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1 головнь боль
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2 ужасная головная боль
General subject: vicious headache, splitting headacheУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > ужасная головная боль
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3 жесточайшая головная боль
General subject: vicious headacheУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > жесточайшая головная боль
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4 atroz
adj.1 terrible, awful.hace un frío atroz it's terribly o awfully cold2 atrocious, horrible, inhumane, abominable.3 agonizing, excruciating.* * *1 (bárbaro) atrocious, outrageous* * *adj.* * *ADJ1) (=terrible) atrocious; (=cruel) cruel, inhuman; (=escandaloso) outrageous2) * (=enorme) huge, terrific; (=malísimo) dreadful, awful* * *adjetivo (brutal, cruel) appalling; ( uso hiperbólico) atrocious, awful* * *= dismal, atrocious, brutal, frightful, dire, abysmal, excruciating, hideous, gruesome, ferocious, god-awful, heinous.Ex. The persistence of a dismal image is a most worrying phenomenon and one which must change if progress is to be made by SLIS.Ex. The public library's selection of books for small boys is atrocious.Ex. Few, if any of us, want to be involved in murder, but the brutal act of one person killing another, the motives for doing so, the personal and social consequences, all hold our attention, as newspaper editors well know and exploit = Pocos, si existe alguien, desea verse implicado en un asesinato, pero el acto brutal de una persona asesinando a otra, los motivos para hacerlo, las consecuencias personales y sociales, todo capta nuestra atención, como bien saben y explotan los directores de periódicos.Ex. The book, written by a man who is not a military historian as such, is concerned above all with showing the war's hideousness, its frightful human cost, its pathos and loss, and its essential failure to achieve its objectives.Ex. Throughout the process of development, debate and enactment of the Digital Millennium Act in the USA, many dire forebodings were envisaged for the library profession.Ex. The communications infrastructure in Africa varies from very good to abysmal = La infraestructura de comunicaciones en †frica oscila entre muy buena y pésima.Ex. Loneliness can involve excruciating physical pain as well as harrowing mental suffering.Ex. The book focuses on images where hideous atrocities -- e.g., murder, blasphemy, wanton destruction and even cannibalism -- are shown to be part of the daily life of the common people of Paris during the revolution.Ex. We hear horrendous tales of shootings in schools and colleges and gruesome murder of parents.Ex. One by one, he wiped the floor with opponents who had spoken in the debate -- with a ferocious blend of rant, rhetoric and rumbustious counterattack.Ex. The director and deputies deserve the most recognition because they actually had to give up time with their families for the god-awful places we sent them.Ex. There are several different ways to make a stink bomb, all of which involving the use of chemicals which react in a way to create a particularly heinous odor.* * *adjetivo (brutal, cruel) appalling; ( uso hiperbólico) atrocious, awful* * *= dismal, atrocious, brutal, frightful, dire, abysmal, excruciating, hideous, gruesome, ferocious, god-awful, heinous.Ex: The persistence of a dismal image is a most worrying phenomenon and one which must change if progress is to be made by SLIS.
Ex: The public library's selection of books for small boys is atrocious.Ex: Few, if any of us, want to be involved in murder, but the brutal act of one person killing another, the motives for doing so, the personal and social consequences, all hold our attention, as newspaper editors well know and exploit = Pocos, si existe alguien, desea verse implicado en un asesinato, pero el acto brutal de una persona asesinando a otra, los motivos para hacerlo, las consecuencias personales y sociales, todo capta nuestra atención, como bien saben y explotan los directores de periódicos.Ex: The book, written by a man who is not a military historian as such, is concerned above all with showing the war's hideousness, its frightful human cost, its pathos and loss, and its essential failure to achieve its objectives.Ex: Throughout the process of development, debate and enactment of the Digital Millennium Act in the USA, many dire forebodings were envisaged for the library profession.Ex: The communications infrastructure in Africa varies from very good to abysmal = La infraestructura de comunicaciones en frica oscila entre muy buena y pésima.Ex: Loneliness can involve excruciating physical pain as well as harrowing mental suffering.Ex: The book focuses on images where hideous atrocities -- e.g., murder, blasphemy, wanton destruction and even cannibalism -- are shown to be part of the daily life of the common people of Paris during the revolution.Ex: We hear horrendous tales of shootings in schools and colleges and gruesome murder of parents.Ex: One by one, he wiped the floor with opponents who had spoken in the debate -- with a ferocious blend of rant, rhetoric and rumbustious counterattack.Ex: The director and deputies deserve the most recognition because they actually had to give up time with their families for the god-awful places we sent them.Ex: There are several different ways to make a stink bomb, all of which involving the use of chemicals which react in a way to create a particularly heinous odor.