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1 thrust in/into
phr.v. 1. зарива, забива (игла/прст)2. thrust one's way in со сила се пробива/влегува3. thrust sth into sb's hands бутнува/тутнува некому нешто во раце -
2 thrust (sth.) into (one's) hand
Общая лексика: сунуть в рукуУниверсальный англо-русский словарь > thrust (sth.) into (one's) hand
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3 thrust
A n3 ( attack) pointe f (at dirigé contre).B vtr ( prét, pp thrust) to thrust sth towards ou at sb mettre brusquement qch sous le nez de qn ; to thrust sth into sth enfoncer qch dans qch ; he thrust the letter/a glass into my hands il m'a brusquement mis la lettre/un verre dans les mains ; to thrust one's head through the window/round the door passer brusquement la tête par la fenêtre/dans l'entrebâillement de la porte ; to thrust sb/sth away ou out of the way pousser violemment qn/qch ; to thrust sb out of the room/towards the door pousser qn violemment hors de la salle/vers la porte ; to thrust one's way to the front of the queue se frayer un passage jusqu'au début de la file d'attente.C v refl ( prét, pp thrust) he thrust himself to the front of the crowd il s'est frayé un passage jusqu'au premier rang de la foule ; to thrust oneself forward lit se lancer en avant ; fig se mettre en avant ; to thrust oneself on ou onto sb ( impose oneself) imposer sa présence à qn ; ( pounce on) se jeter sur qn.■ thrust aside:▶ thrust [sth/sb] aside, thrust aside [sth/sb] lit repousser [object, person] ; fig rejeter [protest, argument].■ thrust back:▶ thrust [sth] back, thrust back [sth] repousser [object, person, enemy].▶ thrust forward [crowd] se précipiter en avant ;▶ thrust [sth] forward, thrust forward [sth] pousser [qch] en avant [person, object].■ thrust on, thrust onto = thrust upon.■ thrust out:▶ thrust [sth] out, thrust out [sth] tendre brusquement [hand] ; lancer [leg] ; projeter [qch] en avant [jaw, chin] ; sortir [qch] (d'un geste brusque) [implement] ; to thrust sb out pousser qn brusquement dehors ; she opened the door and thrust her head out elle a ouvert la porte et a passé brusquement sa tête à l'extérieur ; to thrust sb/sth out of the way pousser (violemment) qn/qch.■ thrust upon:▶ thrust [sth] upon sb imposer [qch] sur qn [idea, job, responsibility] ; the job was thrust upon him il s'est retrouvé avec le travail sur les bras, on lui a imposé le travail ; some have greatness thrust upon them parfois ce sont les circonstances qui font les grands hommes.■ thrust up [seedlings, plant] pousser vigoureusement. -
4 thrust
1. transitive verb,1) (push suddenly) stoßenhe thrust his fist into my face — er stieß mir seine Faust ins Gesicht; (fig.)
thrust aside — beiseite schieben; in den Wind schlagen [Warnungen]
thrust extra work [up]on somebody — jemandem zusätzliche Arbeit aufbürden
2)2. nounthrust one's way through/into/out of something — sich durch/in/aus etwas drängen
1) (sudden push) Stoß, der2) (gist) Stoßrichtung, die4) (force of jet engine) Schub, der* * *past tense, past participle; see thrust* * *[θrʌst]I. nsword \thrust Schwerthieb mmain \thrust Gewicht nt figthe main \thrust of an argument die Hauptaussage eines ArgumentsII. vi<thrust, thrust>to \thrust at sb with a knife nach jdm mit einem Messer stoßenIII. vt<thrust, thrust>▪ to \thrust sth/sb forward [or to \thrust forward sb/sth] jdn/etw nach vorne schiebenhe \thrust back the chair and ran out of the room er schob den Stuhl heftig zurück und rannte aus dem Zimmerto \thrust one's hands into one's pockets die Hände in die Taschen steckento \thrust the money into sb's hand jdm das Geld in die Hand steckenhe \thrust his injured friend through the crowd desperately trying to reach the first-aid post in einem verzweifelten Versuch, die Erste-Hilfe-Station zu erreichen, schob er seinen verletzten Freund rasch durch die MengeI \thrust myself through the dense crowd trying to reach my friend ich bahnte mir einen Weg durch die Menge, um meinen Freund zu erreichento \thrust a knife into sb jdn mit einem Messer stechenshe was suddenly \thrust into a position of responsibility sie wurde plötzlich in eine sehr verantwortungsvolle Position hineingedrängt* * *[ɵrʌst] vb: pret, ptp thrust1. n1) Stoß m; (of knife) Stich m, Stoß m; (fig, of intellect) Stoßkraft fI get the general thrust of what you're saying — ich weiß, worauf es Ihnen ankommt
2. vt1) (= push, drive) stoßen2) (fig)I had the job thrust upon me — die Arbeit wurde mir aufgedrängt or aufgezwungen
to thrust one's way to the front — sich nach vorne vordrängeln, sich nach vorne kämpfen
3. vistoßen (at nach); (with knife) stechen (at nach); (FENCING) einen Ausfall machen, ausfallen (at gegen)* * *thrust [θrʌst]A v/t prät und pperf thrustinto in akk):thrust one’s hand into one’s pocket;3. stoßen, drängen, treiben, werfen:thrust aside zur Seite stoßen;thrust o.s. forwarda) sich nach vorn drängen,b) fig sich in den Vordergrund drängen;thrust sb into prison jemanden ins Gefängnis werfen;thrust on vorwärtstreiben, antreiben;a) (her- oder hin)ausstoßen,b) die Zunge herausstrecken,c) die Hand ausstrecken;thrust one’s way through the crowd sich durch die Menge drängen oder schieben;thrust sth on sb jemandem etwas aufdrängenB v/i1. stoßen (at nach)2. stoßen, drängen ( beide:at gegen;into in akk)3. sich schieben, sich drängen:C s1. Stoß m:in the thrust and parry of the moment im Eifer des Gefechts2. Hieb m (auch fig:at auf akk, gegen)3. MILa) Vorstoß mb) Stoßrichtung f (auch fig)4. allg und TECH Druck m6. ARCH, TECH (Horizontal-, Seiten) Schub m7. GEOL Schub m8. fig Zielstrebigkeit f9. fig Tenor m* * *1. transitive verb,1) (push suddenly) stoßenhe thrust his fist into my face — er stieß mir seine Faust ins Gesicht; (fig.)
