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we+had+to+put+up+with

  • 21 put off

    ertelemek, baştan savmak, soğutmak, canını sıkmak, zorla indirmek, oyalamak, sonraya bırakmak, savsaklamak, atlatmak, engel olmak, yutturmak, çıkarmak (elbise), bırakmak, üstünden atmak, kurtulmak, kaçırmak (iştah), kırmak (cesaret), denize açılmak
    * * *
    geciktir
    * * *
    1) (to switch off (a light etc): Please put the light off!) söndürmek, kapatmak
    2) (to delay; to postpone: He put off leaving / his departure till Thursday.) ertelemek
    3) (to cancel an arranged meeting etc with (a person): I had to put the Browns off because I had 'flu.) baştan savmak, savsaklamak
    4) (to cause (a person) to feel disgust or dislike (for): The cheese looked nice but the smell put me off; The conversation about illness put me off my dinner.) soğutmak, nefret ettirmek

    English-Turkish dictionary > put off

  • 22 put off

    • saada luopumaan jostakin
    • torjua
    • työntää
    • tyrkätä
    • tuupata
    • viivyttää
    • viivytellä
    • siirtää
    • töytäistä
    • tönäistä
    • pukata
    • puskea
    • suistaa
    • sysätä
    • pitkittää
    • lähteä
    • lykätä
    * * *
    1) (to switch off (a light etc): Please put the light off!) sammuttaa
    2) (to delay; to postpone: He put off leaving / his departure till Thursday.) lykätä
    3) (to cancel an arranged meeting etc with (a person): I had to put the Browns off because I had 'flu.) peruuttaa tapaaminen
    4) (to cause (a person) to feel disgust or dislike (for): The cheese looked nice but the smell put me off; The conversation about illness put me off my dinner.) tympäistä

    English-Finnish dictionary > put off

  • 23 put off

    1) (to switch off (a light etc): Please put the light off!) slå av
    2) (to delay; to postpone: He put off leaving / his departure till Thursday.) utsette
    3) (to cancel an arranged meeting etc with (a person): I had to put the Browns off because I had 'flu.) avlyse
    4) (to cause (a person) to feel disgust or dislike (for): The cheese looked nice but the smell put me off; The conversation about illness put me off my dinner.) få til å miste matlysten

    English-Norwegian dictionary > put off

  • 24 put off

    vt
    ( postpone) odkładać (odłożyć perf); ( discourage) zniechęcać (zniechęcić perf); ( distract) rozpraszać
    * * *
    1) (to switch off (a light etc): Please put the light off!) wyłączyć
    2) (to delay; to postpone: He put off leaving / his departure till Thursday.) odłożyć
    3) (to cancel an arranged meeting etc with (a person): I had to put the Browns off because I had 'flu.) odmówić
    4) (to cause (a person) to feel disgust or dislike (for): The cheese looked nice but the smell put me off; The conversation about illness put me off my dinner.) odstręczać, odstraszać

    English-Polish dictionary > put off

  • 25 put off

    1) (to switch off (a light etc): Please put the light off!) izslēgt; nodzēst
    2) (to delay; to postpone: He put off leaving / his departure till Thursday.) atlikt; novilcināt
    3) (to cancel an arranged meeting etc with (a person): I had to put the Browns off because I had 'flu.) atcelt (tikšanos); atteikt (kādam)
    4) (to cause (a person) to feel disgust or dislike (for): The cheese looked nice but the smell put me off; The conversation about illness put me off my dinner.) šķebināt; bojāt apetīti

    English-Latvian dictionary > put off

  • 26 put off

    1) (to switch off (a light etc): Please put the light off!) išjungti
    2) (to delay; to postpone: He put off leaving / his departure till Thursday.) atidėti
    3) (to cancel an arranged meeting etc with (a person): I had to put the Browns off because I had 'flu.) atsakyti (kam)
    4) (to cause (a person) to feel disgust or dislike (for): The cheese looked nice but the smell put me off; The conversation about illness put me off my dinner.) sukelti (kam) pasibjaurėjimą (kuo)

