Перевод: с турецкого на английский

с английского на турецкий

twit

  • 1 budala

    adj. fool, dullish, barren, chumpish, clownish, doltish, dreary, sappy, zany
    --------
    n. fool, chucklehead, clod, jackass, juggins, noddy, noodle, prune, simple simon, soft, twit, zany
    * * *
    1. dimwit 2. foolish 3. imbecile 4. ninny 5. noodle 6. oaf 7. twit (n.)

    Turkish-English dictionary > budala

  • 2 aptal

    adj. silly, stupid, dumb, foolish, idiotic, fatheaded, feeble-minded, half witted, thickheaded, daft, dotty, goofy, gormless, inane, oafish
    --------
    n. stupid person, stupid, silly, fool, dummy, idiot, birdbrain, booby, cuckoo, dumb bell, dunce, fathead, half wit, lummox, simp, softhead, tomfool, twerp, twit
    * * *
    1. cretin 2. fathead 3. fatheaded 4. fatuous 5. feebleminded 6. fool 7. foolish 8. mutt 9. obtuse 10. puddingheaded 11. silly 12. stupid 13. stupid person 14. witless 15. zany

    Turkish-English dictionary > aptal

  • 3 sataşmak

    v. pick on, tease, annoy, go for, hit at, ride, twit

    Turkish-English dictionary > sataşmak

  • 4 sataşmamak

    v. (neg. form of sataşmak) pick on, tease, annoy, go for, hit at, ride, twit

    Turkish-English dictionary > sataşmamak

  • 5 alay etmek

    to make fun (of), to poke fun at, to take the piss (out of), to laugh at, to gibe at, to scoff, to ridicule, to tease, to jeer, to mock, to deride, to twit, to taunt

    İngilizce Sözlük Türkçe > alay etmek

См. также в других словарях:

  • twit — twit·ten; twit·ter·a·tion; twit·ter·er; twit·tery; twit; twit·ter; twit·ty; …   English syllables

  • twit — twit1 [twit] vt. twitted, twitting [aphetic < ME atwiten, to twit < OE ætwitan < æt, at + witan, to accuse, akin to witan, to know: see WISE1] to reproach, tease, taunt, etc., esp. by reminding of a fault or mistake n. 1. the act of… …   English World dictionary

  • Twit — can mean: *A British slang word for an insignificant, foolish or annoying person. *The weekly podcast This WEEK in TECH. *The TWiT podcast network TWiT.tv *The Roald Dahl children s book called The Twits *A user of Twitter …   Wikipedia

  • twit — was originally, and still is, a verb, meaning ‘taunt’ [16]. It is a shortened version of the now defunct atwite. This went back to Old English ætwītan, a compound verb formed from the prefix æt , denoting ‘opposition’, and wītan ‘reproach’. It is …   The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins

  • twit — was originally, and still is, a verb, meaning ‘taunt’ [16]. It is a shortened version of the now defunct atwite. This went back to Old English ætwītan, a compound verb formed from the prefix æt , denoting ‘opposition’, and wītan ‘reproach’. It is …   Word origins

  • Twit — Twit, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Twitted}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Twitting}.] [OE. atwiten, AS. [ae]tw[=i]tan to reproach, blame; [ae]t at + w[=i]tan to reproach, blame; originally, to observe, see, hence, to observe what is wrong (cf. the meanings of E.… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • twit — [twıt] n [Date: 1900 2000; Origin: Perhaps from twat] informal a person who you think is stupid or silly …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • twit — [ twıt ] noun count INFORMAL a stupid or silly person …   Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • twit — Ⅰ. twit [1] ► NOUN informal, chiefly Brit. ▪ a silly or foolish person. DERIVATIVES twittish adjective. ORIGIN originally dialect in the sense «tale bearer». Ⅱ. twit [2] …   English terms dictionary

  • twit — index jape, jeer, mock (deride) Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …   Law dictionary

  • twit — vb *ridicule, deride, mock, taunt, rally Analogous words: reproach, chide, *reprove: reprehend, blame, censure (see CRITICIZE): *scoff, jeer, gibe …   New Dictionary of Synonyms

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