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with+food

  • 1 groan

    [ɡrəun] 1. verb
    (to produce a deep sound (because of pain, unhappiness etc): He groaned when he heard that he had failed his exam; The table was groaning with food (= there was a great deal of food on it).) andvarpa, stynja
    2. noun
    (a deep sound: a groan of despair.) stuna

    English-Icelandic dictionary > groan

  • 2 stuff

    I noun
    1) (material or substance: What is that black oily stuff on the beach?; The doctor gave me some good stuff for removing warts; Show them what stuff you're made of! (= how brave, strong etc you are).) efni
    2) ((unimportant) matter, things, objects etc: We'll have to get rid of all this stuff when we move house.) drasl
    3) (an old word for cloth.) fataefni
    - that's the stuff! II verb
    1) (to pack or fill tightly, often hurriedly or untidily: His drawer was stuffed with papers; She stuffed the fridge with food; The children have been stuffing themselves with ice-cream.) troða í
    2) (to fill (eg a turkey, chicken etc) with stuffing before cooking.) seta fyllingu í
    3) (to fill the skin of (a dead animal or bird) to preserve the appearance it had when alive: They stuffed the golden eagle.) stoppa upp
    - stuff up

    English-Icelandic dictionary > stuff

  • 3 provision

    [prə'viʒən] 1. noun
    1) (the act of providing: The government are responsible for the provision of education for all children.) ráðstafanir
    2) (an agreed arrangement.) ákvæði
    3) (a rule or condition.) skilyrði
    2. verb
    (to supply (especially an army) with food.) birgja upp
    - provisionally
    - provisions
    - make provision for

    English-Icelandic dictionary > provision

  • 4 quartermaster

    noun (an officer whose job is to provide soldiers with food, transport, a place to live etc.) ráðsmaður

    English-Icelandic dictionary > quartermaster

  • 5 sandwich

    ['sænwi‹, ]( American[) -wi ] 1. noun
    (slices of bread etc with food between: cheese sandwiches.) samloka
    2. verb
    (to place or press between two objects etc: His car was sandwiched between two lorries.) klemma

    English-Icelandic dictionary > sandwich

  • 6 waiter

    feminine - waitress; noun (a person who serves people with food etc at table: She is a waitress in a café; Which waiter served you in the restaurant?) þjónn

    English-Icelandic dictionary > waiter

  • 7 pepper

    ['pepə] 1. noun
    1) (the dried, powdered berries of a certain plant, used for seasoning food: white/black pepper; This soup has too much pepper in it.) pipar
    2) (the plant bearing these berries: a pepper plant.) piparrunni
    3) (any of several red, yellow, or green, hollow seed-containing fruits used as food: red peppers stuffed with rice.) pipar, paprika
    4) (any of the plants which bear these.) piparrunni, papríkujurt
    2. verb
    1) (to put pepper in or on (some food): You don't have to pepper the soup.) pipra
    2) ((with with) to throw, fire etc many, usually small, objects at (someone): He peppered them with bullets.) láta rigna yfir
    - peppercorn
    - pepper-mill
    - peppermint

    English-Icelandic dictionary > pepper

  • 8 feed

    [fi:d] 1. past tense, past participle - fed; verb
    1) (to give food to: He fed the child with a spoon.) gefa að borða; mata
    2) ((with on) to eat: Cows feed on grass.) nærast á, lifa á, éta
    2. noun
    (food especially for a baby or animals: Have you given the baby his feed?; cattle feed.) fæði

    English-Icelandic dictionary > feed

  • 9 keep

    [ki:p] 1. past tense, past participle - kept; verb
    1) (to have for a very long or indefinite period of time: He gave me the picture to keep.) geyma, varðveita; fá til eignar
    2) (not to give or throw away; to preserve: I kept the most interesting books; Can you keep a secret?) geyma, varðveita; þegja yfir
    3) (to (cause to) remain in a certain state or position: I keep this gun loaded; How do you keep cool in this heat?; Will you keep me informed of what happens?) halda, hafa
    4) (to go on (performing or repeating a certain action): He kept walking.) halda áfram
    5) (to have in store: I always keep a tin of baked beans for emergencies.) eiga, vera með
    6) (to look after or care for: She keeps the garden beautifully; I think they keep hens.) rækta, halda við
    7) (to remain in good condition: That meat won't keep in this heat unless you put it in the fridge.) geymast
    8) (to make entries in (a diary, accounts etc): She keeps a diary to remind her of her appointments; He kept the accounts for the club.) halda, færa, skrifa
    9) (to hold back or delay: Sorry to keep you.) tefja
    10) (to provide food, clothes, housing for (someone): He has a wife and child to keep.) framfæra, sjá um
    11) (to act in the way demanded by: She kept her promise.) standa við, halda
    12) (to celebrate: to keep Christmas.) halda upp á
    2. noun
    (food and lodging: She gives her mother money every week for her keep; Our cat really earns her keep - she kills all the mice in the house.) uppihald, fæði og húsnæði
    - keeping
    - keep-fit
    - keepsake
    - for keeps
    - in keeping with
    - keep away
    - keep back
    - keep one's distance
    - keep down
    - keep one's end up
    - keep from
    - keep going
    - keep hold of
    - keep house for
    - keep house
    - keep in
    - keep in mind
    - keep it up
    - keep off
    - keep on
    - keep oneself to oneself
    - keep out
    - keep out of
    - keep time
    - keep to
    - keep something to oneself
    - keep to oneself
    - keep up
    - keep up with the Joneses
    - keep watch

