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1 wrong
[rong] adj., adv.,n.,v. -adj 1. i gabuar; wrong answer përgjigje e gabuar; my watch is wrong ora ime është gabim; it's the wrong road for Gostivar nuk është rruga që të çon në Gostivar. 2. i padrejtë, i gabuar; it is wrong to tell lies nuk është mirë të gënjesh; it was wrong of you to hit him bëre gabim që e qëllove. 3. i papërshtatshëm; pa vend; jo ajo që duhet; the wrong clothes for the occasion veshje e papërshtatshme per rastin; fig. she's on the wrong side of thirty ajo i ka kaluar të tridhjetat. 4. që nuk shkon, që s'është në rregull; something's wrong with him/my leg/ the car ai diçka ka; se ç'më ka këmba; makina ka një problem; there's nothing wrong with saying that... nuk ka ndonjë të keqe që të thuash se...; he's wrong in the head ai s'është mirë nga trutë.-adv. keq; gabim; don't get me wrong mos më keqkupto; take somebody up wrong ia marr tjetër për tjetër dikujt; you've got it all wrong e ke kuptuar krejt gabim.● go wrong a) ngatërroj rrugën; b) gaboj në llogari; c) përfundon keq; dështon (plani); d) pëson defekt (makina); e) shkon keq (ora).-n 1. e keqe; do wrong bëj keq. 2. padrejtësi; right a wrong ndreq një padrejtësi; two wrongs don't make a right padrejtësia nuk ndreqet me një padrejtësi të re; you do him wrong in thinking that.. ti i bie në qafë padrejtësisht duke menduar se..; they did him wrong kanë abuzuar me të. 3. faj; be in the wrong jam fajtor, bëj faj./-vt. trajtoj padrejtësisht; i bie në qafë.● wrongdoer ['rongdu:ë:] n. keqbërës● wrongdoing ['rongdu:ing] n. keqbërje● wrongful dismissal ['rongful dis'misël] n. pushim i padrejtë (nga puna)● wrongfully ['rongfuli] adv. gabim; padrejtësisht● wrong-headed ['ronghedid] adj 1. i gabuar në gjykim. 2. kokëfortë, kryeneç● wrongness ['rongnis] n 1. pasaktësi; gabim. 2. padrejtësi. 3. e keqe* * *gabim
См. также в других словарях:
take something out on somebody — ˌtake it/sth ˈout on sb derived to behave in an unpleasant way towards sb because you feel angry, disappointed, etc, although it is not their fault • OK, so you had a bad day. Don t take it out on me. • She tended to take her frustrations out on… … Useful english dictionary
take something over from somebody — ˌtake ˈover (from sb) | ˌtake sthˈover (from sb) derived 1. to begin to have control of or responsibility for sth, especially in place of sb else 2. to gain control of a political party, a country, etc • The army is threatening to take over if… … Useful english dictionary
take issue with somebody (about something) — take ˈissue with sb (about/on/over sth) idiom (formal) to start disagreeing or arguing with sb about sth • I must take issue with you on that point. Main entry: ↑issueidiom … Useful english dictionary
take issue with somebody (on something) — take ˈissue with sb (about/on/over sth) idiom (formal) to start disagreeing or arguing with sb about sth • I must take issue with you on that point. Main entry: ↑issueidiom … Useful english dictionary
take issue with somebody (over something) — take ˈissue with sb (about/on/over sth) idiom (formal) to start disagreeing or arguing with sb about sth • I must take issue with you on that point. Main entry: ↑issueidiom … Useful english dictionary
take something up with somebody — ˌtake sth ˈup with sb derived to speak or write to sb about sth that they may be able to deal with or help you with • They decided to take the matter up with their MP. Main entry: ↑takederived … Useful english dictionary
take something out against somebody — ˌtake sthˈout (against sb) derived to start legal action against sb by means of an official document • The police have taken out a summons against the driver of the car. Main entry: ↑takederived … Useful english dictionary
draw something from somebody — ˈdraw sth from sb/sth derived to take or obtain sth from a particular source • to draw support/comfort/strength from your family • She drew her inspiration from her childhood experiences. Main entry: ↑draw … Useful english dictionary
take — take1 W1S1 [teık] v past tense took [tuk] past participle taken [ˈteıkən] ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(action)¦ 2¦(move)¦ 3¦(remove)¦ 4¦(time/money/effort etc)¦ 5¦(accept)¦ 6¦(hold something)¦ 7¦(travel)¦ 8 … Dictionary of contemporary English
take in — verb 1. provide with shelter (Freq. 3) • Hypernyms: ↑house, ↑put up, ↑domiciliate • Verb Frames: Somebody s something 2. fool or hoax (Freq. 2) … Useful english dictionary
take out — verb 1. cause to leave (Freq. 7) The teacher took the children out of the classroom • Syn: ↑move out, ↑remove • Hyponyms: ↑clear, ↑call in, ↑estrange … Useful english dictionary