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121 ♦ big
♦ big /bɪg/a.1 grande; grosso; voluminoso; vasto: big toe, alluce; a big house, una grande casa; DIALOGO → - Shoes- They're a bit big, mi stanno un po' grandi; He has got a big heart, ha un gran cuore; è generoso; great big, grandissimo; enorme; grande e grosso: He's got great big eyes, ha degli occhi grandissimi; She had curly hair and a great big nose, aveva i capelli ricci e un gran nasone2 (attr.) grande ( d'età); maggiore: You're a big boy now, ormai sei grande; my big brother, il mio fratello maggiore3 importante; notevole; grande; grosso; serio; forte: big news, grosse novità; a big success, un grande successo; a big mistake, un grosso errore; a big decision, una decisione importante; a big landowner, un grosso possidente; the big day, il gran giorno; the Big Four [Five, Six, etc.], i (o le) quattro [cinque, sei, ecc.] Grandi (banche, società, ecc.); a big rise in prices, un forte aumento dei prezzi; a big appetite, un forte appetito; a big eater, un gran mangiatore; a big spender, uno che spende e spande; uno spendaccione; He's very big in showbiz, è molto importante (o è un pezzo grosso) nel mondo dello spettacolo; (iron.) big idea, idea grandiosa; gran progetto; trovata; alzata d'ingegno4 (fam.) ambizioso; grande; grandioso: big plans, progetti ambiziosi; to think big, pensare in grande; fare grandi progetti6 (pred.) (fam., spesso iron.) generoso: That's very big of you!, è molto generoso da parte tua; che generosità!7 (fam.) famoso; molto in voga; di successo● (fam. USA) the Big Apple, New York □ big-ass ► bigass □ the big bad wolf, il lupo cattivo □ (mus.) big band, big band; grande orchestra jazz o da ballo □ (astron.) the big bang, il big bang □ (fin., in GB) the Big Bang, la deregolamentazione e computerizzazione della Borsa Valori di Londra ( il 27 dicembre 1986) □ big-bellied, panciuto; ( di femmina) incinta, gravida □ (in GB) Big Ben, il Big Ben NOTE DI CULTURA: Big Ben: è propriamente il nome della campana della torre del Parlamento a Londra, fusa nel 1856 e così chiamata in onore di Benjamin Hall, allora direttore dei lavori pubblici; ormai il nome viene anche usato per indicare la torre stessa e l'orologio, famoso per la sua accuratezza e per essere usato come segnale orario dalla BBC □ (fin., in USA) the Big Board, il cartellone delle quotazioni ( alla Borsa Valori di New York); la Borsa Valori di New York □ big-boned, di forte ossatura; robusto □ Big Brother, Grande Fratello; dittatore □ (fam. USA) big bucks = big money ► sotto □ (fam.) big bug ► bigwig □ big business, attività commerciale redditizia; ( anche) le grandi società, le grandi imprese, la grande industria □ big cat, grosso felino (leone, tigre, leopardo, ecc.) □ (fam. scherz.) big cheese, pezzo grosso □ (astron.) big crunch, «big crunch» ( collasso della materia con cui avrà fine la vita dell'universo) □ ( slang USA) big daddy, capo; capoccia; boss □ ( slang USA) big deal, roba grossa; pezzo grosso: to make a big deal out of st., fare un sacco di storie per qc.; fare un affare di stato (o un dramma) di qc.; (iron.) Big deal!, sai che roba!; bell'affare!; no big deal, niente di speciale; roba da poco; What's the big deal?, e con ciò?; embè? □ (GB) big dipper, (le) montagne russe ( nei luna park) □ (astron., USA) the Big Dipper, l'Orsa Maggiore □ (mecc.) big end, testa ( di pistone) □ (fam. USA) the Big Easy, New Orleans □ big game, le grosse fiere ( come preda di caccia): big-game hunting, caccia grossa □ (fam.) big girl's blouse, smidollato; femminuccia □ ( USA) big government, governo (o Stato) troppo assistenziale; Stato troppo invadente; statalismo □ (fam. USA) big gun, pezzo grosso; persona influente □ big hair, pettinatura cotonata; testa cotonata □ (fam.) big-head, tipo presuntuoso; tipo spocchioso □ (fam.) big-headed, presuntuoso; spocchioso □ big-hearted, generoso; buono □ (fam.) big-hitter, ( persona) pezzo grosso; big; ( cosa) hit; successo □ the big house, la casa più importante (di un villaggio, un circondario); la casa dei signori □ ( USA) the big league, ( baseball) la serie A; (fig. fam.) i grandi, i campioni □ (fam. USA) big-league (agg.), grosso; importante; serio □ (fam.) big money, somme enormi; un sacco di soldi; soldi a palate: This is where the big money is, qui si fanno un sacco di soldi □ (fam.) big-mouth, uno che parla troppo o a sproposito; chiacchierone; lingua lunga □ (fam.) big-mouthed, chiacchierone; che ha la lingua lunga; che non sa tenere la lingua a posto □ (fam.) big name, persona famosa; grosso nome □ (fam.) big noise = big shot ► sotto □ ( slang USA) a big one, (un biglietto da) mille dollari □ ( USA) the big one, il grande evento; il grande momento; il gran giorno; ‘quello grosso’ (uragano, terremoto, ecc.) □ the big screen, il grande schermo; il cinema □ (fam.) big science, la grande ricerca scientifica □ (fam.) big shot, pezzo grosso; persona influente □ (fam.) big-shot (agg.), importante; influente; grosso □ (fin., stor.) the big slump, il tracollo ( della Borsa Valori) di Wall Street ( nel 1929) □ (fam. GB) the Big Smoke, Londra □ (fam.) the big stick, la maniera forte; l'uso della forza; il bastone □ (fam. USA) big talk, promesse vuote; millanterie; vanterie; spacconate □ (polit.) big-tent party, partito che riunisce diverse ideologie e punti di vista eterogenei □ (fam. USA) big-ticket (agg.), costoso; caro □ ( slang) the big time, l'apice di una professione, una carriera, un'attività; ( per estens.) il successo, la fama: to hit (o to make it to) the big time, arrivare al