thrust aside — beiseite schieben; in den Wind schlagen [Warnungen]
thrust extra work [up]on somebody — jemandem zusätzliche Arbeit aufbürden
2)2. nounthrust one's way through/into/out of something — sich durch/in/aus etwas drängen
1) (sudden push) Stoß, der2) (gist) Stoßrichtung, die4) (force of jet engine) Schub, der* * *n.Druck -e m.Schub ¨-e m.Schubkraft f.Vorstoß -¨e m. v.(§ p.,p.p.: thrust)= schieben v.(§ p.,pp.: schob, geschoben)stecken v.(§ p.,pp.: stak, gesteckt)stoßen v.(§ p.,pp.: stieß, gestossen) -
5 thrust
I [θrʌst]1) spinta f. (anche tecn. arch.)2) (with pointed arm) puntata f.3) (of argument, essay) senso m., significato m.4) (attack) frecciata f., stoccata f. (at rivolta a)II 1. [θrʌst]2.to thrust sth. towards o at sb. mettere bruscamente qcs. davanti a qcn.; to thrust sth. into sth. (con)ficcare qcs. in qcs.; to thrust sb., sth. away o out of the way — spingere o cacciare via qcn., qcs
to thrust oneself forward — spingersi in avanti; fig. mettersi in mostra
to thrust oneself on o onto sb. — (impose oneself) imporsi a qcn
* * *past tense, past participle; see thrust* * *[θrʌst] thrust vb: pt, pp1. n(push) spintone m, Aer Space spinta, Mil offensive attacco, offensivait provides the thrust that makes the craft move — dà la spinta necessaria a far muovere l'apparecchio
2. vt(push) spingere con forza, (push in: finger, stick, dagger) conficcareto thrust o.s. upon sb fig — imporre la propria presenza a qn
to thrust sb/sth aside — spingere qn/qc da una parte
* * *thrust /ɵrʌst/n. [uc]1 spinta ( anche mecc., archit.); spintone: the thrust of an arch, la spinta di un arco; (aeron.) takeoff thrust, spinta al decollo4 (mil. e fig.) attacco a fondo; incursione: (econ.) a thrust into the American market, un'incursione nel mercato americano5 (scient.) pulsione7 (geol.) spinta; pressione laterale8 (fig.) arrivismo; ambizione11 ( scherma) stoccata; botta (fam.); uscita: thrust with the point, stoccata di punta; colpo di punta; to parry a thrust, parare una botta; time thrust, uscita in tempo● (mecc.) thrust bearing, cuscinetto assiale; reggispinta □ (fam. USA) thrust bucket, (aeron.) inversore di spinta ( per frenare dopo l'atterraggio); (miss.) dispositivo di cessazione della spinta ( di un razzo) □ (geol.) thrust fault, faglia di compressione; faglia inversa □ (mecc.) thrust meter, pressostato □ (teatr.) thrust stage, palcoscenico che ha una parte in aggetto entro la platea.(to) thrust /ɵrʌst/(pass. e p. p. thrust)A v. t.1 conficcare; ficcare; cacciare; infilare; piantare; introdurre a forza: She thrust a knife into his chest, gli ha piantato un coltello nel petto2 spingere; cacciare: Trees thrust their branches towards the light, gli alberi spingono i rami verso la luce; I thrust him out of the room, l'ho spinto fuori (o l'ho cacciato) dalla stanzaB v. i.1 cacciarsi; ficcarsi; introdursi a forza; infilarsi; spingere: He thrust through the demonstrators, si è infilato tra i dimostranti3 (mil.) spingersi; avanzare: The army was thrusting towards the Rhine, l'esercito avanzava verso il Reno● to thrust oneself, cacciarsi, ficcarsi; intromettersi, intrufolarsi □ ( nuoto) to thrust under water, spingere ( con le gambe) sott'acqua.* * *I [θrʌst]1) spinta f. (anche tecn. arch.)2) (with pointed arm) puntata f.3) (of argument, essay) senso m., significato m.4) (attack) frecciata f., stoccata f. (at rivolta a)II 1. [θrʌst]2.to thrust sth. towards o at sb. mettere bruscamente qcs. davanti a qcn.; to thrust sth. into sth. (con)ficcare qcs. in qcs.; to thrust sb., sth. away o out of the way — spingere o cacciare via qcn., qcs
to thrust oneself forward — spingersi in avanti; fig. mettersi in mostra
to thrust oneself on o onto sb. — (impose oneself) imporsi a qcn
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6 thrust
[ɵrʌst] nsword \thrust Schwerthieb m2) no plthe main \thrust of an argument die Hauptaussage eines Argumentsto \thrust at sb with a knife nach jdm mit einem Messer stoßen vt <thrust, thrust>1) ( push with force)he \thrust back the chair and ran out of the room er schob den Stuhl heftig zurück und rannte aus dem Zimmer;to \thrust one's hands into one's pockets die Hände in die Taschen stecken;to \thrust the money into sb's hand jdm das Geld in die Hand stecken;to \thrust sb through sth jdn durch etw akk drängen;he \thrust his injured friend through the crowd desperately trying to reach the first-aid post in einem verzweifelten Versuch, die Erste-Hilfe-Station zu erreichen, schob er seinen verletzten Freund rasch durch die Menge;I \thrust myself through the dense crowd trying to reach my friend ich bahnte mir einen Weg durch die Menge, um meinen Freund zu erreichen;to \thrust oneself forward sich akk vordrängen;to \thrust sth [up]on sb jdm etw akk auferlegen;to \thrust oneself [up]on sb sich akk jdm aufdrängen3) (stab, pierce)to \thrust a knife into sb jdn mit einem Messer stechen;she was suddenly \thrust into a position of responsibility sie wurde plötzlich in eine sehr verantwortungsvolle Position hineingedrängt -
7 thrust
past tense, past participle; see thrusttr[ɵrʌst]3 (hostile remark) ataque nombre masculino, crítica5 (main point) idea central, idea clavetransitive verb (pt & pp thrust)1 (shove) empujar, empujar con violencia1 (jostle) dar empujones1 (push in) meter1 (pierce - with sword) dar estocadas; (- with other instrument) clavar1) shove: empujar bruscamente2) plunge, stab: apuñalar, clavarhe thrust a dagger into her heart: la apuñaló en el corazón3)to thrust one's way : abrirse paso4)to thrust upon : imponer athrust n1) push, shove: empujón m, empellón m2) lunge: estocada f (en esgrima)3) impetus: ímpetu m, impulso m, propulsión f (de un motor)n.• acometida s.f.• ataque s.m.• avance s.m.• bote s.m.• empuje s.m.• empujón s.m.• estocada s.f.pret., p.p.(Preterito definido y participio pasivo de "to thrust")v.(§ p.,p.p.: thrust) = acometer v.• atravesar v.• empujar v.