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > put off

  • 27 put off

    skjuta upp; ta av sig (klädesplagg); äckla; hindra, avhålla
    * * *
    1) (to switch off (a light etc): Please put the light off!) stänga av, släcka
    2) (to delay; to postpone: He put off leaving / his departure till Thursday.) skjuta upp (fram)
    3) (to cancel an arranged meeting etc with (a person): I had to put the Browns off because I had 'flu.) ställa in
    4) (to cause (a person) to feel disgust or dislike (for): The cheese looked nice but the smell put me off; The conversation about illness put me off my dinner.) få att tappa aptiten (lusten), avskräcka

    English-Swedish dictionary > put off

  • 28 put off

    1) (to switch off (a light etc): Please put the light off!) zhasnout, vypnout
    2) (to delay; to postpone: He put off leaving / his departure till Thursday.) odložit
    3) (to cancel an arranged meeting etc with (a person): I had to put the Browns off because I had 'flu.) pozvat na později
    4) (to cause (a person) to feel disgust or dislike (for): The cheese looked nice but the smell put me off; The conversation about illness put me off my dinner.) znechutit
    * * *
    • odkládat
    • odložit
    • odradit

    English-Czech dictionary > put off

  • 29 put off

    1) (to switch off (a light etc): Please put the light off!) zhasnúť, vypnúť
    2) (to delay; to postpone: He put off leaving / his departure till Thursday.) odložiť
    3) (to cancel an arranged meeting etc with (a person): I had to put the Browns off because I had 'flu.) odsunúť
    4) (to cause (a person) to feel disgust or dislike (for): The cheese looked nice but the smell put me off; The conversation about illness put me off my dinner.) znechutiť
    * * *
    • vyzliect
    • odložený
    • odložit

    English-Slovak dictionary > put off

  • 30 put off

    1) (to switch off (a light etc): Please put the light off!) a amâna
    2) (to delay; to postpone: He put off leaving / his departure till Thursday.) a contramanda
    3) (to cancel an arranged meeting etc with (a person): I had to put the Browns off because I had 'flu.) a-i tăia pofta (de)
    4) (to cause (a person) to feel disgust or dislike (for): The cheese looked nice but the smell put me off; The conversation about illness put me off my dinner.)

    English-Romanian dictionary > put off

  • 31 put off

    1) (to switch off (a light etc): Please put the light off!) σβήνω
    2) (to delay; to postpone: He put off leaving / his departure till Thursday.) αναβάλλω
    3) (to cancel an arranged meeting etc with (a person): I had to put the Browns off because I had 'flu.) ακυρώνω
    4) (to cause (a person) to feel disgust or dislike (for): The cheese looked nice but the smell put me off; The conversation about illness put me off my dinner.) απωθώ,κόβω τη όρεξη

    English-Greek dictionary > put off

  • 32 put off

    Please put the light off!

    يُطْفِئ النّور
    2) to delay; to postpone:

    He put off leaving / his departure till Thursday.

    يُؤَجِّل

    I had to put the Browns off because I had 'flu.

    يُلْغي مُقابَلَة أو لِقاء
    4) to cause (a person) to feel disgust or dislike (for):

    The conversation about illness put me off my dinner.

    يُنَفِّرُ، يُثير إشْمِئْزاز

    Arabic-English dictionary > put off

  • 33 put off

    1) (to switch off (a light etc): Please put the light off!) éteindre
    2) (to delay; to postpone: He put off leaving / his departure till Thursday.) retarder
    3) (to cancel an arranged meeting etc with (a person): I had to put the Browns off because I had 'flu.) décommander
    4) (to cause (a person) to feel disgust or dislike (for): The cheese looked nice but the smell put me off; The conversation about illness put me off my dinner.) dégoûter (de)

    English-French dictionary > put off

  • 34 put off

    1) (to switch off (a light etc): Please put the light off!) apagar
    2) (to delay; to postpone: He put off leaving / his departure till Thursday.) adiar
    3) (to cancel an arranged meeting etc with (a person): I had to put the Browns off because I had 'flu.) cancelar
    4) (to cause (a person) to feel disgust or dislike (for): The cheese looked nice but the smell put me off; The conversation about illness put me off my dinner.) desestimular