    English-Icelandic dictionary > keep

  • 10 spoon

    [spu:n] 1. noun
    1) (an instrument shaped like a shallow bowl with a handle for lifting food (especially soup or pudding) to the mouth, or for stirring tea, coffee etc: a teaspoon/soup-spoon.) (mat-/te-/súpu)skeið
    2) (a spoonful.) matskeið
    2. verb
    (to lift or scoop up with a spoon: She spooned food into the baby's mouth.) taka upp með skeið, ausa
    - spoon-feed

    English-Icelandic dictionary > spoon

  • 11 taste

    [teist] 1. verb
    1) (to be aware of, or recognize, the flavour of something: I can taste ginger in this cake.) finna bragð af
    2) (to test or find out the flavour or quality of (food etc) by eating or drinking a little of it: Please taste this and tell me if it is too sweet.) bragða á, smakka
    3) (to have a particular flavour or other quality that is noticed through the act of tasting: This milk tastes sour; The sauce tastes of garlic.) bragðast
    4) (to eat (food) especially with enjoyment: I haven't tasted such a beautiful curry for ages.) smakka
    5) (to experience: He tasted the delights of country life.) njóta
    2. noun
    1) (one of the five senses, the sense by which we are aware of flavour: one's sense of taste; bitter to the taste.) bragðskyn
    2) (the quality or flavour of anything that is known through this sense: This wine has an unusual taste.) bragð
    3) (an act of tasting or a small quantity of food etc for tasting: Do have a taste of this cake!) sÿnishorn, smakk
    4) (a liking or preference: a taste for music; a queer taste in books; expensive tastes.) smekkur
    5) (the ability to judge what is suitable in behaviour, dress etc or what is fine and beautiful: She shows good taste in clothes; a man of taste; That joke was in good/bad taste.) smekkur
    - tastefully
    - tastefulness
    - tasteless
    - tastelessly
    - tastelessness
    - - tasting
    - tasty
    - tastiness

    English-Icelandic dictionary > taste

  • 12 disagree

    [disə'ɡri:]
    1) ((sometimes with with) to hold different opinions etc (from someone else): We disagree about everything; I disagree with you on that point.) vera ósammála
    2) (to quarrel: We never meet without disagreeing.) deila, rífast
    3) ((with with) (of food) to be unsuitable (to someone) and cause pain: Onions disagree with me.) fara illa í
    - disagreeably
    - disagreement

    English-Icelandic dictionary > disagree

  • 13 plate

    [pleit]
    1) (a shallow dish for holding food etc: china plates.) diskur
    2) (a sheet of metal etc: The ship was built of steel plates.) málmplata
    3) (articles made of, or plated with, usually gold or silver: a collection of gold plate.) munir með silfur-/gullhúð
    4) (a flat piece of metal inscribed with eg a name, for fixing to a door, or with a design etc, for use in printing.) skilti
    5) (an illustration in a book, usually on glossy paper: The book has ten full-colour plates.) prentuð mynd
    6) ((also dental plate) a piece of plastic that fits in the mouth with false teeth attached to it.) gervigómur/-tennur
    7) (a sheet of glass etc coated with a sensitive film, used in photography.) ljósmyndaplata
    - plateful
    - plating
    - plate glass

    English-Icelandic dictionary > plate

  • 14 toy

    [toi] 1. noun
    (an object made for a child to play with: He got lots of toys for Christmas; a toy soldier.) leikfang
    2. verb
    ((with with) to play with in an idle way: He wasn't hungry and sat toying with his food.) leika sér að

    English-Icelandic dictionary > toy

  • 15 cake

    [keik] 1. noun
    1) (a food made by baking a mixture of flour, fat, eggs, sugar etc: a piece of cake; a plate of cream cakes; a Christmas cake.) kaka
    2) (a piece of other food pressed into shape: fishcakes; oatcakes.) matarkaka
    3) (a flattened hard mass: a cake of soap.) sápustykki
    2. verb
    (to cover in the form of a dried mass: His shoes were caked with mud.) þekja