successo; sfondare □ ( slang) big-time (agg.), molto importante; grosso; di alto livello □ ( slang) big time (avv.), molto; alla grande (fam.): You've screwed it up big time!, hai fatto proprio un gran casino □ ( slang) big-timer, personaggio di primo piano; pezzo grosso; peso massimo □ the big top, il tendone ( del circo) □ (bot., USA) big tree ( Sequoiadendron giganteum), sequoia gigante □ big wheel, ruota gigante ( di luna park); ( slang) pezzo grosso □ to get (o to grow) big (o bigger), ingrossare; ingrandire; ingrassare; crescere □ (fam.) to go over big, avere successo; andare forte □ (fam.) in a big way, moltissimo; enormemente; alla grande (fam.): They do a lot of entertaining in a big way, ricevono moltissimo; danno un sacco di ricevimenti □ (fam.) to make it big, avere un gran successo; sfondare □ (fam.) to talk big, vantarsi; fare lo sbruffone; spararle grosse □ too big for one's boots (o, antiq., breeches; USA pants), che si dà un sacco d'arie; che si è montato la testa; presuntuoso.NOTA D'USO: - big, grand, great o large?- -
122 score
1. nounfinal score — Endstand, der
keep [the] score — zählen
know the score — (fig. coll.) wissen, was Sache ist od. was läuft (salopp)
scores [and scores] of — zig (ugs.); Dutzende [von]
scores of times — zigmal (ugs.)
6)pay off or settle an old score — (fig.) eine alte Rechnung begleichen
7) (reason) Grund, der2. transitive verbon that score — was das betrifft od. angeht; diesbezüglich
1) (win) erzielen [Erfolg, Punkt, Treffer usw.]score a direct hit on something — [Person:] einen Volltreffer landen; [Bombe:] etwas voll treffen
they scored a success — sie konnten einen Erfolg [für sich] verbuchen
score a goal — ein Tor schießen/werfen
2) (make notch/notches in) einkerben3) (be worth) zählen4) (Mus.) setzen; (orchestrate) orchestrieren [Musikstück]3. intransitive verb1) (make score) Punkte/einen Punkt erzielen od. (ugs.) machen; punkten (bes. Boxen); (score goal/goals) ein Tor/Tore schießen/werfenscore high or well — (in test etc.) eine hohe Punktzahl erreichen od. erzielen
2) (keep score) aufschreiben; anschreibenPhrasal Verbs:- academic.ru/110167/score_out">score out* * *[sko:] 1. plurals - scores; noun1) (the number of points, goals etc gained in a game, competition etc: The cricket score is 59 for 3.) die Punktzahl2) (a written piece of music showing all the parts for instruments and voices: the score of an opera.) die Partitur3) (a set or group of twenty: There was barely a score of people there.) zwanzig2. verb2) ((sometimes with off or out) to remove (eg a name) from eg a list by putting a line through it: Please could you score my name off (the list)?; Is that word meant to be scored out?) streichen3) (to keep score: Will you score for us, please?) aufschreiben•- scorer- score-board
- on that score
- scores of
- scores
- settle old scores* * *[skɔ:ʳ, AM skɔ:r]I. nat half time, the \score stood at two all zur Halbzeit stand es zwei zu zweifinal \score Endstand man IQ \score of 110 ein IQ von 110he lived to be three \score [years] er wurde sechzig Jahre altthe play has only been performed a \score of times das Stück wurde nur an die zwanzig Mal aufgeführt▪ \scores pl Dutzende plthere have been \scores of injuries es hat Dutzende von Verletzten gegebenby the \score reihenweise famthere's nothing to worry about on that \score darüber brauchst du dir nicht den Kopf zu zerbrechenit's time these old \scores were forgotten es ist an der Zeit, diese alten Streitereien zu vergessento settle a \score eine Rechnung begleichen fig10.II. vt1. (gain)to \score a goal ein Tor [o SCHWEIZ Goal] schießento \score a point einen Punkt machen2. (achieve result)▪ to \score sth etw erreichen [o erzielen]she \scored 18 out of 20 sie erreichte 18 von 20 möglichen Punktentwo of the machines we tested \scored high marks zwei der getesteten Maschinen erzielten hohe Wertungento \score a hit einen Treffer landen famnearly every shot \scored a hit nahezu jeder Schuss war ein [voller] Trefferto \score a triumph einen Triumph erzielento \score a victory einen Sieg erringen▪ to \score sth etw einkerbento \score the surface of sth die Oberfläche einer S. gen verkratzen▪ to \score sth etw beschaffen▪ to \score sth etw orchestrieren6. (get cheaply, easily)III. vi1. (make a point) einen Punkt machen [o erzielen2. (achieve result) abschneidento \score well/badly gut/schlecht abschneiden3. (record) aufschreibenthat's where you \score over your opponents darin liegt dein Vorteil gegenüber deinen Mitbewerbernthis new CD player really \scores in terms of sound quality dieser neue CD-Spieler ist in punkto Klangqualität eindeutig überlegen* * *[skɔː(r)]1. n1) (= number of points) (Punkte)stand m; (of game, Sport) (Spiel)stand m; (= final score) Spielergebnis ntwhat was your score in the test? — wie viele Punkte hast du bei dem Test erreicht or gemacht? (inf)
England didn't get a very good score — England hat nicht sehr gut abgeschnitten; (in game, test also) England hat nicht sehr viele Punkte erzielt; (Ftbl etc also) England hat nicht sehr viele Tore erzielt or geschossen
the score was Rangers 3, Celtic 0 — es stand 3:0 für Rangers (gegen Celtic)
there was no score at half-time — zur Halbzeit stand es 0:0
to keep (the) score — (mit)zählen; (officially) Punkte zählen; (on scoreboard) Punkte anschreiben
what's the score? — wie steht es?; (fig also) wie sieht es aus? (on mit) (inf)
he doesn't know the score (fig) — er weiß nicht, was gespielt wird (inf)
to make a score with sb (fig) — jdn stark beeindrucken
what's the score? — was bin ich schuldig?, wie viel macht das?