I θrʌstto thrust something AT somebody: she thrust the book at me me tendió el libro bruscamente or con agresividad; to thrust something INTO something: he thrust his knife into the bundle/his hands into his pockets — clavó su cuchillo en el fardo/se metió las manos en los bolsillos
Phrasal Verbs:
II
1) ca) ( with sword) estocada fb) ( push) empujón mc) (attack, advance) ofensiva f2) c ( general direction)the (main) thrust of the report is that... — la idea central del informe es que...
3) u ( impetus) empuje m, fuerza f[θrʌst] (vb: pt, pp thrust)1. N1) (=push) empujón m ; [of dagger] puñalada f ; [of knife] cuchillada f ; [of sword] estocada f ; (Mil) (=offensive) ofensiva f ; (=advance) avance m2) (Mech) empuje m ; (Aer, Naut) propulsión fforward/reverse thrust — empuje m de avance/de marcha atrás
3) (=basic meaning) [of speech] idea f clave4) (=dynamism) empuje m, dinamismo m2.VT (=push) empujar; (=insert) introducir, meter ( into en); (=insert piercingly) clavar, hincar ( into en)to thrust a stick into the ground — clavar or hincar un palo en el suelo
•
she thrust her head out of the window — asomó or sacó la cabeza por la ventana•
she found herself suddenly thrust into the limelight — de pronto, sin comerlo ni beberlo, se vio convertida en el centro de atención•
to thrust sth on or upon sb — imponer algo a algn, obligar a algn a aceptar algoSpain had greatness thrust upon her — España recibió su grandeza sin buscarla, se le impuso la grandeza a España sin quererlo ella
to thrust o.s. (up)on sb — (fig) pegarse a algn
•
to thrust sb through with a sword — atravesar a algn (de parte a parte) con una espada•
I thrust my way through the crowd/to the front — me abrí paso entre la multitud/hacia adelante3.VIto thrust at sb: he thrust at me with a sword/knife — me asestó una estocada/cuchillada
* * *
I [θrʌst]to thrust something AT somebody: she thrust the book at me me tendió el libro bruscamente or con agresividad; to thrust something INTO something: he thrust his knife into the bundle/his hands into his pockets — clavó su cuchillo en el fardo/se metió las manos en los bolsillos
Phrasal Verbs:
II
1) ca) ( with sword) estocada fb) ( push) empujón mc) (attack, advance) ofensiva f2) c ( general direction)the (main) thrust of the report is that... — la idea central del informe es que...
3) u ( impetus) empuje m, fuerza f -
8 thrust
[θrʌst] 1. pt, pp thrust, n ( TECH) 2. vtto thrust sth into sth — wpychać (wepchnąć perf) coś do czegoś
* * *past tense, past participle; see thrust -
9 thrust
أَقْحَمَ \ dig, (dug): to force (sth., such as a finger, a tool, a weapon, etc.) deep into (sth. else): He dug his knife into the meat. insert: to put (sth.) into sth.; put (sth.) between two things: Please insert this notice in your newspaper. Insert the key in the lock. Insert my name in the list, between yours and his. shove: to push. thrust: to push suddenly and forcefully: He thrust a letter into my hand. tuck: to push (sth.) into a narrow place (so as to make it firm or neat, or to hide it): Tuck your shirt inside your trousers. I tucked my children into bed (I pushed the coverings tightly around them). \ See Also أدخل (أَدْخَلَ)، أدرج (أَدْرَجَ) -
10 thrust into hand
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11 ficcare
thrustcolloq ( mettere) shove colloq* * *ficcare v.tr.1 to thrust*; to drive* (in), to ram: ficca bene il chiodo nella parete, drive the nail well into the wall; ficcare un palo nel terreno, to ram a post into the ground; ficcarsi le mani in tasca, to stick one's hand into one's pocket; gli ficcarono un bavaglio in bocca, they thrust a gag into his mouth; poco mancò che mi ficcasse un dito in un occhio, he nearly poked me in the eye // ficcare qlco. in testa a qlcu., to hammer (o to get) sthg. into s.o.'s head; non riesco a ficcarmi in testa tutte queste date, I just can't get all these dates into my head // ficcare il naso dappertutto, to poke (o to thrust) one's nose into everything // ficcare gli occhi addosso a qlcu., to stare hard at s.o.2 (fam.) ( mettere) to put* (away), to stick*, to stuff: ho ficcato le chiavi da qualche parte, ma non ricordo dove, I stuck the keys somewhere, but I don't remember where; ho ficcato qualche cosa in valigia e sono partita, I stuffed a few things in my suitcase and left3 ( scherma) to thrust*.◘ ficcarsi v.rifl. ( cacciarsi) to thrust* oneself, to dive; ( nascondersi) to hide*: quando c'è un temporale il mio cane si ficca sotto il letto, when there's a storm my dog dives under the bed; ficcare sotto le lenzuola, to dive under the sheets; in che strano affare ti sei ficcato?, what strange business have you got yourself into?; ficcare tra i cespugli, to dive into the bushes; dove si sarà ficcato il mio berretto?, (fam.) where can my cap be? (o where has my cap got to?); dove ti sei ficcato in tutto questo tempo?, where have you been hiding all this time?* * *[fik'kare]1. vtficcare il naso negli affari altrui fig — to poke o stick one's nose into other people's business
lo hanno ficcato dentro — (fam : in prigione) they put him away o inside
2)ficcarsi; ficcarsi le dita nel naso — to pick one's nose
ficcarsi il cappello in testa — to put o thrust one's hat on one's head
2. vr (ficcarsi)(andare a finire) to get todove si sarà ficcato? — where can he (o it ecc) have got to?
