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with+vacuum+cleaner

  • 1 hoover

    ['hu:və] 1. noun
    (a kind of vacuum cleaner.)
    2. verb
    (to clean (a carpet etc) with a vacuum cleaner: She hoovered the carpets.)
    * * *
    putekļsūcējs; sūkt ar putekļsūcēju

    English-Latvian dictionary > hoover

  • 2 belt

    [belt] 1. noun
    1) (a long (narrow) piece of leather, cloth etc worn round the waist: a trouser-belt; He tightened his belt.) josta; siksna
    2) (a similar object used to set wheels in motion: the belt of a vacuum-cleaner.) siksna; lente
    3) (a zone of country etc: a belt of trees; an industrial belt.) josla; zona
    2. verb
    1) (to fasten with a belt: He belted his trousers on.) apjozt; sajozt
    2) (to strike (with or without a belt): He belted the disobedient dog.) pērt (ar siksnu)
    * * *
    josta, siksna; zona, josla; lente; dzensiksna; patronlente; apjozt; pērt ar siksnu

    English-Latvian dictionary > belt

  • 3 suck

    1. verb
    1) (to draw liquid etc into the mouth: As soon as they are born, young animals learn to suck (milk from their mothers); She sucked up the lemonade through a straw.) zīst; sūkt
    2) (to hold something between the lips or inside the mouth, as though drawing liquid from it: I told him to take the sweet out of his mouth, but he just went on sucking; He sucked the end of his pencil.) sūkāt
    3) (to pull or draw in a particular direction with a sucking or similar action: The vacuum cleaner sucked up all the dirt from the carpet; A plant sucks up moisture from the soil.) iesūkt; uzsūkt
    4) ((American) (slang) to be awful, boring, disgusting etc: Her singing sucks; This job sucks.) riebties; būt pretīgam
    2. noun
    (an act of sucking: I gave him a suck of my lollipop.) zīšana; sūkšana; sūkāšana
    - suck up to
    * * *
    zīšana; iesūkšana; neliels malks; izkrišana, izgāšanās; saldumi; zīst; sūkt; sūkāt

    English-Latvian dictionary > suck

См. также в других словарях:

  • Vacuum cleaner — Cylinder vacuum cleaner for home use. French train vacuum cleaner …   Wikipedia

  • vacuum cleaner — Appliance Ap*pli ance, n. 1. The act of applying; application. [1913 Webster] 2. subservience; compliance. [Obs.] Shak. [1913 Webster] 3. A thing applied or used as a means to an end; an apparatus or device; as, to use various appliances; a… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Central vacuum cleaner — The power unit of a typical central vacuum cleaner for residential use A central vacuum cleaner (also known as built in or ducted) is a type of vacuum cleaner appliance, installed into a building as a semi permanent fixture. Central vacuum… …   Wikipedia

  • Eureka (vacuum cleaner) — Infobox Company company name = Eureka company company type = Division genre = Home Care foundation = 1909 founder = Fred Wardell location city = Peoria, IL location country = United States location = origins = key people = area served = industry …   Wikipedia

  • vacuum — [vak′yo͞om, vak′yo͞o əm] n. pl. vacuums or vacua [vak′yo͞o ə] [L, neut. sing. of vacuus, empty] 1. a space with nothing at all in it; completely empty space 2. a) an enclosed space, as that inside a vacuum tube, out of which most of the air or… …   English World dictionary

  • vacuum — ► NOUN (pl. vacuums or vacua) 1) a space entirely devoid of matter. 2) a space from which the air has been completely or partly removed. 3) a gap left by the loss or departure of someone or something important. 4) (pl. vacuums) informal a vacuum… …   English terms dictionary

  • vacuum cleaning — noun • • • Main Entry: ↑vacuum * * * vacuum cleaning, the act of cleaning with a vacuum cleaner …   Useful english dictionary

  • Vacuum — This article is about empty physical space or the absence of matter. For other uses, see Vacuum (disambiguation). Free space redirects here. For other uses, see Free space (disambiguation). Pump to demonstrate vacuum In everyday usage, vacuum is… …   Wikipedia

  • vacuum — n. & v. n. (pl. vacuums or vacua) 1 a space entirely devoid of matter. 2 a space or vessel from which the air has been completely or partly removed by a pump etc. 3 a the absence of the normal or previous content of a place, environment, etc. b… …   Useful english dictionary

  • vacuum — /vak yoohm, yooh euhm, yeuhm/, n., pl. vacuums for 1, 2, 4 6, vacua /vak yooh euh/ for 1, 2, 4, 6; adj.; v. n. 1. a space entirely devoid of matter. 2. an enclosed space from which matter, esp. air, has been partially removed so that the matter… …   Universalium

  • Vacuum switch — Prior to effective engine computers, engine vacuum was used for many functions in an automobile. Vacuum switches were employed to regulate this flow, and were commonly controlled by temperature, solenoids, mechanically, or directly. They operated …   Wikipedia

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