5) (= 20) zwanziga score of people —
scores and scores — hunderte or Hunderte, jede Menge (inf)
scores of times — hundertmal, zigmal (inf)
by the score — massenweise (inf)
6) (= reason, ground) Grund mon that score — aus diesem Grund, deshalb
2. vt1) (= win) erzielen; marks, points erzielen, bekommen; goals schießen, erzielen; runs schaffen; (RUGBY) try erzielen; (GOLF) hole-in-one machento score a point off or over sb (fig) — auf jds Kosten (acc) glänzen, jdn ausstechen
that remark scored a hit — diese Bemerkung hat ins Schwarze getroffen
2) (= groove) einkerben, Rillen/eine Rille machen in (+acc); (= mark) Kratzer/einen Kratzer machen in (+acc); (COOK) fat, meat etc einschneidenthe film was scored by Michael Nyman — die Musik zu dem Film ist or stammt von Michael Nyman
3. vito score well/badly — gut/schlecht abschneiden; (in game, test etc also) eine gute/keine gute Punktzahl erreichen; (Ftbl etc also)
the batsman didn't score off the fast balls — der Schlagmann konnte die schnellen Bälle nicht verwandeln
2) (= keep score) (mit)zählen3) (inf* * *A s1. Kerbe f, Einschnitt m, Rille f2. (Markierungs)Linie fa) losrasen, rangehen wie Blücher umg,b) aus dem Häuschen geraten umg4. SPORTa) (Spiel)Stand mc) Punktliste f:score at half time Halbzeitstand, -ergebnis;the score is even das Spiel steht unentschieden;keep (the) score anschreiben;know the score umg Bescheid wissen;score one for me! umg eins zu null für mich!5. Rechnung f, Zeche f:run up a score Schulden machen, eine Rechnung auflaufen lassen;have a score to settle with sb fig eine Rechnung mit jemandem zu begleichen haben;what’s the score? wie viel macht oder kostet das?;on that score in dieser Hinsicht;on what score? aus welchem Grund?6. (Gruppe f oder Satz m von) zwanzig, zwanzig Stück:a score of apples 20 Äpfel;7. pl eine große (An)Zahl:scores of times hundertmal, x-mal umga) jemandem eins auswischen,b) jemanden lächerlich machen9. MUS Partitur f:B v/t1. SPORTb) die Punkte, den Spielstand etc anschreibenc) fig Erfolge, Siege verzeichnen, erringen, verbuchen, feiern:score a hit einen Treffer erzielen, fig einen Bombenerfolg haben;score points for sth fig mit etwas imponieren3. SCHULE, PSYCH jemandes Leistung etc bewerten4. MUSa) in Partitur setzenb) instrumentieren, setzen ( for für)5. GASTR Fleisch etc schlitzen6. einkerben, -schneiden7. markieren:score under unterstreichenC v/i1. SPORThe scored twice er war zweimal erfolgreichb) die Punkte anschreibena) jemandem eins auswischen,b) jemanden lächerlich machen;score over sb (sth) jemanden (etwas) übertreffen3. gezählt werden, zählen:that scores for us das zählt für uns* * *1. nounWhat's the score? - The score was 4-1 at half-time — Wie steht es? - Der Halbzeitstand war 4: 1
final score — Endstand, der
keep [the] score — zählen
know the score — (fig. coll.) wissen, was Sache ist od. was läuft (salopp)
4) in pl. (great numbers)scores [and scores] of — zig (ugs.); Dutzende [von]
scores of times — zigmal (ugs.)