ficcarsi nei pasticci o nei guai — to get into hot water o a fix
* * *[fik'kare] 1.verbo transitivo1) (cacciare) to shove, to stick*, to stuff, to put*ficcare tutto in valigia — to stuff, shove everything into a suitcase
ficcare un dito in un occhio (a qcn.) — to poke (sb.) in the eye
2) (conficcare) to drive*, to thrust* (in into)3) fig.2.ficcare qcs. in testa a qcn. — to get o drive sth. into sb.'s head
1) (mettersi)- rsi le mani in tasca — to stick o stuff one's hands in one's pockets
- rsi le dita nel naso — to pick one's nose, to poke o stick one's finger up one's nose
-rsi nei guai, in un pasticcio — fig. to get into trouble o a mess
••ficcare il naso in — to poke o stick one's nose into, to pry into, to nose about o around in [affari, vita]
* * *ficcare/fik'kare/ [1]1 (cacciare) to shove, to stick*, to stuff, to put*; ficcare tutto in valigia to stuff, shove everything into a suitcase; ficcare la mano nella borsa to plunge one's hand into the bag; ficcare un dito in un occhio (a qcn.) to poke (sb.) in the eye; chissà dove ha ficcato il mio giornale I wonder where he put my newspaper2 (conficcare) to drive*, to thrust* (in into)3 fig. ficcare qcs. in testa a qcn. to get o drive sth. into sb.'s head; ficcatelo bene in testa! get that into your (thick) skull!II ficcarsi verbo pronominalecolloq.1 (mettersi) - rsi le mani in tasca to stick o stuff one's hands in one's pockets; - rsi le dita nel naso to pick one's nose, to poke o stick one's finger up one's nose; -rsi nei guai, in un pasticcio fig. to get into trouble o a mess2 (andare a finire) dove si sono ficcate le chiavi? where did my keys get to o go? dove si è ficcato? where did he get to?ficcare il naso in to poke o stick one's nose into, to pry into, to nose about o around in [affari, vita]. -
12 hincar
v.1 to stick, to dig, to jab, to jab at.2 to sting, to prick, to pinch, to urticate.* * *1 (clavar) to drive (in)2 (apoyar) to set firmly\hincar el diente en algo (comida etc) to sink one's teeth into something 2 figurado to get one's teeth into somethinghincarse de rodillas to kneel (down)* * *verb1) to sink2) stick•* * *1.VT (=meter) [+ objeto punzante] to thrust, drive (en into)[+ pie] to set (firmly) (en on)hincó el bastón en el suelo — he stuck his stick in the ground, he thrust his stick into the ground
hincó la mirada en ella — he fixed his gaze on her, he stared at her fixedly
- hincarladiente, rodilla2.See:* * *1.verbo transitivoa) ( clavar)hincar algo en algo — < estaca> to drive o thrust something into something
me hincó los dientes en la mano — it buried its teeth in o sunk its teeth into my hand
b)2.hincar la rodilla — to go down on one knee (frml or liter)
hincarsev pron* * *----* hincarle el diente a = get + Posesivo + teeth into.* hincar una puntilla = drive + nail.* hincar un clavo = drive + nail.* hincar un cuchillo = knife.* hincar un puñal = knife.* * *1.verbo transitivoa) ( clavar)hincar algo en algo — < estaca> to drive o thrust something into something
me hincó los dientes en la mano — it buried its teeth in o sunk its teeth into my hand
b)2.hincar la rodilla — to go down on one knee (frml or liter)
hincarsev pron* * ** hincarle el diente a = get + Posesivo + teeth into.* hincar una puntilla = drive + nail.* hincar un clavo = drive + nail.* hincar un cuchillo = knife.* hincar un puñal = knife.* * *hincar [A2 ]vt1 (clavar) hincar algo EN algo:hincó la estaca en la tierra he drove o thrust the stake into the groundle hincó el puñal en el pecho she plunged the dagger into his chestme hincó los dientes en la mano it buried its teeth in o sunk its teeth into my hand2■ hincarsehincarse de rodillas to kneel* * *
hincar ( conjugate hincar) verbo transitivo ( clavar) hincar algo en algo ‹ estaca› to drive o thrust sth into sth;◊ me hincó los dientes en la mano it buried its teeth in o sunk its teeth into my hand
hincarse verbo pronominal tb hincarse de rodillas to kneel
hincar vtr (algo punzante) to drive (in)
♦ Locuciones: hincar el diente a, (una comida) to sink one's teeth into: tengo ganas de hincarle el diente a ese libro, I can't wait to get my teeth into that book
' hincar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
codo
- diente
English:
drive
- set
* * *♦ vthincó los postes en el suelo he drove the posts into the ground;Famhincar el diente a algo [a comida] to sink one's teeth into sth;[a trabajo, proyecto] to tackle sth, to get one's teeth into sth2. [apoyar] to set (firmly);Famhincar los codos [estudiar] to study hard;si quieres aprobar, vas a tener que hincar los codos if you want to pass you're going to have to roll up your sleeves and do some serious studying* * *v/t thrust, stick (en into);hincar el diente fam sink one’s teeth (en into);hincar el diente a algo fig fam get one’s teeth into sth* * *hincar {72} vtclavar: to stick, to plunge -
13 hineinstoßen
(unreg., trennb., -ge-)I v/t (hat)1. push in(to); (Messer etc.) thrust (into)* * *hi|nein|sto|ßen sep1. vtSchwert etc to thrust in ( in +acc -to)2. vi aux seinin eine Lücke hinéínstoßen — to steer into a space
in ein Gebiet hinéínstoßen — to enter a district
* * *hi·nein|sto·ßenI. vt irreg1. (in etw stoßen)2. (in etw schieben)ein Messer in jds Leib \hineinstoßen to stab sb [with a knife]eine Waffe in die Scheide \hineinstoßen to sheath a weaponII. vi Hilfsverb: seinin eine Lücke \hineinstoßen to steer smartly into a spacein ein Gebiet \hineinstoßen to penetrate a region* * *1.unregelmäßiges transitives Verb1) thrust inetwas in etwas (Akk.) hineinstoßen — thrust something into something
2) (hineinbringen)2.jemanden in etwas (Akk.) hineinstoßen — push somebody into something; (fig.) plunge somebody into something
unregelmäßiges intransitives Verb; mit seinin etwas (Akk.) hineinstoßen — (vordringen) push or thrust into something (hineinsteuern) drive (or) turn into something
* * *hineinstoßen (irr, trennb, -ge-)A. v/t (hat)1. push in(to); (Messer etc) thrust (into)2. MUS:hineinstoßen in (+akk) blow intoB. v/i (ist)hineinstoßen in (+akk) push in(to)* * *1.unregelmäßiges transitives Verb1) thrust inetwas in etwas (Akk.) hineinstoßen — thrust something into something
2.jemanden in etwas (Akk.) hineinstoßen — push somebody into something; (fig.) plunge somebody into something
unregelmäßiges intransitives Verb; mit seinin etwas (Akk.) hineinstoßen — (vordringen) push or thrust into something (hineinsteuern) drive (or) turn into something
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14 plunge
1. transitive verb2) (fig.)plunged in thought — in Gedanken versunken
2. intransitive verbbe plunged into darkness — in Dunkelheit getaucht sein (geh.)
