to take French leave./ * /While the Smith family was in Europe, the house sitter packed up all the silver and took French leave./ See: SLIP AWAY … Dictionary of American idioms
take\ French\ leave — v. phr. To leave secretly; abscond. The party was so boring that we decided to take French leave. While the Smith family was in Europe, the house sitter packed up all the silver and took French leave. See: slip away … Словарь американских идиом
take french leave — Depart informally, take leave unceremoniously … New dictionary of synonyms
take French leave — verb a) To leave unannounced b) to desert. to go AWOL Syn: abscond, AWOL … Wiktionary
take French leave — to take time away from your job without asking for permission … English dictionary
french leave — To take French leave is to leave a gathering without saying goodbye or without permission … The small dictionary of idiomes
French leave — n. (obsol.) leaving without saying goodbye to take French leave * * * (obsol.) [ leaving without saying goodbye ] to take French leave (obsol.) [ leaving without saying goodbye ] to take French leave … Combinatory dictionary
French leave — If you leave an official or social event without notifying the person who invited you, you take French leave. Is Bill coming back for the closing speech or has he taken French leave? … English Idioms & idiomatic expressions
French leave — unauthorized absence Originally of a soldier, implying a propensity in French soldiers for desertion. Some civilian and figurative use: We could still, if we wished, take French leave of Vietnam. (M. McCarthy, 1967) … How not to say what you mean: A dictionary of euphemisms