6)pay off or settle an old score — (fig.) eine alte Rechnung begleichen
7) (reason) Grund, der2. transitive verbon that score — was das betrifft od. angeht; diesbezüglich
1) (win) erzielen [Erfolg, Punkt, Treffer usw.]score a direct hit on something — [Person:] einen Volltreffer landen; [Bombe:] etwas voll treffen
they scored a success — sie konnten einen Erfolg [für sich] verbuchen
score a goal — ein Tor schießen/werfen
2) (make notch/notches in) einkerben3) (be worth) zählen4) (Mus.) setzen; (orchestrate) orchestrieren [Musikstück]3. intransitive verb1) (make score) Punkte/einen Punkt erzielen od. (ugs.) machen; punkten (bes. Boxen); (score goal/goals) ein Tor/Tore schießen/werfenscore high or well — (in test etc.) eine hohe Punktzahl erreichen od. erzielen
2) (keep score) aufschreiben; anschreiben3) (secure advantage) die besseren Karten haben ( over gegenüber, im Vergleich zu)Phrasal Verbs:* * *n.Auswertung f.Ergebnis -se n.Punktzahl f.Spielergebnis n.Spielstand m.Stand eines Wettkampfes m. v.erringen v. -
123 round
round [raʊnd]━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━1. adverba. ( = around) autour• you can't get through here, you'll have to go round vous ne pouvez pas passer par ici, il faut faire le tour• the idea was going round and round in his head il tournait et retournait l'idée dans sa tête► all + round• this ought to make life much easier all round ( = for everybody) cela devrait simplifier la vie de tout le monde2. preposition• they went round the cafés looking for... ils ont fait le tour des cafés à la recherche de...• round about £800 800 livres environ• the house is just round the corner la maison est au coin de la rue ; ( = near) la maison est tout près3. adjectivea. ( = circular) rond ; ( = rounded) arrondib. ( = complete) a round dozen une douzaine tout rond4. nouna. ( = circle) rond m, cercle m• to make one's round(s) [watchman, policeman] faire sa ronde ; [postman, milkman] faire sa tournée ; [doctor] faire ses visites• to make the rounds of... faire le tour de...c. [of cards, golf, competition] partie f ; (Boxing) round m ; [of election] tour m ; [of talks, discussions] série fd. [of drinks] tournée f( = go round) [+ corner] tourner ; [+ bend] prendre6. compounds► round robin noun ( = petition) pétition f (où les signatures sont disposées en rond) ; ( = letter) lettre envoyée à plusieurs destinataires ; (especiallyUS) (Sport) poule f• this plane does three round trips a week cet avion effectue trois rotations fpl par semaine ► round trip ticket noun billet m aller-retour[+ prices] arrondir (au chiffre inférieur)[+ speech, meal] terminer ; [+ debate, meeting] mettre fin à• and now, to round off, I must say... et maintenant, pour conclure, je dois dire...► round up separable transitive verba. ( = bring together) [+ people] réunir ; [+ cattle] rassemblerb. [+ prices] arrondir (au chiffre supérieur)* * *Note: round often appears after verbs in English ( change round, gather round, pass round). For translations, consult the appropriate verb entry (change, gather, pass)[raʊnd] 1.1) GB ( on all sides)2) GB ( in circles)to go round and round — [carousel] tourner (en rond); [person] fig tourner en rond; lit aller et venir
3) GB (to specific place, home)4) GB5) GB ( as part of cycle)2.preposition GB1) ( expressing location) autour de [table etc]2) ( expressing direction)to go round a bend — ( in road) prendre un virage
3) ( on visit)3.round about adverbial phrase1) ( approximately) à peu près, environ2) ( vicinity)4.1) (set, series) série f (of de)2) ( in competition) rencontre fqualifying round — match m de qualification
3) (in golf, cards) partie f; (in boxing, wrestling) round m4) ( in showjumping) parcours m5) ( in election) tour m6) ( of drinks) tournée f7) Military ( unit of ammunition) balle f8) Military ( shot fired) salve f9) ( burst)round of applause — salve f d'applaudissements
10) ( of bread)11) ( route) tournée fto do one's rounds — [doctor] visiter ses malades; [postman] faire sa tournée; [guard] faire sa ronde
to do ou go the rounds — [rumour, flu] circuler
to go ou do the rounds of — faire le tour de
12) ( circular shape) rondelle f (of de)5.1) (circular, spherical, curved) rond2) ( complete) [figure] rondin round figures, that's £100 — ça fait 100 livres sterling en arrondissant
6.a nice round sum — une somme rondelette (colloq)
transitive verb contourner [headland]Phrasal Verbs:- round on- round up -
124 dead
A n2 ( death) to rise/be raised from the dead ressusciter/être ressuscité d'entre les morts ;3 fig ( depths) at dead of night, in the dead of night en pleine nuit, au cœur de la nuit ; in the dead of winter en plein hiver, au cœur de l'hiver.B adj1 ( no longer living) [person] mort, décédé ; [animal, tree, flower, leaf, skin] mort ; the dead man/woman le mort/la morte ; a dead body un cadavre ; to drop (down) dead tomber raide mort ; to play dead faire le mort/la morte ; drop dead ○ ! va te faire voir ○ ! ; to shoot sb dead abattre qn ; dead and buried lit, fig mort et enterré ; they're all dead and gone now ils nous ont tous quittés maintenant ; more dead than alive plus mort que vif ; ‘wanted, dead or alive’ ‘recherché, mort ou vif’ ; to leave sb for dead laisser qn pour mort ; to give sb up for dead tenir qn pour mort ; I'm absolutely dead ○ after that walk! ( exhausted) je suis absolument mort ○ après cette marche! ;2 ( extinct) [language] mort ; [custom, law] désuet/-ète, tombé en désuétude ; [issue, debate] dépassé ; [cigarette] éteint ; [fire] éteint, mort ; [match] usagé ; are these glasses dead? GB avez-vous fini avec ces verres? ;4 (not functioning, idle) [battery] à plat ; [bank account] dormant ; [capital, money] improductif/-ive, inactif/-ive ; [file] qu'on ne consulte plus ; the phone went dead tout d'un coup il n'y avait plus de tonalité (sur la ligne) ;5 ( impervious) to be dead to sth être insensible à qch ;7 ( absolute) a dead calm un calme plat ; dead silence silence de mort ; to be a dead shot ○ être un tireur d'élite ; to come to a dead stop s'arrêter net ; she hit the target in the dead centre elle a atteint la cible en plein milieu.C adv surtout GB (absolutely, completely) absolument ; are you dead certain? est-ce que tu es absolument sûr?, est-ce que tu es sûr et certain? ; he was staring dead ahead il regardait droit devant lui ; sail dead ahead navigue droit devant ; dead in the middle of the street en plein milieu de la rue ; to be dead level être parfaitement plat ; to be dead on time être pile ○ à l'heure ; I left (at) dead on six o'clock je suis parti à six heures pile ○ or sonnantes ; it's dead easy ○ ! c'est simple comme bonjour ○ ! ; his shot was dead on target son coup était en plein dans le mille ; they were dead lucky ○ not to get caught! ils ont eu du pot ○ de ne pas se faire prendre! ; dead drunk ○ ivre mort ; dead tired ○ crevé ○, claqué ○ ; I was dead scared ○ ! j'avais une trouille bleue ○ ! ; you're dead right ○ ! tu as parfaitement raison! ; dead good! génial ○ ! ; ‘dead slow’ Aut ‘roulez au pas’ ; to drive dead slow rouler au pas ; dead straight absolument or tout à fait droit ; to be dead against être totalement opposé à [idea, plan] ; to be dead set on doing être tout à fait décidé à faire ; he's dead on ○ for that job US il est sûr de décrocher ce poste ; you're dead on ○ ! US tu as tout à fait raison! ; to stop dead s'arrêter net ; to cut sb dead snober qn.to be dead to the world dormir comme une souche, être dans les bras de Morphée liter ; I wouldn't be seen dead wearing that hat! je ne porterais ce chapeau pour rien au monde! ; I wouldn't be seen dead in a place like that! pour rien au monde je ne voudrais être vu dans un endroit pareil! ; the affair is dead but it won't lie down l'affaire est loin d'être enterrée ; dead men tell no tales Prov les morts ne parlent pas ; the only good traitor is a dead traitor un bon traître est un traître mort ; you do that and you're dead meat ○ ! US tu fais ça et je te tue! -
125 sight
1. noun1) (the act or power of seeing: The blind man had lost his sight in the war.) syn2) (the area within which things can be seen by someone: The boat was within sight of land; The end of our troubles is in sight.) sikte3) (something worth seeing: She took her visitors to see the sights of London.) severdighet4) (a view or glimpse.) syn, utsikt, glimt5) (something seen that is unusual, ridiculous, shocking etc: She's quite a sight in that hat.) syn, skue6) ((on a gun etc) an apparatus to guide the eye in taking aim: Where is the sight on a rifle?) sikte2. verb1) (to get a view of; to see suddenly: We sighted the coast as dawn broke.) få øye på2) (to look at (something) through the sight of a gun: He sighted his prey and pulled the trigger.) sikte på, rette/stille inn•- sight-seer
- catch sight of
- lose sight ofsyn--------synsevne--------utsiktIsubst. \/saɪt\/1) syn(sevne)2) syn3) synsvidde, sikte4) syn, skue, severdighet5) ( gammeldags) åsyn6) sikte, sikteinnretning7) ( sjøfart) sikte, observasjon, solhøyde8) mål, fremtidsutsikt9) ( hverdagslig) masse, mengdeafter sight ( handel) etter sikt (om veksel)at first sight ved første øyekast, ved første blikkat the sight of ved synet avby sight av utseendecatch\/get sight of få øye påcome into sight bli synligfix one's sights on streve etter, sikte motin sight innenfor synsvidde, i sikte, innen rekkevidde• keep the child in sight!in someone's sight etter noens oppfatning• in my sight, he's a moronin the sight of God for Guds åsyn, for Gudkeep sight of someone\/something ikke miste noe(n) av synelook a (perfect) sight eller look a (proper) sight se helt forferdelig ut• what a sight you look!long sight skarpt syn langsynthet forutseenhet lang siktlose sight of ( også overført) miste av syne• you shouldn't lose sight of the fact that he has been married for 20 yearsmake a sight of oneself spjåke seg utnot a pretty sight ( hverdagslig) ikke noe pent synnot by a long sight ikke på langt næron sight på flekken, med det sammeout of sight utenfor synsvidde, ute av sikte• keep out of my sight!• don't let him out of your sight!• I watched her out of sight!out of sight, out of mind ute av øye, ute av sinnpayable at\/on sight ( handel) betalbar ved sikt\/forevisningplay at sight ( musikk) spille fra bladetraise one's sights ( overført) sikte høyere, sikte mot høyere målset one's sights too high sikte for høyt, tro for godt om seg selva sight for sore eyes en fryd for øyet, et kjærkomment synsight unseen ( handel) usetttake a sight at the sun ta ut kursen etter solentake a sight with the compass ta ut kursen ved hjelp av kompassettake sight at ta sikte påwithin sight innenfor synsvidde, i sikte, innen rekkeviddeIIverb \/saɪt\/1) ( spesielt sjøfart) få øye på, få i sikte2) observere, ta observasjon av, bli sett• did you sight the star?3) ta sikte, sikte på4) utstyre med sikte, justere siktet på, stille inn -
126 cross
I 1. [krɒs] [AE krɔːs]1) (shape) croce f.the Cross — relig. la Croce
to put a cross against — segnare con una croce [name, item]
"put a cross in the box" — "sbarrate la casella", "segnate la casella con una croce"
a cross between Hitler and Napoleon — fig. un incrocio fra Hitler e Napoleone
3) sart. sbieco m.to cut sth. on the cross — tagliare qcs. di sbieco
4) sport (in football) cross m., traversone m.2.1) (angry) arrabbiato, irritato, di cattivo umoreto be cross with sb. — essere seccato con qcn.
