Question |
Answer |
poważny (przestępstwo) pogorszony start learning
|
|
Aggravated rape in the first degree" bans sexual intercourse or sodomy with a child under 13.
|
|
|
przeszukać, wywrócić do góry nogami. doszczętnie zniszczyć, trawić (o ogniu, pożarze) flaki start learning
|
|
don't perplex with a word tripe They gutted my room but they didn't find anything. My flat was gutted by fire last night.
|
|
|
flota start learning
|
|
Your horse is fleet! I want to ride it. She caught his wrist and ran fleetly down the corridor.
|
|
|
start learning
|
|
a small, black creature with a large head and long tail that lives in water and develops into a frog or toad
|
|
|
start learning
|
|
|
|
|
agresywnie pewny siebie, zarozumiały; zwyżkowy start learning
|
|
giving your opinions in a powerful and confident way: A bullish financial market is one in which share prices are rising She's being very bullish about the firm's future.
|
|
|
start learning
|
|
a child, especially one who behaves badly She's behaving like a spoilt brat.
|
|
|
szczupły, zapasowy, dodatkowy, wolny start learning
|
|
She runs every day to have a spare figure. I spared an hour for this meeting and it was a waste of time. I lost my key but I have a spare.
|
|
|
ocenić coś na oko, określić coś na oko, mierzyć kogoś wzrokiem start learning
|
|
The cook eyeballed all the ingredients of the goulash.
|
|
|
nieposzalowana uczciwość, prawość start learning
|
|
complete honesty: Her probity and integrity are beyond question.
|
|
|
ubikacja, sedes, klozet (pojemnik mainly UK start learning
|
|
lavvy. a toilet The lavatories will be out of service for the rest of the flight.
|
|
|
poprzednik, okoliczność poprzedzająca oficjalnie przodek start learning
|
|
someone or something existing or happening before, especially as the cause or origin of something existing or happening later: a word or phrase that a pronoun refers back to: Many people feel a great curiosity to find out about their antecedents. In the sentence "He picked a book off the shelf and handed it to Sally", "book" is the antecedent of "it".
|
|
|
dziwoląg, oryginał, czub, start learning
|
|
Some whacko called telling us to get out of there.
|
|
|
start learning
|
|
the back of the neck She kissed the nape of his neck.
|
|
|
start learning
|
|
|
|
|
ciężkostrawny, sycący (o jedzeniu); nudny (np. o sztuce), drętwy (np. o atmosferze), start learning
|
|
stuffy Stodgy food is heavy and unhealthy, sometimes in an unpleasant way: boring, serious, and formal I've been eating too many stodgy puddings. Neither company has succeeded in shedding its stodgy image. Younger consumers, it is said, regard their products as stodgy and unfashionable
|
|
|
start learning
|
|
a short plant or its small seed-like fruits that have a flavour similar to but weaker than aniseed and are used in food, especially for making bread or cake:
|
|
|
start learning
|
|
|
|
|
start learning
|
|
be on first name terms with somebody
|
|
|
dostrzegać, zauważać, obczaić (BE) - potocyzm; mierzyć czas start learning
|
|
You must clock the new doctor, he is cute.
|
|
|
zlać, stłuc, dać lanie; skóra start learning
|
|
the strong, thick skin of an animal, used for making leather I'll hide you if you dare to return to our family farmstead. I'll have your hide once we get home
|
|
|
start learning
|
|
small pieces of metal that fly through the air when a bomb or similar weapon explodes and are intended to injure people Twelve people were hit by shrapnel in the attack. a shrapnel wound. shrapnel granate
|
|
|
start learning
|
|
If you say that someone goes to great lengths to achieve something, you mean that they try very hard and perhaps do extreme things in order to achieve it. Greta Garbo went to great lengths to hide from reporters and photographers
|
|
|
marnieć, gnić, popaść w zapomnienie, poniewierać się (np. osoba, przedmiot), stracić animusz, werwę, podupaść start learning
|
|
to exist in an unpleasant or unwanted situation, often for a long time. PINE After languishing in obscurity for many years, her early novels have recently been rediscovered. He has been languishing in jail for the past 20 years. The ruling party is languishing in third place in the opinion polls.
|
|
|
start learning
|
|
She can talk about her kids on end. I have been working on end today
|
|
|
po czyjejś stronie, z czyjejś strony start learning
|
|
The problem has been fixed on their end
|
|
|
start learning
|
|
a tool like a hammer with a large, flat end made of wood or rubber: Lay it on a workbench and sharply smack it with a mallet. The strong men in the circus swing a mallet to ring the bell.
|
|
|
start learning
|
|
to get enough food or money to stay alive, but no more: The prisoners were subsisting on a diet of bread and water. These people subsist on rice, beans, fruits, and vegetables.
|
|
|
start learning
|
|
because of. a small hollow mark in the surface of something, caused by pressure or by being hit She got what she wanted by dint of pleading and threatening. Additionally, many have dints that must be derived from rough handling before firing.
|
|
|
start learning
|
|
sometimes Every so often I came out just long enough to get water. And every so often, a small change does make a big difference.
|
|
|
knot (część świeczki), obraźliwie pała start learning
|
|
a piece of string in the centre of a candle, or a similar part of a light, that supplies fuel to a flame
|
|
|