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Merriam-Webster Collegiate Dictionary - barricade

 
 

Связанные словари

Barricade

barricade
 I. transitive verb  (-caded; -cading)  Etymology: 2~  Date: 1592  1. to block off or stop up with a ~ ~ a street  2. to prevent access to by means of a ~  II. noun  Etymology: French, from Middle French, from barriquer to ~, from barrique barrel  Date: 1642  1. an obstruction or rampart thrown up across a way or passage to check the advance of the enemy  2. barrier 3, obstacle  3. plural a field of combat or dispute
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См. в других словарях

1.
  n. & v. --n. a barrier, esp. one improvised across a street etc. --v.tr. block or defend with a barricade. Etymology: F f. barrique cask f. Sp. barrica, rel. to BARREL ...
Толковый словарь английского языка Oxford English Reference
2.
  1) преграда преграждать 2) горн. перемычка ...
Большой Англо-русский Русско-английский политехнический словарь
3.
  заграждение, преграда; ограждение ...
Англо-русский строительный словарь
4.
  баррикада, перемычка, преграда ...
Англо-русский Русско-английский научно-технический словарь
5.
  1. баррикада barricade tactics —- тактика баррикадных боев 2. преграда 3. воен. заграждение 4. дор. ограждение 5. баррикадировать to barricade the door —- забаррикадировать дверь streets were barricaded —- на улицах были сооружены баррикады 6. (from, against) оградить (себя и т. п. от кого-л., чего-л.) ...
Новый большой англо-русский словарь
6.
   1. noun  1) баррикада  2) преграда Syn: see obstacle  2. v. баррикадировать ...
Англо-русский словарь
7.
  (barricades, barricading, barricaded) 1. A barricade is a line of vehicles or other objects placed across a road or open space to stop people getting past, for example during street fighting or as a protest. Large areas of the city have been closed off by barricades set up by the demonstrators. = blockade N-COUNT 2. If you barricade something such as a road or an entrance, you place a barricade or barrier across it, usually to stop someone getting in. The rioters barricaded streets with piles of blazing tyres... The doors had been barricaded. VERB: V n, V n 3. If you barricade yourself inside a room or building, you place barriers across the door or entrance so that other people cannot get in. The students have barricaded themselves into their dormitory building... About forty prisoners are still barricaded inside the wrecked buildings. VERB: V pron-refl prep/adv, V-ed ...
Collins COBUILD Advanced Learner's English Dictionary
8.
  ~1 n a temporary wall or fence across a road, door etc that prevents people from going through  (Soldiers fired over the barricades at the rebels.) ~2 v to protect or close something by building a barricade  (Terrorists had barricaded themselves inside the embassy.) ...
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English

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