to be cross about sth. — essere di cattivo umore per qcs.
to get cross — arrabbiarsi o adirarsi ( with con)
2) (transverse) [ timber] trasversale, obliquo3) (contrary to general direction) [breeze, swell] contrario••II 1. [krɒs] [AE krɔːs]1) (go across) attraversare [road, country, room]; passare, attraversare [ river]; superare, oltrepassare [border, line, mountains]; [ bridge] attraversare, scavalcare [river, road]; [road, railway line, river] tagliare, attraversare [country, desert]; [ line] attraversare, tagliare [ page]2) fig. superare, oltrepassare [limit, boundary]3) (meet) [road, railway line] incrociare, intersecare [road, railway line, river]4) (place in shape of a cross) incrociareto cross one's legs — incrociare o accavallare le gambe
5) biol. bot. zool. incrociare, ibridare7) (draw line across) (s)barrare [ cheque]2.1) (anche cross over) (go across) fare una traversata3.to cross oneself — relig. segnarsi, farsi il segno della croce
••* * *[kros] I adjective(angry: I get very cross when I lose something.)- crosslyII 1. plural - crosses; noun1) (a symbol formed by two lines placed across each other, eg + or x.)2) (two wooden beams placed thus (+), on which Christ was nailed.)3) (the symbol of the Christian religion.)4) (a lasting cause of suffering etc: Your rheumatism is a cross you will have to bear.)5) (the result of breeding two varieties of animal or plant: This dog is a cross between an alsatian and a labrador.)6) (a monument in the shape of a cross.)7) (any of several types of medal given for bravery etc: the Victoria Cross.)2. verb1) (to go from one side to the other: Let's cross (the street); This road crosses the swamp.)2) ((negative uncross) to place (two things) across each other: He sat down and crossed his legs.)3) (to go or be placed across (each other): The roads cross in the centre of town.)4) (to meet and pass: Our letters must have crossed in the post.)5) (to put a line across: Cross your `t's'.)6) (to make (a cheque or postal order) payable only through a bank by drawing two parallel lines across it.)7) (to breed (something) from two different varieties: I've crossed two varieties of rose.)8) (to go against the wishes of: If you cross me, you'll regret it!)•- cross-- crossing
- crossbow
- cross-breed
- cross-bred
- crosscheck 3. noun(the act of crosschecking.) controllo accurato, riscontro- cross-country skiing
- cross-examine
- cross-examination
- cross-eyed
- cross-fire
- at cross-purposes
- cross-refer
- cross-reference
- crossroads
- cross-section
- crossword puzzle
- crossword
- cross one's fingers
- cross out* * *cross (1) /krɒs/n.1 croce ( segno, oggetto, simbolo): Maltese Cross, croce di Malta; the Cross and the Crescent, la Croce e la Mezzaluna; (mil., in GB) the Distinguished Service Cross, la Croce al Valor Militare; to mark with a cross, segnare con una croce; to put a cross against a name, segnare un nome con una croce4 (zool., bot.) incrocio; ibrido: The mule is a cross between a mare and an ass, il mulo è l'incrocio d'una cavalla con un asino5 (fig.) incrocio; via di mezzo; (un) misto: The taste is a cross between yoghurt and cream cheese, il sapore è una via di mezzo tra lo yogurt e il formaggio burroso7 (mecc.) crociera; raccordo a croce● (relig.) cross-bearer, portatore di croce; crocifero □ cross-shaped, cruciforme □ to make one's cross, fare una croce ( in luogo della firma) □ on the cross, diagonalmente; ( anche sartoria) di sbieco; (fam. USA) (in modo) disonesto □ (stor.) to take the cross, farsi crociato □ (fig.) to take up one's cross, accettare (con rassegnazione) la propria croce.cross (2) /krɒs/a.1 arrabbiato; irritato; di cattivo umore; iroso: to be cross with sb., essere arrabbiato con q.; a cross word, una parola irosa● ( Si veda anche sotto i singoli lemmi) (leg.) cross appeal, appello incidentale □ (naut.) cross bearing, rilevamento incrociato □ (geol.) cross-bedding, stratificazione incrociata □ (polit., GB) cross bench, banco di deputato indipendente ( alla Camera dei Lord) □ (polit., GB) cross-bencher, deputato indipendente □ cross-border, transfrontaliero; tra Stati confinanti; con l'estero; estero; straniero: (fin.) cross-border merger, incorporazione di società straniere; cross-border worker, frontaliere □ (edil.) cross bracing, controvento □ (leg.) cross-claim, domanda riconvenzionale □ (comput.) cross compiler, compilatore incrociato □ ( boxe) cross counter, colpo d'incontro □ (GB) cross-curricular, multidisciplinare □ cross-dating, datazione incrociata □ (med.) cross-dominance, lateralità incrociata □ (rag.) cross entry, trasferimento d'una somma ad altro conto □ cross hairs, reticolo ( di arma da fuoco o su schermo di computer) □ (mecc.) cross-head screwdriver, giravite a testa obliqua □ (fin.) cross holding, partecipazione incrociata □ (chim.) cross link, legame trasversale □ (med.) cross-matching technique, tecnica della prova crociata ( del sangue) □ (fin.) cross participation, partecipazione incrociata □ (mecc.) cross-peen hammer, martello da meccanico □ (mat.) cross product, prodotto vettoriale □ (fin.) cross rate, corso ( di cambio) indiretto; parità indiretta □ (mat.) cross ratio, birapporto □ ( sport) cross shot, ( calcio) tiro trasversale, traversone; ( tennis, ecc.) tiro angolato □ ( USA) cross street, (strada) traversa □ cross stroke, frego ( a penna); ( sport: golf, ecc.) tiro trasversale □ (polit.) cross voting, voto trasversale □ cross wires, reticolo □ (fam. GB) as cross as two sticks, irritatissimo; d'umore nero □ at cross purposes, senza capirsi; fraintendendosi: to talk at cross purposes, parlare senza capirsi; fraintendersi.♦ (to) cross /krɒs/A v. t.1 attraversare: to cross a road [the sea], attraversare una strada [il mare]2 attraversare; passare su; passare per: A worried look crossed her face, un'espressione preoccupata le si disegnò sul viso; It has never crossed my mind, non mi è mai passato per la testa3 oltrepassare; superare: to cross the gender divide, superare le differenze di sesso; to cross the bounds of decency, superare i limiti della decenza4 incrociare; intersecare; tagliare; sbarrare: to cross two wires, incrociare due fili; Broadway crosses Seventh Avenue at Times Square, Broadway interseca la Settima Avenue a Times Square; to cross one's «t's», tagliare le (o fare il taglietto alle) «t»; to cross one's arms, incrociare le braccia; to cross one's legs, incrociare le gambe; ( su una sedia) accavallare le gambe; to cross one's fingers, incrociare le dita ( per scaramanzia); My previous letter crossed yours, la mia lettera precedente ha incrociato la tua; to cross each other, incrociarsi; intersecarsi5 fare una croce su; sbarrare: to cross a name, fare una croce su un nome; to cross a ballot paper, mettere la croce su una scheda elettorale; ( banca) to cross a cheque, sbarrare un assegno6 contrariare; contrastare; opporsi a: Nobody likes to be crossed, a nessuno piace essere contrariato; to cross sb. 's plans, contrastare i piani di q.7 (bot., zool.) incrociare, ibridareB v. i.1 fare una traversata: I crossed by hovercraft from Ramsgate to Calais, feci la traversata sull'hovercraft da Ramsgate a Calais2 andare, recarsi ( attraversando un confine, il mare, ecc.); passare; entrare: We crossed into Austria, siamo entrati in Austria3 incrociarsi: We crossed on the street, ci siamo incrociati per strada; Our letters crossed in the post, le nostre lettere si sono incrociate● Cross!, avanti! ( ai semafori pedonali) □ (polit., GB) to cross the floor, passare all'opposizione (o dalla parte del governo); votare per il partito avverso □ to cross sb. 's hand = to cross sb.'s palm ► sotto □ to cross one's heart, mettersi una mano sul cuore ( per asseverare): Cross my heart ( and hope to die)!, mi venga un colpo ( se non è vero, se sono stato io, ecc.) □ (relig.) to cross oneself, farsi il segno della croce; segnarsi □ (fig.) to cross sb. 's palm with silver, dare soldi a ( una chiromante, ecc., che legge la mano); (scherz.) ungere q., allungare una bustarella a q. □ to cross sb. 's path, trovarsi sulla strada di q.; sbarrare la strada a q. □ (fig.) to cross one's «t's» and dot one's «i's», controllare tutti i dettagli; essere molto preciso □ ( anche fig.) to cross swords with sb., incrociare la spada con q. □ (fig.) We'll cross that bridge when we come to it, ci occuperemo di quella faccenda quando sarà il momento.* * *I 1. [krɒs] [AE krɔːs]1) (shape) croce f.the Cross — relig. la Croce
to put a cross against — segnare con una croce [name, item]
"put a cross in the box" — "sbarrate la casella", "segnate la casella con una croce"
a cross between Hitler and Napoleon — fig. un incrocio fra Hitler e Napoleone
3) sart. sbieco m.to cut sth. on the cross — tagliare qcs. di sbieco
4) sport (in football) cross m., traversone m.2.1) (angry) arrabbiato, irritato, di cattivo umoreto be cross with sb. — essere seccato con qcn.
to be cross about sth. — essere di cattivo umore per qcs.