1)3. nounplunge into something — (lit. or fig.) in etwas (Akk.) stürzen
Sprung, dertake the plunge — (fig. coll.) den Sprung wagen
* * *1. verb1) (to throw oneself down (into deep water etc); to dive: He plunged into the river.) tauchen2. noun(an act of plunging; a dive: He took a plunge into the pool.) der (Kopf-)Sprung- academic.ru/56302/plunger">plunger- take the plunge* * *[plʌnʤ]I. nto make a \plunge tauchena sixty-foot \plunge into the sea sechzig Fuß unter der Meeresoberfläche2. (swim)\plunge [in the pool] Schwimmen [im Pool] nt kein plthere has been a \plunge in the value of the dollar today der Wert des Dollar ist heute dramatisch gefallenthe \plunge of the dollar der Sturz des Dollara \plunge in profits dramatisch sinkende Profitea \plunge in value dramatischer Wertverlust4.II. vi1. (fall) stürzenthe Niagara Falls \plunges 55.5 metres die Niagarafälle stürzen 55,5 m in die Tiefewe \plunged into the sea wir sprangen ins Meerto \plunge to one's death in den Tod stürzen3. (dash) stürzenshe \plunged forward sie warf sich nach vorneIII. vt1. (immerse)2. (thrust)to \plunge a dagger/knife/needle into sb jdn mit einem Dolch/einem Messer/einer Nadel stechen3. (suddenly cause)the blackout plunged the town into darkness der Stromausfall tauchte die Stadt in Dunkelheit* * *[plʌndZ]1. vt1) (= thrust) stecken; (into water etc) tauchenhe plunged the knife into his victim's back — er jagte seinem Opfer das Messer in den Rücken
to plunge one's hand into sth — seine Hand tief in etw (acc) (hinein)stecken
2) (fig)to plunge the country into war/debt — das Land in einen Krieg/in Schulden stürzen
the room was plunged into darkness — das Zimmer war in Dunkelheit getaucht
we were plunged into darkness —
2. vi1) (= dive) tauchen; (goalkeeper) sich werfen, hechten2) (= rush esp downward) stürzenhe plunged into/through the crowd — er stürzte sich in/wühlte sich durch die Massen
3) (share prices, currency etc) stürzen, stark fallensales have plunged by 24% — die Verkaufszahlen sind um 24% gefallen
4) (fig) (into debate, studies, preparations, debt) sich stürzen (into in +acc); (into recession) stürzen (into in +acc)6) (neckline) fallen7) (= speculate rashly) sich verspekulieren3. vr(into studies, job etc) sich stürzen (into in +acc)4. nhe enjoys a quick plunge before breakfast — vor dem Frühstück schwimmt er gern eine Runde
2) (= downward movement) Sturz mhis plunge into debt began when his business collapsed — nach dem Bankrott seines Geschäftes stürzte er sich in Schulden
shares took a plunge after the government's announcement — nach der Ankündigung der Regierung kam es zu einem Kurssturz
a plunge in the value of the pound — ein Kurssturz m des Pfunds
4) (= rash investment) Fehlspekulation f* * *plunge [plʌndʒ]A v/t1. (ein)tauchen (in, into in akk) (auch fig):plunge o.s. into debts,B v/i1. (ein)tauchen (in, into in akk)2. stürzen, stürmen ( beide:into in akk)5. sich nach vorn werfen (Pferd etc)7. stürzen (Preise, Kurse etc)8. umg hasardieren, alles auf eine Karte setzenC s1. (Ein)Tauchen ntake the plunge fig den (Ab)Sprung wagen4. Sprung-, Tauchbecken n* * *1. transitive verb1) (thrust violently) stecken; (into liquid) tauchen2) (fig.)2. intransitive verb1)plunge into something — (lit. or fig.) in etwas (Akk.) stürzen
2) (descend suddenly) [Straße usw.:] steil abfallen3. nounSprung, dertake the plunge — (fig. coll.) den Sprung wagen
* * *n.Talfahrt -en f. v.eintauchen v.tauchen v. -
15 clavar
v.1 to drive (clavo, estaca).2 to nail, to fix (letrero, placa).clavó la suela de la bota he nailed on the sole of the boot3 to fix, to rivet.clavar los ojos o la mirada en algo/alguien en to stare at something/somebody4 to nail down, to nail in, to nail, to fix with nails.5 to hammer, to knock in, to hammer in, to hammer down.El carpintero clavó las tablas The carpenter hammered the boards.6 to perplex.7 to screw, to shaft, to poke.El chico clavó a su novia The boy screwed his girlfriend.* * *1 (con clavos) to nail2 (un clavo) to bang, hammer in; (estaca) to drive4 familiar (cobrar caro) to sting, fleece1 (gen) to stick* * *verb1) to hammer2) nail3) plunge4) fix* * *1. VT1) (=hincar) [+ clavo] to hammer inclavar banderillas — (Taur) to thrust banderillas into the bull's neck
2) (=fijar) [con clavos] to nail3) [+ joya] to set, mount4) (Ftbl) [+ pelota] to hammer, driveel delantero clavó el balón en la red — the forward hammered o drove the ball into the net
5) ** (=cobrar de más) to rip off *-pagué cuarenta euros -pues, te han clavado — "I paid forty euros" - "you were ripped off"
6) * (=hacer perfecto)-¿cómo has hecho el examen? -lo he clavado — "how did the exam go?" - "it was spot on" *
7) Méx ** (=robar) to swipe *, nick *, pinch *2.See:* * *1.verbo transitivo1)a)clavar algo en algo — < clavo> to hammer something into something; <puñal/cuchillo> to stick something in something; < estaca> to drive something into something
me clavó los dientes/las uñas — he sank his teeth/dug his nails into me
b) <cartel/estante> to put up (with nails, etc)c) <ojos/vista> to fix... on2) (fam)a) ( cobrar caro) to rip... off (colloq)nos clavaron $10,000 — they stung us for $10,000
b) (CS fam) ( engañar) to cheatc) (Méx fam) ( robar) to swipe (colloq), to filch (colloq)3) (RPl fam) ( dejar plantado) to stand... up (colloq)4) (Ven fam) < estudiante> to fail, to flunk (AmE colloq)2.clavarse v pron1)a) <aguja/espina>b) (refl) <cuchillo/puñal>2) (CS fam)clavarse con algo — ( por no poder venderlo) to get stuck with something (colloq); ( por ser mala compra)
3) (Per fam) ( colarse)se clavó en la cola — he jumped the line (AmE) o (BrE) the queue
4) (Col arg)clavarse estudiando or a estudiar — to study like crazy (colloq)