* * *1 (brutal, cruel) appalling, terrible2 (uso hiperbólico) atrocious, awful, dreadful ( BrE)tengo un dolor de cabeza atroz I have an atrocious o an awful headache* * *
atroz adjetivo
atrocious
atroz adjetivo
1 (pésimo, insoportable) atrocious
2 fam (enorme) enormous, tremendous
' atroz' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
insensibilidad
- barbaridad
- muerte
English:
agonizing
- appalling
- atrocious
- dreadful
- excruciating
- heinous
- hell
- hideous
- raging
- unspeakable
- vicious
- crippling
- dire
- terrible
* * *atroz adj1. [cruel] [crimen, tortura] horrific, barbarices de una fealdad atroz he's terribly o incredibly ugly3. [muy malo] atrocious, awful* * *adj1 appalling, atrocious2:un éxito atroz a smash hit* * *♦ atrozamente adv* * *atroz adj1. (cruel) atrocious / appalling2. (enorme) terriblehace un frío atroz it's terribly cold / it's freezing -
5 cerchio
m (pl -chi) circle* * *cerchio s.m.1 circle, ring, round: danzare in cerchio, to dance in a ring; girare in cerchio, to turn round; (aer.) cerchio della morte, loop, ( di motociclisti) wall of death; gli aerei descrivono dei cerchi nel cielo, the planes are circling overhead // fare cerchio, to stand in a circle: fare cerchio intorno a qlcu., to make a circle round s.o. // cerchio vizioso, vicious circle; fare dei cerchi viziosi, to argue in circles (o to go round in circles) // avere un cerchio alla testa, to have a headache // si stringe il cerchio intorno al terrorista, the noose is tightening around the terrorist2 circle: cerchio circoscritto, circumscribed circle (o circumcircle); cerchio inscritto, inscribed circle (o incircle); cerchio exinscritto, escribed circle; cerchio massimo ( di sfera), great circle3 ( di botte) hoop // dare un colpo al cerchio e uno alla botte, to run with the hare and hunt with the hounds (o to keep in with both sides)4 ( cerchione di ruota) rim* * *1) mat. circle2) (circolo) circle, ringstare in cerchio attorno a — to form a circle o a ring around
fare cerchio attorno a qcn. — to gather around sb.
3) (anello) ring; (attrezzo ginnico) hoop-chi, orecchini a cerchio — hoop earrings
4) (di ruota) rim- chi in lega — aut. alloy rims o wheels
5) (di botte) hoop6) fig. (mal di testa)* * *cerchiopl. - chi /'t∫erkjo, ki/sostantivo m.1 mat. circle2 (circolo) circle, ring; stare in cerchio attorno a to form a circle o a ring around; fare cerchio attorno a qcn. to gather around sb.; danzare in cerchio to dance in a circle5 (di botte) hoop -
6 ужасный
1) General subject: God-awful, abominable, abysmal, almighty (we had an almighty row - у нас произошёл ужасный скандал), apalling, appalling, awesome, awful, beastly, blatant, chronic, chronical, crashing, cruel, damnable, darn, deadly, desperate, deuced, dire, direful, dread, dreadful, execrable, ferocious, flagitious, flagrant (о преступнике и т. п.), frightening, frightful, gastful, ghastful, ghastly, god awful, grievous, grisly, grizzly, gross, grueling, gruesome, hair raising, harrowing, heinous, hellish, helluva, hideous, horrible, horrid, howling, immane, monstrous, morbid, mortal, nasty, parlous, perishing (о холоде), sad, scary, shocking, splitting, towering, tragic, tragical, tremendous, unholy, vicious, wicked, woeful, woesome, horrendous, terrifying2) Colloquial: atrocious, fearful, hair-raising, scarey, terrible, terrific, thundering, ungodly, wretched, a bitch of (a bitch of a headache - ужасная головная боль), bad (they aren't that bad)4) French: macabre5) Obsolete: vengeable7) Australian slang: doggone9) Jargon: Hell, greeby, bugly (bugly - butt ugly), hellaclous, furry, gosh-awful, lousy, off-beat, offbeat11) Makarov: black12) Emotional: blue, cursed, curst, devilish, disastrous, fiendish, flaming, frantic, hanging, holy, holy mackerel!, pesky, vile14) Internet: awsm (сокращение awesome, часто используется в Интернете. "Did you see that new reality tv show? it was awsm!") -
7 ond