to get cross — arrabbiarsi o adirarsi ( with con)
2) (transverse) [ timber] trasversale, obliquo3) (contrary to general direction) [breeze, swell] contrario••II 1. [krɒs] [AE krɔːs]1) (go across) attraversare [road, country, room]; passare, attraversare [ river]; superare, oltrepassare [border, line, mountains]; [ bridge] attraversare, scavalcare [river, road]; [road, railway line, river] tagliare, attraversare [country, desert]; [ line] attraversare, tagliare [ page]2) fig. superare, oltrepassare [limit, boundary]3) (meet) [road, railway line] incrociare, intersecare [road, railway line, river]4) (place in shape of a cross) incrociareto cross one's legs — incrociare o accavallare le gambe
5) biol. bot. zool. incrociare, ibridare7) (draw line across) (s)barrare [ cheque]2.1) (anche cross over) (go across) fare una traversata3.to cross oneself — relig. segnarsi, farsi il segno della croce
•• -
127 big
big [bɪg]1. adjective• a big boy/girl un grand garçon/une grande fille2. adverb3. compounds• tourism is big business here le tourisme rapporte beaucoup d'argent par ici ► big cat noun grand félin m• he's a big name in politics c'est un grand nom de la politique ► big shot (inf) noun grand ponte (inf) m[athlete, industrialist] de première catégorie* * *[bɪg]to get big(ger) — ( taller) grandir; ( fatter) grossir; ( in pregnancy) s'arrondir
2) ( in size) [bed, room, building, garden, lake, town] grand (before n); [animal, car, boat, parcel, box] gros/grosse (before n), grand (before n)a big book — ( thick) un gros livre; ( large-format) un grand livre
3) ( in age) grand (before n)his big brother — son grand frère, son frère aîné
4) ( in extent) [family, crowd, class, party] grand (before n); [collection, organization, company] gros/grosse (before n), grand (before n); [meal] copieux/-ieuse5) ( important) [question, problem, decision, change, moment, event] grand (before n)I think we're on to something big — (colloq) je sens qu'on est sur un gros coup (colloq)
6) ( emphatic)to be big in the music business — (colloq) être très connu dans le monde de la musique
7) (colloq) US ( enthusiastic)to be big on — être fanatique or fana (colloq) de [activity]
8) ( generous) [person] généreux/-euse9) gen, Politicsthe Big Four/Five — les Quatre/Cinq Grands
••to be ou go over big — (colloq) faire fureur, faire un tabac (colloq) (in à, en)
to have a big head — péj avoir la grosse tête (colloq)
why can't you keep your big mouth shut? — (colloq) tu n'aurais pas pu la fermer? (colloq)
to have big ideas, think big — (colloq) voir grand (colloq)
to make it big — (colloq) avoir beaucoup de succès
-
128 straight
I n sl1)The guy's a straight. He's gonna turn us over to the cops — Парень такой честный, что выдаст нас полиции
The straights are putting pressure on city hall to clean up the neighborhood — Добропорядочные граждане требуют от городских властей очистить этот район от преступников и наркоманов
2)The straights really get upset if you camp it up too much — Нормальных в половом отношении людей возмущает, когда гомосексуалисты и не скрывают, кто они такие
3)She is a straight and will probably stay that way — Она не употребляет наркотики и вряд ли когда попробует их
4) AmEII adj1) infml2) infml3) slI'm straight now and I'm gonna stay that way — Я завязал с наркотой и думаю, что навсегда
4) AmE slIt only takes a few bucks and a little time to get straight — Надо только несколько баксов, чтобы уколоться, и немного времени, чтобы прийти в себя
She will be straight for a few hours — Она поправит свое здоровье только на несколько часов, а потом ее снова начнет ломать
Once the addict has had his shot and is straight he may become admirably though briefly industrious — Когда наркоман уколется и придет в себя, он может развить кипучую деятельность, хотя и на короткое время
She needed a fix to get straight — Ей нужно было уколоться, чтобы остановить эту дрожь в теле
См. также в других словарях:
get a shot — get a needle from a doctor You are sick. Maybe you should get a shot of penicillin … English idioms
get a shot at — shoot at, see the target you want to shoot at The buck was partly hidden. I couldn t get a shot at it … English idioms
Get Well Soon (groupe) — Get Well Soon Pays d’origine Allemagne Genre musical Rock, Folk, Electro, Pop Années d activité … Wikipédia en Français
shot of — Brit informal : no longer having someone or something that you do not want I m ready to get/be shot of [=rid of] this job. The band wants to be shot of its manager. • • • Main Entry: ↑shot … Useful english dictionary
shot — shot1 [ʃɔt US ʃa:t] n ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(gun)¦ 2¦(bullets)¦ 3¦(attempt to score)¦ 4¦(photograph)¦ 5¦(film/tv)¦ 6¦(attempt)¦ 7 give something your best shot 8 be a long shot 9 a 10 to 1 shot/50 to 1 shot etc 10 a shot in the dark … Dictionary of contemporary English
shot — shot1 [ ʃat ] adjective never before noun INFORMAL injured, damaged, or destroyed: The bones in her wrist were shot. shot to pieces/hell (=severely damaged or completely destroyed): My nerves are completely shot to pieces. be shot through with… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
shot — I UK [ʃɒt] / US [ʃɑt] noun Word forms shot : singular shot plural shots *** 1) [countable] an act of firing a gun fire a shot: The man fired two shots from a handgun. a) a bullet that is fired from a gun The third shot hit the officer in the… … English dictionary
shot — 1 noun GUNS/SHOOTING 1 fire a shot to fire a gun: He pulled out his rifle and fired three shots. 2 take a shot at to try to kill or injure someone by firing a gun at them: Someone took a shot at him as he was getting out of his car. 3 SOUND (C)… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
Shot of Love — Infobox Album Name = Shot of Love Type = studio Artist = Bob Dylan Released = August 10, 1981 Recorded = March–May 1981 Genre = Gospel rock Length = 40:15 Label = Columbia Producer = Chuck Plotkin, Bob Dylan with Bumps Blackwell on Shot of Love… … Wikipedia
shot-up — 1. AND shot away mod. alcohol or drug intoxicated. □ Well, you see, he’s shot up and can’t come to the phone. □ How can anybody get so shot away in so little time? 2. mod. severely injured by gunshots. □ Tom got himself shot up in a hunting… … Dictionary of American slang and colloquial expressions
You're Darn Tootin' — Theatrical poster for You re Darn Tootin (1928) Directed by E. L. Kennedy … Wikipedia