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x+can+go+to+(bloody)+hell+ru+en

  • 61 pest

    [ziekte] (bubonic) plague pestilence
    [figuurlijk] pest blight
    [informeel] [moeilijkheid] 〈zie voorbeelden 3
    [informeel; in samenstellingen] [klein] miserable
    [informeel; in samenstellingen] [vervelend] rotten
    voorbeelden:
    1   informeelzo brutaal als de pest zijn be as cheeky as hell
         iemand mijden als de pest avoid someone like the plague
    2   zure regen is de pest voor onze bossen acid rain is the bane of our forests
    3   informeeldat is nou juist de pest! that's the awful/rotten thing about it!
    4   een (klein) pesthuisje a poky little place
    5   wat een pestherrie! what a rotten noise!
    ¶   informeelde pest in hebben/krijgen be/get in a foul mood
         informeelde pest aan iets/iemand hebben loathe/detest something/someone
         informeelde pest over iets inhebben be annoyed about something
         informeelik zie geen pest I can't see a bloody thing
         ik snap er geen pest van it's a bloody mystery to me
         het stinkt als de pest it stinks to high heaven

    Van Dale Handwoordenboek Nederlands-Engels > pest

  • 62 cabrón

    adj.
    1 mean, evil.
    2 intelligent.
    m.
    1 billy goat, buck.
    2 cuckold, man married to an unfaithful wife.
    3 son of a bitch, sod, git, get.
    * * *
    nombre masculino,nombre femenino
    1 tabú (hombre) bastard; (mujer) bitch
    1 ZOOLOGÍA he-goat, billy-goat
    ————————
    1 ZOOLOGÍA he-goat, billy-goat
    * * *
    cabrón, -ona ***
    1.
    SM (=cornudo) cuckold
    2. SM / F
    1)

    ¡cabrón! — you bastard! ***

    2) LAm [de burdel] brothel keeper; And, Cono Sur (=chulo) pimp; CAm, Cono Sur (=traidor) traitor; And (=maricón) queer **, fag (EEUU) **

    ¡cabrón! — (=idiota) you stupid berk! **

    * * *
    I
    - brona adjetivo (Esp, Méx vulg)

    el muy cabrón/la muy cabrona — the bastard o (AmE) son of a bitch (vulg)/the bitch (vulg)

    II
    - brona masculino, femenino
    1) (Esp, Méx vulg) (masculino) bastard (vulg), son of a bitch (AmE vulg); (femenino) bitch (vulg)
    2) cabrón masculino
    a) (vulg) ( cornudo) cuckold
    b) (Andes fam o vulg) ( proxeneta) pimp, ponce (BrE)
    * * *
    = rotter, dickhead, scumbag, bitchy [bitchier -comp., bitchiest -sup.], badass, swine, pig, bastard.
    Ex. When she had finished Beck said reassuringly: 'Don't let old Tilly bother you - She can be a rotter at times - She's a Jekyl and Hyde, if ever there was one - One minute she's fine; another, she's a monster'.
    Ex. Whoever said Moby is the leader of dickheads that beat people up? He is just a bald-headed hippie who wouldn't hurt a fly.
    Ex. He then made the comment that our soldiers are fighting 'detestable murderers and scumbags'.
    Ex. She worked at a local clothing company for a while and found the other staff and managers to all be very cliquey, bitchy and rather shallow.
    Ex. In the hardscrabble times of the Bible, where there were plagues, invasions from foreign powers, and swarms of locusts, you pretty much had to be a badass.
    Ex. In German law it is a criminal offense for A to insult B, for example, by calling him a swine.
    Ex. He was waiting for the opportunity to unleash his fury, no one calls him a pig and gets away with it.
    Ex. I once thought I saw the light at the end of the tunnel, but it was just the light from a torch of some bastard bringing me more work.
    ----
    * ser un cabrón con = be rotten to.
    * * *
    I
    - brona adjetivo (Esp, Méx vulg)

    el muy cabrón/la muy cabrona — the bastard o (AmE) son of a bitch (vulg)/the bitch (vulg)

    II
    - brona masculino, femenino
    1) (Esp, Méx vulg) (masculino) bastard (vulg), son of a bitch (AmE vulg); (femenino) bitch (vulg)
    2) cabrón masculino
    a) (vulg) ( cornudo) cuckold
    b) (Andes fam o vulg) ( proxeneta) pimp, ponce (BrE)
    * * *
    = rotter, dickhead, scumbag, bitchy [bitchier -comp., bitchiest -sup.], badass, swine, pig, bastard.

