См. также в других словарях:
heart — W1S1 [ha:t US ha:rt] n ↑artery, ↑brain, ↑fatty, ↑tissue, ↑heart, ↑kidney, ↑intestine, ↑intestine2, ↑small, ↑large, ↑liver, ↑lung, ↑muscles, ↑stoma … Dictionary of contemporary English
Aché — Infobox Ethnic group name = Achéphoto caption = Aché aiming into the canopy headerstyle = background:#ccf; labelstyle = background:#ddf; header1 = label1 = data1 = The Aché (pronounced Ah·CHAY) Indians are a traditional hunter gatherer tribe… … Wikipedia
ache — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun ADJECTIVE ▪ constant, deep (figurative), dull, nagging, throbbing ▪ familiar ▪ muscular, st … Collocations dictionary
heart — noun 1 part of the body ADJECTIVE ▪ healthy, strong ▪ bad, weak ▪ beating, pounding, racing ▪ … Collocations dictionary
ache — 01. My thumb has really been [aching] since I shut the door on it. 02. The hockey player had a terrible [ache] in his shoulder after the game. 03. Her tooth was [aching] so much that she had trouble falling asleep. 04. When I had the flu, my skin … Grammatical examples in English
ache — [[t]e͟ɪk[/t]] aches, aching, ached 1) VERB If you ache or a part of your body aches, you feel a steady, fairly strong pain. [V adv/prep] The glands in her neck were swollen, her head was throbbing and she ached all over... My leg is giving me… … English dictionary
ache — ache1 [eık] v [: Old English; Origin: acan] 1.) if part of your body aches, you feel a continuous, but not very sharp pain there = ↑hurt ▪ His feet were aching from standing so long. 2.) to want to do or have something very much ache for ▪ I m… … Dictionary of contemporary English
ache — /ayk/, v., ached, aching, n. v.i. 1. to have or suffer a continuous, dull pain: His whole body ached. 2. to feel great sympathy, pity, or the like: Her heart ached for the starving animals. 3. to feel eager; yearn; long: She ached to be the… … Universalium
heart — n 1.Sl. ticker, organ of circulation; bosom, breast. 2. inner feeling, feelings, soul, spirit, Sl. gut; sentiment, feeling, emotion; sensibility, responsiveness, passion; nature, disposition, temperament. 3. sympathy, fellow feeling,… … A Note on the Style of the synonym finder
ache */ — I UK [eɪk] / US verb [intransitive] Word forms ache : present tense I/you/we/they ache he/she/it aches present participle aching past tense ached past participle ached 1) if part of your body aches, you feel a continuous pain there that is… … English dictionary
ache — I. intransitive verb (ached; aching) Etymology: Middle English aken, from Old English acan Date: before 12th century 1. a. to suffer a usually dull persistent pain < an aching back > b. to become distressed or disturbed (as with anxiety or… … New Collegiate Dictionary