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1 wasting time
■ Action by one or more players with the intention to hold on to the ball in order to preserve the current score.Syn. wasting time■ Versuch eines oder mehrerer Spieler den Ball zu halten, um so den Spielstand bis zum Ende des Spiels zu sichern. -
2 wasting my time and causing me trouble
American: jerk someone around (Recently it seems like everyone is \<b\>jerking me around\</b\>)Универсальный русско-английский словарь > wasting my time and causing me trouble
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3 wasting time
Colloquial: Shooting The Bull -
4 wasting time.
Colloquial: Goofing off -
5 wasting asset
Finan asset that will cease to have any value at all at a date in the future, such as an option or a short-term lease -
6 time-wasting
■ Action by one or more players with the intention to hold on to the ball in order to preserve the current score.Syn. wasting time■ Versuch eines oder mehrerer Spieler den Ball zu halten, um so den Spielstand bis zum Ende des Spiels zu sichern. -
7 riding and wasting are gerunds in
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8 time-wasting substitution
■ The action of replacing one or several players, generally close to the end of a match, in order to gain time.■ Häufig kurz vor Spielende vorgenommene Auswechslung, um Zeit zu gewinnen und das Ergebnis zu wahren.Englisch-deutsch wörterbuch fußball > time-wasting substitution
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9 Chronic Wasting Disease
Veterinary medicine: CWDУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > Chronic Wasting Disease
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10 sludge wasting
Англо-русский словарь промышленной и научной лексики > sludge wasting
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11 hivuttattava
• wasting -
12 wychudzenie
• wasting -
13 wyniszczenie
• wasting -
14 plýtvaný
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15 assolação
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16 загубивший
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17 activo no renovable
• wasting• wasting assets• wasting desire -
18 activos agotables
• wasting• wasting assets• wasting desire -
19 activos no renovables
• wasting• wasting assets• wasting desire -
20 pemborosan
wasting, extravagance, dissipation* * *extravagance* * *wasting, squandering; extravagance, lavishness
См. также в других словарях:
Wasting — could also mean unefficient and/or uneffective consumption. See waste. In medical circles, wasting refers to the process by which a debilitating disease causes muscle and fat tissue to waste away. Wasting is sometimes referred to as acute… … Wikipedia
Wasting — Wast ing, a. Causing waste; also, undergoing waste; diminishing; as, a wasting disease; a wasting fortune. [1913 Webster] {Wasting palsy} (Med.), progressive muscular atrophy. See under {Progressive}. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
wasting — [wās′tiŋ] adj. 1. desolating; destructive [a wasting war] 2. destructive to health [wasting disease] wastingly adv … English World dictionary
wasting — index decadent, deleterious, fatal, waste Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
wasting — 1. SYN: emaciation. 2. Denoting a disease characterized by emaciation. salt w. inappropriately large renal excretion of salt despite the apparent need of the body to retain it. * * * wast·ing wā stiŋ … Medical dictionary
wasting — wastingly, adv. wastingness, n. /way sting/, adj. 1. gradually reducing the fullness and strength of the body: a wasting disease. 2. laying waste; devastating; despoiling: the ravages of a wasting war. n. 3. Geol. See mass wasting. [1200 50; ME;… … Universalium
wasting — wast|ing [ˈweıstıŋ] adj 1.) wasting disease/illness formal a disease that gradually makes you thinner and weaker 2.) wasting asset technical a property, business etc that is losing money ▪ The airline is clearly a wasting asset … Dictionary of contemporary English
wasting — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun Wasting is used after these nouns: ↑muscle {{Roman}}II.{{/Roman}} adj. Wasting is used with these nouns: ↑asset … Collocations dictionary
wasting — adjective wasting disease a wasting disease is one that gradually makes you become thinner and weaker … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
wasting — un·wasting; wasting; … English syllables
wasting — wast•ing [[t]ˈweɪ stɪŋ[/t]] adj. 1) gradually reducing the fullness and strength of the body: a wasting disease[/ex] 2) laying waste; devastating: a wasting war[/ex] • Etymology: 1200–50 wast′ing•ly, adv. wast′ing•ness, n … From formal English to slang