    English-Icelandic dictionary > cake

  • 16 chew

    [ u:]
    (to break (food etc) with the teeth before swallowing: If you chew your food properly it is easier to digest.) tyggja

    English-Icelandic dictionary > chew

  • 17 forage

    ['fori‹] 1. verb
    ((often with about) to search thoroughly: He foraged about in the cupboard; He foraged for food in the cupboard.) leita (að æti); krafsa/róta upp
    2. noun
    (food for horses and cattle.) skepnufóður

    English-Icelandic dictionary > forage

  • 18 freeze

    [fri:z] 1. past tense - froze; verb
    1) (to make into or become ice: It's so cold that the river has frozen over.) frjósa, frysta
    2) ((of weather) to be at or below freezing-point: If it freezes again tonight all my plants will die.) frjósa, frysta
    3) (to make or be very cold: If you had stayed out all night in the snow you might have frozen to death (= died of exposure to cold).) frjósa, (of)kólna
    4) (to make (food) very cold in order to preserve it: You can freeze the rest of that food and eat it later.) frysta
    5) (to make or become stiff, still or unable to move (with fear etc): She froze when she heard the strange noise.) stirðna upp/verða agndofa af skelfingu
    6) (to fix prices, wages etc at a certain level: If the situation does not improve, wages will be frozen again.) frysta laun/verð(lag)
    2. noun
    (a period of very cold weather when temperatures are below freezing-point: How long do you think the freeze will last?) frost
    - freezing
    - frozen
    - freezing-point
    - freeze up

    English-Icelandic dictionary > freeze

  • 19 hunger

    1. noun
    1) (the desire for food: A cheese roll won't satisfy my hunger.) hungur, svengd
    2) (the state of not having enough food: Poor people in many parts of the world are dying of hunger.) hungur
    3) (any strong desire: a hunger for love.) hungur
    2. verb
    (usually with for) to long for (eg affection, love). hungra (eftir e-u)
    - hungrily
    - hungriness
    - hunger strike

    English-Icelandic dictionary > hunger

  • 20 mess

    [mes] 1. noun
    (a state of disorder or confusion; an untidy, dirty or unpleasant sight or muddle: This room is in a terrible mess!; She looked a mess; The spilt food made a mess on the carpet.) drasl; óreiða
    2. verb
    ((with with) to meddle, or to have something to do with: She's always messing with the television set.) blanda sér í (e-ð); fikta í
    - messily
    - messiness
    - mess-up
    - make a mess of
    - mess about/around
    - mess up

    English-Icelandic dictionary > mess

См. также в других словарях:

  • Memories with Food at Gipsy House —   …   Wikipedia

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  • Food vs fuel — is the dilemma regarding the risk of diverting farmland or crops for biofuels production in detriment of the food supply on a global scale. The food vs. fuel or food or fuel debate is internationally controversial, with good and valid arguments… …   Wikipedia

  • Food intolerance — or food sensitivity is a negative reaction to a food that may or may not be related to the immune system or to food poisoning. It can be caused by the absence of specific chemicals or enzymes needed to digest a food substance, or to the body s… …   Wikipedia

  • Food microbiology — is the study of the microorganisms which inhabit, create or contaminate food. Of major importance is the study of microorganisms causing food spoilage.cite book | author = Fratamico PM and Bayles DO (editor). | title = Foodborne Pathogens:… …   Wikipedia

  • Food sovereignty — is a term originally coined by members of Via Campesina in 1996 Global Small Scale Farmers Movement Developing New Trade Regimes , Food First News Views , Volume 28, Number 97 Spring/Summer 2005, p.2.] to refer to a policy framework advocated by… …   Wikipedia

  • Food contact materials — are defined as all kind of materials that can be in contact with food. These can be things that are quite obvious like a glass, a can for soft drinks, but also machinery in a food factory or a coffee machine. Food contact materials can be… …   Wikipedia

  • Food porn — is a sarcastic term variously applied to a spectacular visual presentation of cooking or eating in advertisements, infomercials, cooking shows or other visual media, foods boasting a high fat and calorie contentcite… …   Wikipedia

  • Food politics — are the political aspects of the production, control, regulation, inspection and distribution of food. The politics can be affected by the ethical, cultural, medical and environmental disputes concerning proper farming, agricultural and retailing …   Wikipedia

  • Food play — can have sexual or non sexual connotations. It often refers to Sitophilia , a form of sexual fetishism in which participants are aroused by erotic situations involving food. The phrase is also used to refer to non sexual play with food, such as… …   Wikipedia

  • Food Bank For New York City — is a non profit social services organization. Its aim is to organize food, information and support for needy citizens of New York City.HistoryThe Food Bank For New York City was founded in 1983. It has a network of approximately 1,200 emergency… …   Wikipedia

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