    Ex: When she had finished Beck said reassuringly: 'Don't let old Tilly bother you - She can be a rotter at times - She's a Jekyl and Hyde, if ever there was one - One minute she's fine; another, she's a monster'.

    Ex: Whoever said Moby is the leader of dickheads that beat people up? He is just a bald-headed hippie who wouldn't hurt a fly.
    Ex: He then made the comment that our soldiers are fighting 'detestable murderers and scumbags'.
    Ex: She worked at a local clothing company for a while and found the other staff and managers to all be very cliquey, bitchy and rather shallow.
    Ex: In the hardscrabble times of the Bible, where there were plagues, invasions from foreign powers, and swarms of locusts, you pretty much had to be a badass.
    Ex: In German law it is a criminal offense for A to insult B, for example, by calling him a swine.
    Ex: He was waiting for the opportunity to unleash his fury, no one calls him a pig and gets away with it.
    Ex: I once thought I saw the light at the end of the tunnel, but it was just the light from a torch of some bastard bringing me more work.
    * ser un cabrón con = be rotten to.

    * * *
    ( Esp vulg: en algunas regiones fam): el muy cabrón the swine ( colloq), the bastard ( vulg), the son of a bitch ( AmE vulg)
    masculine, feminine
    A ( Esp vulg: en algunas regiones fam) son of a bitch ( AmE vulg), bastard (sl), swine ( colloq)
    B
    1 ( vulg) (cornudo) cuckold
    2 ( Andes fam o vulg) (proxeneta) pimp, ponce ( BrE colloq)
    C
    * * *

     

    cabrón 1
    ◊ - brona adjetivo (Esp, Méx vulg): el muy cabrón/la muy cabrona the bastard o (AmE) son of a bitch (vulg)/the bitch (vulg)

    ■ sustantivo masculino, femenino (Esp, Méx vulg) (m) bastard (vulg), son of a bitch (AmE vulg);

    (f) bitch (vulg)
    cabrón 2 sustantivo masculino (vulg) ( cornudo) cuckold;
    ( proxeneta) (Andes fam o vulg) pimp, ponce (BrE)
    cabrón,-ona
    I m Zool billy goat
    II sustantivo masculino y femenino vulgar ofens (hombre) bastard
    (mujer) bitch
    ' cabrón' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    cabrito
    - cabrona
    English:
    cunt
    - sod
    - swine
    - bastard
    * * *
    cabrón, -ona
    adj
    1. Vulg [como insulto]
    ¡qué cabrón eres! you bastard!;
    mi profesor de inglés es muy cabrón my English teacher is a real bastard o US asshole
    2. Méx muy Fam [difícil] Br bloody o US goddamn difficult;
    el examen estuvo bien cabrón the exam was a bitch
    nm,f
    1. Vulg [insulto] bastard, f bitch, US asshole;
    Esp muy Fam
    trabajó/estudió como un cabrón he worked/studied his Br arse o US ass off
    2. Méx Fam [genio] whizz, ace;
    es un cabrón para la física he's a whizz at physics
    nm
    1. Vulg [cornudo] cuckold [neutro];
    es un cabrón his wife's screwing around behind his back
    2. [animal] billy-goat
    3. Méx muy Fam [tío] guy;
    ¿adónde irá ese cabrón? where the hell is that guy going?
    4. CAm, Méx muy Fam [como apelativo]
    hola cabrón, ¿qué tal estás? how are you, you old bastard?
    a lo cabrón loc adv
    Méx Fam by force;
    entraron a la casa a lo cabrón they broke into the house
    * * *
    bastard pop, son of a bitch pop

