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1 it
it1) ((used as the subject of a verb or object of a verb or preposition) the thing spoken of, used especially of lifeless things and of situations, but also of animals and babies: If you find my pencil, please give it to me; The dog is in the garden, isn't it?; I picked up the baby because it was crying; He decided to run a mile every morning but he couldn't keep it up.) den, det2) (used as a subject in certain kinds of sentences eg in talking about the weather, distance or time: Is it raining very hard?; It's cold; It is five o'clock; Is it the fifth of March?; It's two miles to the village; Is it your turn to make the tea?; It is impossible for him to finish the work; It was nice of you to come; Is it likely that he would go without us?) det (foreløpig subjekt)3) ((usually as the subject of the verb be) used to give emphasis to a certain word or phrase: It was you (that) I wanted to see, not Mary.) det4) (used with some verbs as a direct object with little meaning: The car broke down and we had to walk it; Oh, bother it!) det•- its- itselfdetIsubst. \/ɪt\/sex appeal, sjarm, ithun har sjarm \/ hun har itIIsubst. \/ɪt\/( hverdagslig) vermutIIIpron. \/ɪt\/1) den, det• where is the cat? it's in the garden2) ( som udefinert subjekt) det, en, man• yes, what is it?ja, hva er det?• where does it hurt?3) seg4) ( hverdagslig) det (samleie)bus it ( hverdagslig) ta bussen, kjøre bussfoot it gå, traske danse, svinge seg i valsenhave a good time of it ha det veldig morsomt, more seg kosteliglord it over spille herre over, tyranniserenow you've done it! nå har du virkelig stelt det til!run for it ( hverdagslig) stikke av, skynde segtake it that anta atthat's it det stemmer, akkurat, nettoppthat's just it det er helt riktig, nettoppthat's probably it det er antakelig forklaringenthink one is it tro en er noethis is it (amer., hverdagslig) tiden er inne, øyeblikket er kommet, nå eller aldri• well, this is it, folks, I gotta leave nowvel, tiden er inne, folkens, jeg må dra nånå får det være nok, nå er det slutt
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hurt — hurt1 W3S2 [hə:t US hə:rt] v past tense and past participle hurt ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(injure somebody)¦ 2¦(feel pain)¦ 3¦(cause pain)¦ 4¦(insult somebody)¦ 5¦(bad effect)¦ 6 be hurting 7 something won t/doesn t hurt ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ [Date: 1100 1200; : Old French; … Dictionary of contemporary English
hurt — 1 verb past tense and past participle hurt 1 (I, T) if a part of your body hurts, you feel pain in it: My back hurts. | it hurts: Where does it hurt? | hurt sb: My shoulder s really hurting me. | hurt like hell (=hurt very much) 2 (T) if you hurt … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
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hurt — hurt1 [ hɜrt ] (past tense and past participle hurt) verb *** 1. ) intransitive or transitive to cause physical pain or injury: You re hurting my arm! These new boots hurt. hurt yourself doing something: Don t hurt yourself exercising. a ) to… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
hurt — I UK [hɜː(r)t] / US [hɜrt] verb Word forms hurt : present tense I/you/we/they hurt he/she/it hurts present participle hurting past tense hurt past participle hurt *** 1) [intransitive] to feel pain somewhere in your body Fred s knees hurt after… … English dictionary
hurt — [12] English borrowed hurt from Old French hurter, which meant ‘knock’ (as its modern French descendant heurter still does). This sense died out in English in the 17th century, leaving only the metaphorically extended ‘wound, harm’. It is not… … The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins
hurt — [12] English borrowed hurt from Old French hurter, which meant ‘knock’ (as its modern French descendant heurter still does). This sense died out in English in the 17th century, leaving only the metaphorically extended ‘wound, harm’. It is not… … Word origins