-
1 vomit
-
2 Il vomit.
Il vomit.Honí Davida. -
3 Il vomit des injures.
Il vomit des injures.Chrlí ze sebe nadávky. -
4 Il vomit son venin sur ses adversaires.
Il vomit son venin sur ses adversaires.Stříká svůj jed na své odpůrce.Dictionnaire français-tchèque > Il vomit son venin sur ses adversaires.
-
5 Le bébé vomit.
Le bébé vomit.Děťátko blinká. -
6 Quand il a le mal de mer, il vomit fréquemment.
Quand il a le mal de mer, il vomit fréquemment.Když má mořskou nemoc, často zvrací.Dictionnaire français-tchèque > Quand il a le mal de mer, il vomit fréquemment.
-
7 sick
[sik] 1. adjective1) (vomiting or inclined to vomit: He has been sick several times today; I feel sick; She's inclined to be seasick/airsick/car-sick.) zvracející, na zvracení2) ((especially American) ill: He is a sick man; The doctor told me that my husband is very sick and may not live very long.) nemocný3) (very tired (of); wishing to have no more (of): I'm sick of doing this; I'm sick and tired of hearing about it!) unavený; otrávený4) (affected by strong, unhappy or unpleasant feelings: I was really sick at making that bad mistake.) znechucený5) (in bad taste: a sick joke.) špatný2. noun(vomit: The bedclothes were covered with sick.) zvratek- sicken- sickening
- sickeningly
- sickly
- sickness
- sick-leave
- make someone sick
- make sick
- the sick
- worried sick* * *• nemocný -
8 throw up
1) (a slang expression for to vomit: She had too much to eat, and threw up on the way home.) zvracet2) (to give up or abandon: He threw up his job.) opustit3) (to build hurriedly: They threw up a temporary building.) rychle postavit* * *• nahodit
См. также в других словарях:
vomit — vomit … Dictionnaire des rimes
Vomit — Vom it, n. [L. vomitus, from vomere, vomitum, to vomit; akin to Gr. ?, Skr. vam, Lith. vemiti. Cf. {Emetic}, {Vomito}.] [1913 Webster] 1. Matter that is vomited; esp., matter ejected from the stomach through the mouth. [1913 Webster] Like vomit… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
vomit — (n.) late 14c., act of expelling contents of the stomach through the mouth, from L. vomitare to vomit often, frequentative of vomere spew forth, discharge, from PIE root *wem to spit, vomit (Cf. Gk. emein to vomit, emetikos provoking sickness;… … Etymology dictionary
Vomit — Vom it, v. t. 1. To throw up; to eject from the stomach through the mouth; to disgorge; to puke; to spew out; often followed by up or out. [1913 Webster] The fish . . . vomited out Jonah upon the dry land. Jonah ii. 10. [1913 Webster] 2. Hence,… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
vomit — [väm′it] n. [ME < L vomitus, a discharging, vomiting < pp. of vomere, to discharge, vomit < IE base * wemē > Gr emein, to vomit, OE wamm, stain, disgrace] 1. the act or process of ejecting the contents of the stomach through the mouth … English World dictionary
Vomit — Vom it, v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Vomited}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Vomiting}.] [Cf. L. vomere, vomitum, and v. freq. vomitare. See {Vomit}, n.] To eject the contents of the stomach by the mouth; to puke; to spew. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
vomit — ► VERB (vomited, vomiting) 1) eject matter from the stomach through the mouth. 2) emit in an uncontrolled stream or flow. ► NOUN ▪ matter vomited from the stomach. ORIGIN Latin vomere to vomit … English terms dictionary
vomit — *belch, burp, disgorge, regurgitate, spew, throw up Analogous words: *eject, expel, oust … New Dictionary of Synonyms
vomit — The verb has inflected forms vomited, vomiting … Modern English usage
vomit — [v] disgorge be seasick*, be sick, bring up*, dry heave*, eject, emit, expel, gag*, heave*, hurl*, puke*, regurgitate, retch, ruminate, spew, spit up, throw up, upchuck*; concepts 179,185,308 … New thesaurus
vomit — 01. He got seasick, and began to [vomit] after half an hour on the boat. 02. I [vomited] a couple of times last night because I drank too much. 03. He got really drunk at the party, and ended up outside, [vomiting] in the garden. 04. The most… … Grammatical examples in English