5) (Méx) (Dep) to dive* * *= pin, knock in, stick, nail.Ex. One example is the circulation of notices which may previously have been pinned on a noticeboard.Ex. The ball pelts, which were usually sheepskin, were fixed to the handles with nails which were only lightly knocked in, and were removed after the day's work (and often during the midday break as well).Ex. Is it a matter of a library in one country sticking a pin in a map and requesting a document from the nearest library to where the pin is inserted?.Ex. This book suggests ways for children to work successfully with scraps of wood by carving, sawing, hammering, nailing or gluing pieces together.----* clavar con chinchetas = pin.* * *1.verbo transitivo1)a)clavar algo en algo — < clavo> to hammer something into something; <puñal/cuchillo> to stick something in something; < estaca> to drive something into something
me clavó los dientes/las uñas — he sank his teeth/dug his nails into me
b) <cartel/estante> to put up (with nails, etc)c) <ojos/vista> to fix... on2) (fam)a) ( cobrar caro) to rip... off (colloq)nos clavaron $10,000 — they stung us for $10,000
b) (CS fam) ( engañar) to cheatc) (Méx fam) ( robar) to swipe (colloq), to filch (colloq)3) (RPl fam) ( dejar plantado) to stand... up (colloq)4) (Ven fam) < estudiante> to fail, to flunk (AmE colloq)2.clavarse v pron1)a) <aguja/espina>b) (refl) <cuchillo/puñal>2) (CS fam)clavarse con algo — ( por no poder venderlo) to get stuck with something (colloq); ( por ser mala compra)
3) (Per fam) ( colarse)se clavó en la cola — he jumped the line (AmE) o (BrE) the queue
4) (Col arg)clavarse estudiando or a estudiar — to study like crazy (colloq)
5) (Méx) (Dep) to dive* * *= pin, knock in, stick, nail.Ex: One example is the circulation of notices which may previously have been pinned on a noticeboard.
Ex: The ball pelts, which were usually sheepskin, were fixed to the handles with nails which were only lightly knocked in, and were removed after the day's work (and often during the midday break as well).Ex: Is it a matter of a library in one country sticking a pin in a map and requesting a document from the nearest library to where the pin is inserted?.Ex: This book suggests ways for children to work successfully with scraps of wood by carving, sawing, hammering, nailing or gluing pieces together.* clavar con chinchetas = pin.* * *clavar [A1 ]vtA1 clavar algo EN algo ‹clavo› to hammer sth INTO sth; ‹palo/estaca› to drive sth INTO sthle clavó el puñal en el pecho she drove o plunged the dagger into his chestuna estaca clavada en el suelo a stake driven into the groundme clavó los dientes/las uñas he sank his teeth/dug his nails into me2 ‹cartel/estante› to put up ( with nails etc)3 ‹ojos› to fix … onclavó en ella una mirada de odio he fixed her with a look of hateB ( fam)1 (cobrar caro) to rip … off ( colloq)DE■ clavarseA1 ‹aguja/espina›me clavé la aguja I stuck the needle into my finger ( o thumb etc)me clavé el destornillador en la mano I stuck the screwdriver in my handse clavó una astilla en el dedo she got a splinter in her finger2 ( refl) ‹cuchillo/puñal›se clavó el puñal en el pecho he drove o plunged the dagger into his chestBme clavé con las entradas I got stuck with the ticketsse clavó con el auto que compró the car turned out to be a bad buy o a real lemon ( colloq)2( RPl fam) (fastidiarse): me tuve que clavar toda la tarde allí porque el cerrajero no vino I was stuck there all afternoon because the locksmith didn't come ( colloq)Csiempre se clava en las fiestas he's always gatecrashing parties ( colloq)D* * *
clavar ( conjugate clavar) verbo transitivo
1a) clavar algo en algo ‹ clavo› to hammer sth into sth;
‹puñal/cuchillo› to stick sth in sth;
‹ estaca› to drive sth into sth;◊ me clavó los dientes/las uñas he sank his teeth/dug his nails into me
c) ‹ojos/vista› to fix … on
2 (fam)
◊ nos clavaron $10,000 they stung us for $10,000
clavarse verbo pronominal
1
2 (CS fam) clavarse con algo ( por no poder venderlo) to get stuck with sth (colloq);
( por ser mala compra):
3 (Méx) (Dep) to dive
clavar
I verbo transitivo
1 (con un martillo) to hammer in
(sujetar con clavos) to nail
2 (una estaca) to drive in
3 familiar (cobrar demasiado) to sting o fleece: nos clavaron dos mil por un simple desayuno, they stung us two thousand pesetas for a breakfast
' clavar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
ensartar
- fijar
- hincar
English:
dig
- drive
- fix
- hammer
- knock
- nail
- pin up
- ram
- sink
- slam on
- stick
- sting
- tack
- set
- spike
- thrust
* * *♦ vt1. [clavo, estaca] to drive (en into); [cuchillo] to thrust (en into); [chincheta, alfiler] to stick (en into);le clavó los dientes en la oreja she sank her teeth into his ear2. [letrero, placa] to nail, to fix;clavó la suela de la bota he nailed on the sole of the boot3. [mirada, atención] to fix, to rivet;clavar los ojos en to stare at;clavó su mirada en la de ella he stared her right in the eyeen esa tienda te clavan they charge you an arm and a leg in that shop♦ viRP, Ven muy Fam [copular] to do it, Br to have it off* * *v/t1 stick (en into)3:clavar los ojos en alguien fix one’s eyes on s.o.4:clavar a alguien por algo fam overcharge s.o. for sth* * *clavar vt1) : to nail, to hammer2) hincar: to plunge, to stick3) : to fix (one's eyes) on* * *clavar vb1. (clavo) to hammerclavar la mirada en algo / clavar los ojos en algo to stare at something -
16 Hintergrund
