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1 turf out
turf out [sb., sth.], turf [sb., sth.] out sbattere fuori, cacciare via* * *vt + adv Britfam buttar fuori* * *turf out [sb., sth.], turf [sb., sth.] out sbattere fuori, cacciare via -
2 turf
I [tɜːf]II [tɜːf]the turf — le corse, il mondo delle corse ippiche
1) zollare, coprire di zolle [lawn, patch, pitch]2) colloq. (throw)turf that dog off the sofa — fai sloggiare o caccia via il cane dal divano
•- turf out* * *[tə:f] 1. plural - turfs; noun1) (rough grass and the earth it grows out of: He walked across the springy turf.) (tappeto erboso)2) ((a usually square piece of) grass and earth: We laid turf in our garden to make a lawn.) (zolla erbosa)2. verb1) (to cover with turf(s): We are going to turf that part of the garden.) (coprire di zolle erbose)2) (to throw: We turfed him out of the house.) buttare* * *[tɜːf](grass) tappeto erboso, (one piece) zolla erbosathe turf — (horse racing) l'ippica, le corse ippiche, (racetrack) l'ippodromo
2. vt(also: turf over) ricoprire di zolle erbose•- turf out* * *turf /tɜ:f/1 [u] tappeto erboso; terreno erboso2 zolla erbosa; piota6 (fam.) territorio controllato da una banda: turf war, guerra tra bande rivali ( per il controllo di un territorio)7 (fam.) (il proprio) territorio (spec.) professionale; (il proprio) campo; (la propria) area di competenza● (form. ingl.) turf accountant, allibratore; bookmaker □ (fig.) turf fight, lotta per le rispettive competenze □ ( calcio) turf shoes, scarpe da calcetto □ turf spade, tagliazolle.(to) turf /tɜ:f/v. t.coprire di zolle erbose; impiotare; piotare● ( slang) to turf out, buttar fuori; estromettere ( da un circolo, da una società); dare lo sfratto a, escomiare ( un inquilino); essere cacciato, andarsene ( per inadempienza, ecc.).* * *I [tɜːf]II [tɜːf]the turf — le corse, il mondo delle corse ippiche
1) zollare, coprire di zolle [lawn, patch, pitch]2) colloq. (throw)turf that dog off the sofa — fai sloggiare o caccia via il cane dal divano
•- turf out -
3 dig
I 1. [dɪg]1) (poke) spintone m., colpo m.; (with elbow) gomitata f.; (with fist) pugno m.to get in a dig at sb. — lanciare una frecciata a qcn
3) archeol. scavi m.pl.2. II 1. [dɪg]1) (excavate) scavare [trench, tunnel]2) agr. zappare [garden, plot]; archeol. scavare, fare degli scavi in [ site]3) (extract) cavare [ potatoes]; raccogliere [ root crops]; estrarre [coal, turf] ( out of da)5) AE colloq. (like)2.1) (excavate) scavare ( into in; for alla ricerca di, per cercare); agr. zappare; archeol. scavare, fare degli scavi3) (penetrate)to dig into — [springs, thorns] piantarsi, conficcarsi
•- dig in- dig out- dig up* * *[diɡ] 1. present participle - digging; verb1) (to turn up (earth) with a spade etc: to dig the garden.) scavare2) (to make (a hole) in this way: The child dug a tunnel in the sand.) scavare3) (to poke: He dug his brother in the ribs with his elbow.) colpire2. noun(a poke: a dig in the ribs; I knew that his remarks about women drivers were a dig at me (= a joke directed at me).) colpo; frecciata- digger- dig out
- dig up* * *dig /dɪg/n.1 (archeol.) scavo3 (fig. fam.) frecciatina; battutina: He can never resist a dig at her parents, non può mai trattenersi dal lanciare una frecciatina ai suoi genitori; to have a dig at sb. [st.], fare una battutina su q. [qc.]4 (pl.) (fam. antiq. GB) camera d'affitto; alloggio♦ (to) dig /dɪg/(pass. e p. p. dug)A v. t.1 scavare; estrarre ( dal suolo): He dug a hole in the ground, ha scavato una buca in terra; to dig a trench [a grave, a tunnel, a ditch], scavare una trincea [una tomba, una galleria, un fosso]; to dig coal, estrarre carbone; to dig potatoes, cavare le patate ( scavando)3 conficcare; piantare: He dug his