    Spanish-English dictionary > cabrón

  • 63 Arsch

    Arsch <-[e]s, Ärsche> [arʃ, pl ʼɛrʃə] m
    ( derb)
    1) ( Hintern) arse ( Brit) (fam!), ass (Am) (fam!), (Brit a.) bum (sl)
    2) ( blöder Kerl) [stupid] bastard, (( Brit) (sl) (a.)); bugger
    WENDUNGEN:
    jdm geht der \Arsch auf [o mit] Grundeis (sl) sb is scared shitless [or (Brit a.) shit-scared];
    aussehen wie ein \Arsch mit Ohren (sl) to look as thick as pig-shit;
    am \Arsch der Welt (sl) out in the sticks, in the arse [or (Am) ass] end of nowhere (sl)
    einen kalten \Arsch haben/ kriegen;
    (euph: sterben) to snuff it, to kick the bucket;
    den \Arsch offen haben ( vulg) to be talking out of one's arse [or (Am) ass] (sl)
    du hast ja den \Arsch offen! you're talking out of your arse!;
    sich dat den \Arsch abfrieren (sl) to freeze one's arse [or (Am) ass] [or (fam!) tits] [or (fam!) balls] off;
    jdm in den \Arsch kriechen to kiss (sl); [or (fam!) lick] sb's arse [or (Am) ass];
    jdn [mal] am \Arsch lecken können sb can get stuffed (sl), sb can fuck-off ( vulg)
    leck mich [damit] am \Arsch! ( verpiss dich) fuck [or ( vulg) piss] off!, (Brit a.) get stuffed! (sl), (Am a.) kiss my ass! (sl) ( verdammt noch mal) fuck it! ( vulg), (( Brit) ( fam) (a.)); [oh] bugger !;
    im [o am] \Arsch sein (sl) to be fucked[-up] ( vulg)
    sich akk auf den [o seinen] \Arsch setzen (sl) to park one's bum [or (Am) butt] ( fam) ( sich Mühe geben) to get one's arse [or (Am) ass] in gear (sl) ( perplex sein) to be blown away (sl)
    jdn [o jdm] in den \Arsch treten (sl: einen Tritt versetzen) to kick sb's arse [or (Am) ass] (sl) ( jdn antreiben) to give sb a [good] kick up the arse [or (Am) ass] ( fam)
    [von jdm] den \Arsch voll bekommen [o kriegen] (sl) to get a [bloody [or (Am) hell of a] ( fam)] good hiding [from sb];
    den \Arsch zukneifen;
    (euph: sterben) to snuff it (sl), to kick the bucket (sl)

    Deutsch-Englisch Wörterbuch für Studenten > Arsch

  • 64 vache

    I.
    n. f.
    1. (pej.): 'Copper', policeman. Les vaches: 'The fuzz'. (This seemingly injurious appellation, as well as the expression Mort aux vaches!, has nothing to do with the bovine species. Mort aux vaches! is said to have originated after 1870 in occupied AlsaceLorraine where the German military police force, die Wache (the watch), focused discontent among the occupied, and the jeer was originally Mort à la Wache!)
    2. (also: peau de vache): 'Pig of a character', very awkward so-and-so.
    3. Coup de pied en vache (fig.): Dirty trick, sly and malicious act.
    4. Vache à lait: 'Sucker', wealthy dupe, the kind of rich gullible fool who keeps cadgers and hangers-on in food and money.
    5. Vache laitière (pej.): 'Big fat biddy' (the kind of 'silly moo' whose ample mammaries are her dominant feature).
    6. Etre plein comme une vache: To be 'pissed to the eye-balls', to be rolling drunk.
    7. Il pleut comme vache qui pisse! It's raining cats and dogs!
    8. Bouffer de la vache enragée: To have to rough it, to go through a tough period in life. (The image here is of the impoverished individual whose meat rations, when he can afford them, are of the 'shoe-leather' variety.)
    9. Oh, la vache! Damn and blast! — Drat! (This exclamation and its English equivalents are equally innocuous and dated.)
    10. Vache de¼! This colloquial intensifier can either be damning as in Quel vache de temps! What bloody (awful) weather! or loaded with admiration as in C'est un vache de mec! He's one hell of a guy!
    11. La croix des vaches: Punishment inflicted by old-time pimps on recalcitrant prostitutes or by members of the underworld on a traitor. These deep facial cuts in the shape of a cross made with a razor blade, were encouraged to fester and leave a scar by the application of a chemical.
    II.
    adj.
    1. (of person): Weak, all limp. Je me sens tout vache aujourd'hui! I'm really feeling weak at the knees today!
    2. (of person): 'Beastly', 'mean', nasty. Son père est drôlement vache avec lui, côté discipline! His father's a right Colonel Blimp! Sois pas vache, prête-moi des sous! Come on, be a pal, lend us some money! Tu es vraiment vache, ces temps-ci! You're a right swine these days!
    3. (of problem, poser): 'Stinking difficult', awkward and loaded with (intentional) snags. Ses questions d'examen sont toujours vaches! The papers he sets are right stinkers!
    4. Un vache¼, une vache ¼: An incredible¼(When the adjective precedes the noun, it acts as an intensifier nearly always with a positive connotation. Une vache nana: A smashing bird. Il m'est arrivé une vache histoire! You won't believe what happened to me!)
    5. Amour vache: Tempestuous sort of love affair (the kind where the partners seem to be exchanging as many blows as kisses).