m background (auch Kunst und fig.); (hinterer Teil eines Raumes) back; THEAT. und fig. backdrop; die Hintergründe fig. the background (+ Gen of), what’s behind s.th.; die Tat hat politische Hintergründe the act is politically motivated; sich vor dem Hintergrund eines Krieges etc. abspielen take place against a backdrop of war etc.; in den Hintergrund treten oder geraten umg. take a back seat; in den Hintergrund rücken Problem, Aspekt etc.: be pushed into the background; sich im Hintergrund halten oder im Hintergrund bleiben keep out of the way; beobachtend: watch from the sidelines; jemanden in den Hintergrund drängen push s.o. into the background, force s.o. onto the sidelines; etw. im Hintergrund haben (geheimen Plan etc.) have s.th. up one’s sleeve; im Hintergrund stehen (kaum beachtet werden) be in the background* * *der Hintergrundbackdrop; foil; back; background* * *Hịn|ter|grundm(von Bild, Raum) background; (von Bühne, Saal) back; (THEAT = Kulisse) backdrop, backcloth; (fig = verborgene Zusammenhänge) background no pl (+gen to)im Hintergrund — in the background
im Hintergrund der Bühne — at the back of the stage
vor dem Hintergrund (lit, fig) — against the background
der musikalische/akustische Hintergrund — the background music/sounds pl
im Hintergrund bleiben/stehen (lit, fig) — to stay/be in the background
in den Hintergrund treten or rücken (fig) — to be pushed into the background
jdn/etw in den Hintergrund drängen — to push sb/sth into the background
* * *der1) (the space behind the principal or most important figures or objects of a picture etc: He always paints ships against a background of stormy skies; trees in the background of the picture.) background2) (happenings that go before, and help to explain, an event etc: the background to a situation.) background3) (a dull person or thing against which someone or something else seems brighter: She acted as a foil to her beautiful sister.) foil4) (a background: This castle is the perfect setting for a murder.) setting* * *Hin·ter·grundm1. (hinterer Teil des Blickfeldes) backgroundder \Hintergrund einer Bühne/eines Raums/eines Saals the back of a stage/a room/a hallim \Hintergrund in the backgroundim \Hintergrund eines Raums/eines Saals at the back of a room/a hall2. (Bedingungen und Umstände)der Hexenwahn und der Teufelsglaube bildeten den \Hintergrund der Hexenverfolgungen fear of witches and belief in the devil led up to [or formed the background to] the witch huntsvor dem \Hintergrund einer S. gen in/against the setting of sth, against the backdrop liter [or background] of sth4.▶ jdn in den \Hintergrund drängen [o spielen] to push [or thrust] sb into [or to relegate sb to] the background, to steal the limelight from sb▶ in den \Hintergrund treten [o geraten] [o rücken] to fade [or recede] [or retreat] into the background* * *der akustische/musikalische Hintergrund — the background sounds/music
* * *Hintergrund m background ( auch KUNST und fig); (hinterer Teil eines Raumes) back; THEAT etc fig backdrop;die Tat hat politische Hintergründe the act is politically motivated;abspielen take place against a backdrop of war etc;geraten umg take a back seat;in den Hintergrund rücken Problem, Aspekt etc: be pushed into the background;im Hintergrund bleiben keep out of the way; beobachtend: watch from the sidelines;jemanden in den Hintergrund drängen push sb into the background, force sb onto the sidelines;etwas im Hintergrund haben (geheimen Plan etc) have sth up one’s sleeve;im Hintergrund stehen (kaum beachtet werden) be in the background* * *der (auch fig.) backgroundder akustische/musikalische Hintergrund — the background sounds/music
* * *m.background n. -
17 Hintergrund
Hin·ter·grund m1) ( hinterer Teil des Blickfeldes) background;im \Hintergrund in the background;im \Hintergrund eines Raums/ eines Saals at the back of a room/a hall;2) ( Bedingungen und Umstände)der \Hintergrund einer S. gen the background to sth;der \Hintergrund einer Geschichte the backdrop ( liter); [or ( liter) setting] [or background] to a story;der Hexenwahn und der Teufelsglaube bildeten den \Hintergrund der Hexenverfolgungen fear of witches and belief in the devil led up to [or formed the background to] the witch huntsvor dem \Hintergrund einer S. gen in/against the setting of sth, against the backdrop ( liter); [or background] of sthWENDUNGEN:jdn in den \Hintergrund drängen [o spielen] to push [or thrust] sb into [or to relegate sb to] the background, to steal the limelight from sb;in den \Hintergrund treten [o geraten] [o rücken] to fade [or recede] [or retreat] into the background -
18 enterrar
v.1 to bury.María enterró su gatito Mary buried her kitten.María enterró sus recuerdos Mary buried her memories.2 to forget about.3 to sink or drive in.le enterró el puñal en el vientre he plunged the dagger into his belly* * *1 to bury, inter1 figurado to bury oneself\enterrarse en vida figurado to cut oneself off from the world* * *verb* * *VT1) (=ocultar en tierra) to bury2) (=olvidarse de) to bury, forget3) LAm [+ arma] to thrust (en into)bury (en in)* * *1.verbo transitivo to bury2.enterrarse v pron* * *= bury, lay + Nombre + to rest, inter.Ex. And if the topic does become tomorrow's carrion, it would not, perhaps, be inappropriate that it was buried under its own dead horse subject heading.Ex. A New Orleans style funeral provided a humorous backdrop for library staff to relive the tragedies and successes of the old system as it was laid to rest.Ex. The author talks about the funerary role played by chapter houses where bishops or important patrons were interred.----* enterrar el hacha de guerra = bury + the hatchet, bury + the tomahawk, bury + the war axe.* sin enterrar = unburied.* * *1.verbo transitivo to bury2.enterrarse v pron* * *= bury, lay + Nombre + to rest, inter.Ex: And if the topic does become tomorrow's carrion, it would not, perhaps, be inappropriate that it was buried under its own dead horse subject heading.
