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1 tug
1. noun1) Ruck, dertug of love [battle] — (coll.) Streit bei der Ehescheidung, wem das Kind zugesprochen wird
tug of war — (lit. or fig.) Tauziehen, das
2)2. transitive verb,tug [boat] — Schlepper, der
- gg- ziehen; schleppen [Boot]3. intransitive verb,- gg- zerren (at an + Dat.)* * *1. past tense, past participle - tugged; verb 2. noun1) (a strong, sharp pull: He gave the rope a tug.) der Ruck2) (a tug-boat.) der Schlepper•- academic.ru/119185/tug-boat">tug-boat- tug-of-war* * *[tʌg]I. nII. vt<- gg->▪ to \tug sb/sth jdn/etw ziehenIII. vi<- gg->her children were \tugging at her hair ihre Kinder zerrten an ihren Haaren* * *[tʌg]1. vtzerren, ziehen; vessel (ab)schleppenshe tugged a tuft of his hair out by the roots — sie zog or riss ihm ein Büschel Haare aus
2. viziehen, zerren (at an +dat) → heartstringsSee:→ heartstrings3. n1)(= pull)
to give sth a tug — an etw (dat) ziehenI felt a tug on my sleeve — ich spürte, wie mich jemand am Ärmel zog
parting with it was quite a tug — es fiel mir etc sehr schwer, mich etc davon zu trennen
2) Schlepper m, Schleppkahn m* * *tug [tʌɡ]A v/t1. → B 12. SCHIFF schleppenB v/iC s1. Zerren n, heftiger Ruck:give sth a tug → B 22. figa) große Anstrengunga tug-of-love child ein Kind, dessen geschiedene Eltern sich um das Sorgerecht streiten;3. SCHIFF Schlepper m* * *1. noun1) Ruck, derhe felt a tug on the fishingline — er spürte, wie etwas an der Angel zog
tug of love [battle] — (coll.) Streit bei der Ehescheidung, wem das Kind zugesprochen wird
tug of war — (lit. or fig.) Tauziehen, das
2)2. transitive verb,tug [boat] — Schlepper, der
- gg- ziehen; schleppen [Boot]3. intransitive verb,- gg- zerren (at an + Dat.)* * *v.zerren v. n.Zug ¨-e m.
См. также в других словарях:
tug — [c]/tʌg / (say tug) verb (tugged, tugging) –verb (t) 1. to pull at with force or effort. 2. to move by pulling forcibly; drag; haul. 3. to tow (a vessel, etc.) by means of a tugboat. –verb (i) 4. to pull with force or effort: to tug at an oar. 5 …
tug — verb (tugs, tugging, tugged) 1》 pull hard or suddenly. 2》 tow (a ship) with a tugboat. noun 1》 a hard or sudden pull. 2》 (also tugboat) a small, powerful boat used for towing larger ships, especially in harbour. ↘an aircraft towing a glider.… … English new terms dictionary
tug — I. verb (tugged; tugging) Etymology: Middle English tuggen; akin to Old English togian to pull more at tow Date: 14th century intransitive verb 1. to pull hard 2. to struggle in opposition ; contend 3. to … New Collegiate Dictionary
show — [[t]ʃo͟ʊ[/t]] ♦ shows, showing, showed, shown 1) VERB If something shows that a state of affairs exists, it gives information that proves it or makes it clear to people. [V that] Research shows that a high fibre diet may protect you from bowel… … English dictionary
tug — [[t]tʌ̱g[/t]] tugs, tugging, tugged 1) VERB If you tug something or tug at it, you give it a quick and usually strong pull. [V at n] A little boy came running up and tugged at his sleeve excitedly... [V n] She kicked him, tugging his thick hair.… … English dictionary
tug — 1 verb tugged, tugging (I, T) also tug at to pull with one or more short, quick pulls: She kept tugging insistently at Alan s sleeve. 2 noun (C) 1 also tug boat / / a small strong boat used for pulling or guiding ships into a port, up a river etc … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
tug — I UK [tʌɡ] / US verb [intransitive/transitive] Word forms tug : present tense I/you/we/they tug he/she/it tugs present participle tugging past tense tugged past participle tugged to pull someone or something by making a short strong movement tug… … English dictionary
pull — I. verb Etymology: Middle English, from Old English pullian; akin to Middle Low German pulen to shell, cull Date: before 12th century transitive verb 1. a. to exert force upon so as to cause or tend to cause motion toward the force b. to stretch… … New Collegiate Dictionary
grin — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun ADJECTIVE ▪ big, broad, Cheshire (AmE), Cheshire cat, huge, large, wide ▪ faint, feeble … Collocations dictionary
sleeve — noun 1 piece of clothing that covers arm ADJECTIVE ▪ long, short ▪ left, right ▪ full, wide ▪ three quarter (esp. A … Collocations dictionary
tug — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun ADJECTIVE ▪ good, hard, sharp ▪ All it needed was a good tug. ▪ firm ▪ gentle, little … Collocations dictionary