bad, cruel, evil, wicked* * *adj wicked ( fx deed, man, stepmother; we live in a wicked world),( stærkere, F) evil ( fx deeds, man; good and evil);( dårlig) bad ( fx conscience, dream);[ den onde] the Devil;[ med sb:][ ond cirkel] vicious circle (el. spiral);[ ond fe] bad fairy;[ i ondt lune] in a bad mood;[ der har aldrig været et ondt ord imellem os] there has never been a wrong word between us;[ onde tider] hard times;[ ondt vejr] foul weather;[ det onde øje]( i overtro) the evil eye;[ med vb:][ ane ondt] suspect mischief,T smell a rat;F suffer hardship(s);[ få ondt](dvs få kvalme) feel sick,( besvime) faint;[ jeg fik ondt i armene af det] it made my arms ache;(omtr) desperate diseases must have desperate remedies;( ofte =) set a thief to catch a thief;[ give ondt af sig] grumble,T grouse;[ det gør ondt] it hurts;[ det gør ondt i min finger] my finger hurts;(se også ndf: jeg har ondt i);[ hvor gør det ondt?] where does it hurt? where is the pain?[ det gør kun ondt værre] it only makes matters worse;[ det gør mig ondt for ham] I am (el. feel) sorry for him;[ det gør mig ondt at høre det] I am sorry to hear it;[ hvor ondt det end gør mig at sige det] however sorry I am to say it; reluctant as I am to say it;[ jeg har ondt af ham] I am (el. feel) sorry for him;[ hvad øjet ikke ser har hjertet ikke ondt af] what the eye doesn't see the heart doesn't grieve for;[ jeg har ondt i fingeren (, armen, benet etc)] my finger (, arm, leg etc) hurts;[ have ondt i]( vedvarende) have a... ache ( fx a headache, (a) backache, (a) stomachache, (a) toothache);[ jeg har ondt ved at tro det] I find it difficult to believe;[ sætte ondt for en] speak ill of somebody;[ sætte ondt blod imellem dem] make a bad blood between them;[ man må tage det onde med det gode] one must take the rough with the smooth;[ være af det onde] be a bad thing;[ det er der ikke noget ondt i] there is no harm in that;[ være ond imod (el. ved) en] be cruel to somebody;T be mad at (el. with) somebody;
См. также в других словарях:
vicious — viciously, adv. viciousness, n. /vish euhs/, adj. 1. addicted to or characterized by vice; grossly immoral; depraved; profligate: a vicious life. 2. given or readily disposed to evil: a vicious criminal. 3. reprehensible; blameworthy; wrong: a… … Universalium
vicious — vi|cious [ˈvıʃəs] adj [Date: 1300 1400; : Old French; Origin: vicieux, from Latin vitiosus full of faults , from vitium; VICE] 1.) violent and cruel in a way that hurts someone physically ▪ a vicious murder ▪ a vicious killer ▪ Keep away from… … Dictionary of contemporary English
vicious — adjective 1 violent and dangerous, and likely to hurt someone: a vicious attack | a vicious criminal | Keep away from that dog, he can be vicious. 2 cruel and deliberately trying to hurt someone s feelings or make their character seem bad: Sarah… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
vicious — vi•cious [[t]ˈvɪʃ əs[/t]] adj. 1) addicted to or characterized by vice; immoral or evil; depraved 2) spiteful; malicious: vicious gossip[/ex] 3) unpleasantly severe or intense: a vicious headache[/ex] 4) savage; ferocious: a vicious temper[/ex]… … From formal English to slang
vicious — /ˈvɪʃəs / (say vishuhs) adjective 1. characterised by brutal violence: a vicious attack. 2. characterised by a brutally violent disposition. 3. addicted to or characterised by vice or immorality; depraved; profligate. 4. given or disposed to… …
vi´cious|ness — vi|cious «VIHSH uhs», adjective. 1. evil; wicked: »vicious and weak conduct, a dictator s vicious love of power. The criminal led a vicious life. 2. having bad habits or a bad disposition; fierce; savage: »a vicious horse, the vicious temper of… … Useful english dictionary
vi´cious|ly — vi|cious «VIHSH uhs», adjective. 1. evil; wicked: »vicious and weak conduct, a dictator s vicious love of power. The criminal led a vicious life. 2. having bad habits or a bad disposition; fierce; savage: »a vicious horse, the vicious temper of… … Useful english dictionary
vi|cious — «VIHSH uhs», adjective. 1. evil; wicked: »vicious and weak conduct, a dictator s vicious love of power. The criminal led a vicious life. 2. having bad habits or a bad disposition; fierce; savage: »a vicious horse, the vicious temper of the wicked … Useful english dictionary
syndrome — The aggregate of symptoms and signs associated with any morbid process, and constituting together the picture of the disease. SEE ALSO: disease. [G. s., a running together, tumultuous concourse; (in med.) a concurrence of symptoms, fr. syn,… … Medical dictionary
nutritional disease — Introduction any of the nutrient related diseases and conditions that cause illness in humans. They may include deficiencies or excesses in the diet, obesity and eating disorders, and chronic diseases such as cardiovascular disease,… … Universalium
British moralists of the eighteenth century: Shaftesbury, Butler and Price — David McNaughton In this chapter I discuss the moral theories of three influential writers: Anthony Ashley Cooper, Third Earl of Shaftesbury (1671–1713); Joseph Butler (1692–1752) and Richard Price (1723–91). All three wrote extensively on issues … History of philosophy