elbow into my ribs, mi ha piantato il gomito nelle costole; He dug the spurs into the horse's sides, ha piantato gli speroni nei fianchi del cavallo4 (pop. antiq.) apprezzare; capire: to dig girls, apprezzare le donne; I can dig that, lo capisco; You dig?, capisci?B v. i.1 fare uno scavo; vangare2 ( anche fig.) scavare: to dig for gold, scavare in cerca d'oro; cercare l'oro; They dug down several metres and found water, hanno scavato per alcuni metri e hanno trovato l'acqua; They dug through 6 feet of solid rock, hanno fatto un buco di 6 piedi nella roccia solida; They spent months digging through the archives, hanno passato mesi a scavare negli archivi● to dig deep, far prova di generosità, elargire con generosità; (fig.) fare ricerche approfondite □ (fig.) to dig one's own grave, scavarsi la fossa con le proprie mani □ to dig sb. in the ribs, dare una gomitata (o una ditata) nelle costole a q. □ (fig.) to dig a hole for oneself, darsi la zappa sui piedi (fig.) □ to dig (up) the dirt (on sb.), cercare di scoprire informazioni compromettenti (su q.).* * *I 1. [dɪg]1) (poke) spintone m., colpo m.; (with elbow) gomitata f.; (with fist) pugno m.to get in a dig at sb. — lanciare una frecciata a qcn
3) archeol. scavi m.pl.2. II 1. [dɪg]1) (excavate) scavare [trench, tunnel]2) agr. zappare [garden, plot]; archeol. scavare, fare degli scavi in [ site]3) (extract) cavare [ potatoes]; raccogliere [ root crops]; estrarre [coal, turf] ( out of da)5) AE colloq. (like)2.1) (excavate) scavare ( into in; for alla ricerca di, per cercare); agr. zappare; archeol. scavare, fare degli scavi3) (penetrate)to dig into — [springs, thorns] piantarsi, conficcarsi
•- dig in- dig out- dig up
См. также в других словарях:
turf out — verb put out or expel from a place The unruly student was excluded from the game • Syn: ↑eject, ↑chuck out, ↑exclude, ↑boot out, ↑turn out • Derivationally related forms: ↑exclusion ( … Useful english dictionary
turf out — phrasal verb [transitive] Word forms turf out : present tense I/you/we/they turf out he/she/it turfs out present participle turfing out past tense turfed out past participle turfed out British informal to force someone to leave a place or an… … English dictionary
turf out — PHRASAL VERB If someone is turfed out of a place or position, they are forced to leave. [BRIT, INFORMAL] [be V ed P] We hear stories of people being turfed out and ending up on the streets... [be V ed P of n] The party was turfed out of office… … English dictionary
turf out — Verb. To expel a thing or a person, to throw out. E.g. Haven t you turfed out that broken chair yet? Informal … English slang and colloquialisms
Turf out — throw out; eject … Dictionary of Australian slang
turf out — Australian Slang throw out; eject … English dialects glossary
turf out — (Slang) exile someone, expel something … English contemporary dictionary
turf out — Eject … A concise dictionary of English slang
turf — [tʉrf] n. pl. turfs or Archaic turves [tʉrvz] [ME < OE, akin to ON torf < IE * dorbhos, sod, tuft of grass < base * derbh , to twist together] 1. a) a surface layer of earth containing grass plants with their matted roots; sod; sward b)… … English World dictionary
turf — turf1 [tə:f US tə:rf] n plural turfs or turves [tə:vz US tə:rvz] [: Old English;] 1.) [U] especially BrE a surface that consists of soil with grass on top, or an artificial surface that looks like this ▪ soft green turf 2.) BrE … Dictionary of contemporary English
turf — /tɜf / (say terf) noun (plural turfs or turves /tɜvz / (say tervz)) 1. the covering of grass, etc., with its matted roots, forming the surface of grassland. 2. a piece cut or torn from the surface of grassland, with the grass, etc., growing on… …