    Dictionary of Modern Colloquial French > vache

  • 65 κρέας

    Grammatical information: n.
    Meaning: `meat, piece of meat'.
    Other forms: Gen. κρέως (sec. κρέατος; Attica 338a); Pl. nom. κρέᾰ (Il., innovation; very uncertain κρέατα Od.), gen. κρεῶν (IA.), also κρειῶν (Hom.; prob. for κρεέων), κρεάων (h. Merc. 130; Zumbach Neuerungen 3), dat. κρέασι (Il.), also κρέεσσι (Orac. ap. Hdt. 1, 47), κρεάεσσι (late Ep.).
    Dialectal forms: Dor. κρῆς
    Compounds: As 1. member usually κρεο- (after the ο-stems), e.g. κρεο-κοπέω `cut meat' (A., E.), also κρεω- (after γεω-, λεω- a. o.) as v. l. and e.g. in κρεω-δαίτης `meat-distributor' (Phld.), κρε-άγρα `meat-pincer' (Ar.; elision, from κρεο-), κρεᾱ-νόμος, - έω, - ία `distributing meat' (E., Is., hell.; after ἀγορᾱ-νόμος; after this κρεᾱ-δοτέω, - σία), κρεη-φαγέω `eat meat' (Hp., analogical beside κρεο-φ.). Details on the inflexion Schwyzer 516, Sommer Μνήμης χάριν 2, 145 ff., Chantraine Gramm. hom. 1, 209 f.; on the form of the 1. member Solmsen Unt. 23 n. 1. Rarely as 2. member: πάγ-κρεας `sweetbread, pancreas' (Arist., medic.), γλυκύ-κρεος `with sweet meat' (Sophr.) a. o.
    Derivatives: Diminut. κρεᾳδιον (IA.), κρεΐσκος (Alex. 189), κρεύλλιον (Theognost.); with κρεώδης `meaty' (Arist., Thphr.), κρεῖον `butcher' stall' (I 206; H. κρήϊον), after ἀγγεῖον a.o.; not with Specht KZ 62, 230 n. 2 and Ursprung 126 from *κρέϜι-ον with old i-stem; quite uncertain κρηστήριον (Attica IVa).
    Origin: IE [Indo-European] [621] * kreu₂- `flesh'
    Etymology: But for the accent κρέας can be identical with Skt. kravíṣ- n. `raw flesh'; basis * kreuh₂s- n. Wrong Benveniste Origines 31. Skt. krūr-á- `raw, bloody' \< * kruh₂-ro-. Beside it Skt. kravyám n. `raw flesh' = OPr. krawian n., Lith. kraũjas m. `blood' (all *kreuh₂-i̯-); with diff. ablaut e.g. OCS krъvь f. `blood' (* kruh-i-). - More forms Pok. 621f., W.-Hofmann s. cruor, crūdus, cruentus, Fraenkel Lit. et. Wb. s. kraũjas, Vasmer Russ. et.Wb. s. krovь.
    See also: S. auch κρύος.
    Page in Frisk: 2,11-12

    Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > κρέας

  • 66 κρύος

    Grammatical information: n.
    Meaning: `icy cold, frost' (Hes. Op. 494, A. in lyr., Arist., Jul.).
    Derivatives: κρυόεις `horrible, lugubrious' (Il., Hes., Pi.), `icy-cold' (A. R., AP, Orph.) with analogical - ο- (cf. also Debrunner Άντίδωρον 28); s. also ὀκρυόεις; κρυώδης `id.' (Plu., Poll.); further perh. κρυερός `horrible, lugubrious' (Hom., Hes., Ar. in lyr.), `icy-cold' (Simon., Ar. in lyr.); cf. below. - Beside κρύος there are as independent formations: 1. κρῡμός m. `icy cold, frost, horror' (Ion., trag., hell.) with κρυμώδης `icy-cold' (Hp., Ph., AP), κρυμαλέος `id.' (S. E.; Debrunner IF 23, 22, Chantraine Formation 254), κρυμ-αίνω `make cold' (Hdn.), - ώσσω `be rigid from cold' (Theognost.). -- 2. κρύσταλλος s.v.
    Origin: XX [etym. unknown]
    Etymology: The wordgroup has cognates in diff. languages. On κρύσταλλος, which is Pre-Greek, s.v. The word is sonnected (Chantraine Formation 247, Schwyzer 484) with Lat. crusta `bark, crust'. However, this is wrong as the Latin word has a quite different meaning: `the hard surface of a body, the rind, shell, crust, bark' which protects it' (Lewis and Short); so it has nothing to do with cold; it is used of flumen, indicating a covering or crust of ice, but this is an incidental use, a metaphor, not the central aspect of the meaning. The word, then, has nothing to do with words for `cold, ice'. (Its etymology with κρύος must therefore be given up; there is no other proposal.) Further one connects Toch. B krost, A kuraś etc. `cold' (Duchesne-Guillemin BSL 41, 155 f.), but the -o- is difficult. One assumed for crusta the zero grade of an s-stem (so this is now wrong or irrelevant); beside it one proposed a full grade of the suffix in IE. *kruu̯-es- (?), Gr. κρύ-ος and in Latv. kruv-es-is `frozen mud'. Now *kruu̯-es- is not an admitted IE formation. It may have been * kruh₁-es-. [Not, with Frisk, to the word for `blood' Lat. cruōr \< * kreuh₂-ōs, Gr. κρέ(Ϝ)ας \< *kreu̯h₂-s-, s. v.] - With κρῡμός agrees Av. xrū-ma- `horrible'; but this word is analysed as * kruh₂-mo- and connected with the group of `blood' (above). One compared κρύος: κρῦμός with θύος: θῡμός, but the implication is not clear. The often assumed basic forms *κρύσ-ος, *κρυσ-μός are improbable (Frisk; does Chantraine accept this?) - κρυερός reminds of Skt. krūrá-, Av. xrūra- `wounded, raw, bloody, horrible', which points to * kruH-ro- (and Lat. crūdus `raw', if from * crūrus). κρυερός may have been rebuilt after the adj. in - ερός, but it can as well be an independent derivation from κρύος; cf. Bloch Sprachgesch. u. Wortbed. 23 n. 22. It might continue * kruh₁-er- (reconstructed above). Chantraine rejects the connection with `blood', as it would not fit semantically (but I think it fits very well) or formally. - A verbal * kreus- appears in Germanic, e.g. OWNo. *hrjósa, pret. hraus `shiver' with the zero grade verbal noun OHG hroso, -a `ice, crust'. On OIc. hrjósa see De Vries Wb., who denies that it has to do with cold or ice. - [Kluge22 s.v. Kruste derives it from `verkrustetes Blut', which must be wrong, s. above.].
    Page in Frisk: 2,28-29

    Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > κρύος

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