Ex: A New Orleans style funeral provided a humorous backdrop for library staff to relive the tragedies and successes of the old system as it was laid to rest.Ex: The author talks about the funerary role played by chapter houses where bishops or important patrons were interred.* enterrar el hacha de guerra = bury + the hatchet, bury + the tomahawk, bury + the war axe.* sin enterrar = unburied.* * *enterrar [A5 ]vt1 ‹cadáver› to burylo entierran mañana a las diez the burial is tomorrow at ten2 ‹tesoro/joyas› to bury3 (sobrevivir) to outlive, bury ( colloq)4 ( liter); ‹ilusiones/recuerdos/odio› to bury, put … behind one5 (clavar) enterrar algo EN algo to bury sth IN sthle enterró el puñal en el pecho she buried the dagger in his chestle enterró las uñas en la espalda she dug her nails into his backenterrarse en vida to cut oneself off from the world* * *
enterrar ( conjugate enterrar) verbo transitivo
to bury;
enterrar vt
1 to bury: todavía hay muchos tesoros enterrados, there's still a lot of buried treasure
2 (olvidar, terminar con algo) aquello enterró mis ilusiones, that destroyed all my hopes
figurado enterrar el hacha de guerra, (reconciliarse) to forgive and forget
' enterrar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
guerra
English:
bury
- rest
- embed
- hatchet
- sink
* * *♦ vt1. [cadáver] to bury2. [objeto, tesoro] to bury;enterrar el hacha de guerra to bury the hatchet3. [clavar] to sink o drive in;le enterró el puñal en el vientre he plunged the dagger into his belly4. [olvidar] to forget about* * *v/t bury;enterrar a todos fig outlive everybody* * *enterrar {55} vt: to bury* * * -
19 hincar
hincar ( conjugate hincar) verbo transitivo ( clavar) hincar algo en algo ‹ estaca› to drive o thrust sth into sth;◊ me hincó los dientes en la mano it buried its teeth in o sunk its teeth into my handhincarse verbo pronominal tb hincarse de rodillas to kneel
hincar vtr (algo punzante) to drive (in) Locuciones: hincar el diente a, (una comida) to sink one's teeth into: tengo ganas de hincarle el diente a ese libro, I can't wait to get my teeth into that book ' hincar' also found in these entries: Spanish: codo - diente English: drive - set -
20 Н-180
(КАК (СЛОВНО, ТОЧНО)) НОЖ В СЕРДЦЕ кому coll ((как etc +) NP these forms only subj-compl with бытье ( subj: usu. abstr) fixed WOextremely painful, hurtful for s.o. (in an emotional sense): (itfs) (like) a knife in s.o. heart(itfs) (like) a knife thrust into s.o. % heart (itis) (like) a stab in the heart (it) cuts at s.o. 's heart ( sth. goes through s.o.) like a knife.«Вы должны поехать вместе со мной... завтра же... Если вы откажетесь, это будет мне нож в сердце...» (Лившиц 1). "You must go, together with me...tomorrow....If you refuse, it will be like a knife in my heart..." (1a).Добавлением к (моему) смятению было письмо от сына, пришедшее в Нью-Йорк через Швейцарию. Это был нож в самое сердце (Аллилуева 2). То add to my confusion, about this same time I received a letter from my son, which had reached New York via Switzerland. It was like a knife thrust straight into my heart (2a).
См. также в других словарях:
thrust — 1 verb past tense and past participle thrust (T) 1 to push something somewhere with a sudden or violent movement: thrust sth into/back: The man thrust a package into Jake s hand and ran away. 2 have sth thrust upon you to be forced to accept… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
thrust — thrust1 [θrʌst] v past tense and past participle thrust [Date: 1100 1200; : Old Norse; Origin: thrysta] 1.) [T always + adverb/preposition] to push something somewhere roughly ▪ She thrust a letter into my hand. ▪ He thrust me roughly towards the … Dictionary of contemporary English
into — in|to W1S1 [ ıntə before vowels ıntu strong ıntu:] prep ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(to the inside of something)¦ 2¦(becoming involved)¦ 3¦(changing)¦ 4¦(hitting something)¦ 5¦(direction)¦ 6¦(time)¦ 7¦(finding out)¦ 8¦(dividing numbers)¦ 9 be into something … Dictionary of contemporary English
pocket — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun 1 for keeping things in ADJECTIVE ▪ bulging ▪ tourists with bulging pockets ▪ deep ▪ zip (BrE), zipped, zippered … Collocations dictionary
cut — cut1 W1S1 [kʌt] v past tense and past participle cut present participle cutting ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(reduce)¦ 2¦(divide something with a knife, scissors etc)¦ 3¦(make something shorter with a knife etc)¦ 4¦(remove parts from film etc)¦ 5¦(make a… … Dictionary of contemporary English
cut — 1 /kVt/ verb past tense and past participle cut present participle cutting 1 DIVIDE WITH KNIFE ETC (T) to divide something into two or more pieces using a sharp tool such as a knife: Do you want me to cut the cake? | The thieves had cut the phone … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
forefront — noun the forefront VERB + THE FOREFRONT ▪ remain at, remain in ▪ Education remains at the forefront of the state s planning. ▪ keep sb/sth at, keep sb/sth in, keep sb/sth to (BrE) … Collocations dictionary
spotlight — noun 1 lamp VERB + SPOTLIGHT ▪ shine ▪ They shone the spotlight on a woman at the back of the audience. ▪ step into ▪ He stepped into the spotlight to the wild applause of the crowd. SPOTLIGHT + VERB … Collocations dictionary
disaster — noun 1 bad event/situation ADJECTIVE ▪ awful, big, catastrophic, devastating, enormous (esp. AmE), great, horrible, huge, large scale (esp. AmE) … Collocations dictionary
fist — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ balled (esp. AmE), clenched, closed, tight ▪ loose ▪ little, small, tiny … Collocations dictionary
knife — noun 1 tool for cutting ADJECTIVE ▪ blunt, dull (esp. AmE) ▪ sharp ▪ serrated ▪ long ▪ small … Collocations dictionary