    English-Portuguese (Brazil) dictionary > put off

  • 35 put one's foot in it

    (to say or do something stupid: I really put my foot in it when I asked about his wife - she had just run away with his friend!) træde i spinaten
    * * *
    (to say or do something stupid: I really put my foot in it when I asked about his wife - she had just run away with his friend!) træde i spinaten

    English-Danish dictionary > put one's foot in it

  • 36 put\ to

    2) || be put to it быть вынужденным; it is surprising what he can do when he is put to it удивительно, что /как много/ он может сделать, когда это требуется; we had been put to it to keep up with him нам было трудно не отставать от него /идти с ним в ногу/

    English-Russian dictionary of verb phrases > put\ to

  • 37 put one's foot in it

    (to say or do something stupid: I really put my foot in it when I asked about his wife - she had just run away with his friend!) meter la pata

    English-spanish dictionary > put one's foot in it

  • 38 put one's foot in it

    (to say or do something stupid: I really put my foot in it when I asked about his wife - she had just run away with his friend!) hlaupa á sig, verða sér til skammar

    English-Icelandic dictionary > put one's foot in it

  • 39 put one's foot in it

    (to say or do something stupid: I really put my foot in it when I asked about his wife - she had just run away with his friend!) szamárságot mond, csinál

    English-Hungarian dictionary > put one's foot in it

  • 40 put one's foot in it

    (to say or do something stupid: I really put my foot in it when I asked about his wife - she had just run away with his friend!) pôr a pata na poça

    English-Portuguese dictionary > put one's foot in it

См. также в других словарях:

  • put up with — {v.} To accept patiently; bear. * /We had to put up with Jim s poor table manners because he refused to change./ * /The mother told her children, I refuse to put up with your tracking in mud! / Compare: STAND FOR …   Dictionary of American idioms

  • put up with — {v.} To accept patiently; bear. * /We had to put up with Jim s poor table manners because he refused to change./ * /The mother told her children, I refuse to put up with your tracking in mud! / Compare: STAND FOR …   Dictionary of American idioms

  • put\ up\ with — v To accept patiently; bear. We had to put up with Jim s poor table manners because he refused to change. The mother told her children, I refuse to put up with your tracking in mud! Compare: stand for …   Словарь американских идиом

  • put up with — PHRASAL VERB If you put up with something, you tolerate or accept it, even though you find it unpleasant or unsatisfactory. [V P P n] They had put up with behaviour from their son which they would not have tolerated from anyone else. Syn:… …   English dictionary

  • To put up with — Put Put (put; often p[u^]t in def. 3), v. i. 1. To go or move; as, when the air first puts up. [Obs.] Bacon. [1913 Webster] 2. To steer; to direct one s course; to go. [1913 Webster] His fury thus appeased, he puts to land. Dryden. [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • put — [ put ] (past tense and past participle put) verb transitive *** ▸ 1 move something to position ▸ 2 cause to be in situation ▸ 3 write/print something ▸ 4 make someone go to place ▸ 5 give position on list ▸ 6 build/place somewhere ▸ 7 express in …   Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • put in — phrasal verb Word forms put in : present tense I/you/we/they put in he/she/it puts in present participle putting in past tense put in past participle put in 1) [transitive] to spend a particular amount of time doing something, or to make a… …   English dictionary

  • put — W1S1 [put] v past tense and past participle put present participle putting [T] ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(move to place)¦ 2¦(change somebody s situation/feelings)¦ 3¦(write/print something)¦ 4¦(express)¦ 5 put a stop/an end to something 6 put something into… …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • Put — (put; often p[u^]t in def. 3), v. i. 1. To go or move; as, when the air first puts up. [Obs.] Bacon. [1913 Webster] 2. To steer; to direct one s course; to go. [1913 Webster] His fury thus appeased, he puts to land. Dryden. [1913 Webster] 3. To… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • put — verb past tense putpresent participle putting MOVE STH 1 (transitive always + adv/prep) to move something from one place or position into another, especially using your hands: put sth in/on/there etc: Put those bags on the table. | You should put …   Longman dictionary of contemporary English

  • put — verb past tense putpresent participle putting MOVE STH 1 (transitive always + adv/prep) to move something from one place or position into another, especially using your hands: put sth in/on/there etc: Put those bags on the table. | You should put …   Longman dictionary of contemporary English

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