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Англо-русский Русско-английский биологический словарь - monkey

 
 

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Перевод с английского языка monkey на русский

monkey
обезьяна – Allen's swamp monkey – banded leaf monkey – black-and-red howler monkey – black-handed spider monkey – black howler monkey – black spider monkey – blue monkey – bonnet monkey – brown-headed spider monkey – brown howler monkey – capuchin monkey – cebid monkeys – colobus monkey – common squirrel monkey – diadem monkey – Diana monkey – dusky leaf monkey – Formosan rhesus monkey – Goeldi's monkey – grass monkey – gray leaf monkey – greater white-nosed monkey – green monkey – Guatemalan howler monkey – howler monkey – hussar monkey – leaf monkey – lesser white-nosed monkey – lion monkey – long-haired spider monkey – long-nosed monkey – mantled howler monkey – maroon leaf monkey – military monkey – mitis monkey – mona monkey – mountain monkey – moustached monkey – New World monkeys – night monkey – Old World monkeys – ouakari monkey – owl monkey – owl-faced monkey – patas monkey – pig-tailed monkey – platyrrhine monkeys – proboscis monkey – putty-nosed monkey – red-backed squirrel monkey – red-bellied monkey – red-eared monkey – red howler monkey – rhesus monkey – ring-tailed monkey – rufous-handed howler monkey – silvered leaf monkey – snub-nosed monkey – spider monkey – squirrel monkey – Sunda leaf monkey – talapoin monkey – three-banded night monkey – titi monkey – Tonkin snub-nosed monkey – toque monkey – ursine howler monkey – vervet monkey – white-eyelid monkey – white-fronted leaf monkey – widow monkey – woolly monkey – woolly spider monkey
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См. в других словарях

1.
  1. зоол. обезьяна (Primates; Gebidae) 2. разг. обезьяна, мартышка 3. обезьяний мех 4. шалун, проказник you young monkey! —- ах ты шалунишка (проказник)! 5. разг. обезьяна, кривляка 6. глиняный кувшин с узким горлышком 7. стеклоплавильный тигель 8. сл. пятьсот фунтов стерлингов 9. ам. сл. пятьсот долларов 10. австрал. сл. овца 11. диал. заяц 12. тех. копровая баба 13. тех. тележка подъемного крана 14. тех. клещевой захват Id: to get one's monkey up —- рассердиться, разозлиться Id: to put smb.'s monkey up —- рассердить (разозлить) кого-л. Id: to suck (to sup) the monkey —- пить из горлышка (бутылки); пить ром из скорлупы кокосового ореха; тайком тянуть вино из бочонка (обычно через соломинку) Id: to make a monkey (out) of smb. —- сделать кого-л. посмешищем Id: to have a monkey on one's back —- ам. сл. быть наркоманом 15. подшучивать; дурачиться; забавляться 16. передразнивать 17. трогать, брать в руки то, что не следует; портить неумелым обращением stop monkeying (about) with those tools —- оставь в покое эти инструменты 18. вмешиваться, соваться ...
Новый большой англо-русский словарь
2.
  tricks шалости, проказы MONKEY  1. noun; pl. -s  1) обезьяна  2) joc.; disapprov. шалун, проказник  3) tech. копровая баба  4) тележка подъемного крана  5) глиняный кувшин с узким горлышком  6) sl. пятьсот фунтов стерлингов; amer. пятьсот долларов  7) sl. закладная put smb. s monkey up - разозлить (кого-л.) get ones monkey up - рассердиться, разозлиться  2. v.  1) подшучивать, дурачиться; забавляться  2) передразнивать  3) вмешиваться, соваться  4) портить; неумело обращаться (with, about, around); I knew a window would soon get broken, with all those children monkeying around in the garden ...
Англо-русский словарь
3.
  клещевой захват, подвесной молот для забивки свай ...
Англо-русский Русско-английский научно-технический словарь
4.
  копровый молот (свободно падающий) ...
Англо-русский строительный словарь
5.
  1) горн. вентиляционный ходок; просек 2) клещевой захват 3) шлаковая лётка 4) тележка (подъёмного крана) 5) подвесной молот (для забивки свай) 6) тигель для варки малых порций стекла ...
Большой Англо-русский Русско-английский политехнический словарь
6.
  n. & v. --n. (pl. -eys) 1 any of various New World and Old World primates esp. of the families Cebidae (including capuchins), Callitrichidae (including marmosets and tamarins), and Cercopithecidae (including baboons and apes). 2 a mischievous person, esp. a child (young monkey). 3 sl. a Brit. {pound}500. b US $500. 4 (in full monkey engine) a machine hammer for pile-driving etc. --v. (-eys, -eyed) 1 tr. mimic or mock. 2 intr. (often foll. by with) tamper or play mischievous tricks. 3 intr. (foll. by around, about) fool around. Phrases and idioms have a monkey on one's back sl. be a drug addict. make a monkey of humiliate by making appear ridiculous. monkey bread the baobab tree or its fruit. monkey business colloq. mischief. monkey flower a mimulus, esp. Mimulus cardinalis, with bright yellow flowers. monkey-jacket a short close-fitting jacket worn by sailors etc. or at a mess. monkey-nut a peanut. monkey-puzzle a coniferous tree, Araucaria araucaria, native to Chile, with downward-pointing branches and small close-set leaves. monkey-suit colloq. evening dress. monkey tricks colloq. mischief. monkey wrench a wrench with an adjustable jaw. Derivatives monkeyish adj. Etymology: 16th c.: orig. unkn. (perh. LG) ...
Толковый словарь английского языка Oxford English Reference
7.
   I. noun  (plural ~s)  Etymology: probably of Low German origin; akin to Moneke, name of an ape, probably of Romance origin; akin to Old Spanish mona ~  Date: circa 1530  1. a nonhuman primate mammal with the exception usually of the lemurs and tarsiers; especially any of the smaller longer-tailed catarrhine or platyrrhine primates as contrasted with the apes  2.  a. a person resembling a ~  b. a ludicrous figure ; dupe  3. any of various machines, implements, or vessels; especially the falling weight of a pile driver  4. a desperate desire for or addiction to drugs — often used in the phrase ~ on one's back; broadly a persistent or annoying encumbrance or problem  II. verb  (~ed; ~ing)  Date: 1859  transitive verb mimic, mock  intransitive verb  1. to act in a grotesque or mischievous manner  2.  a. fool, trifle — often used with around  b. tamper — usually used with with ...
Merriam-Webster Collegiate Dictionary
8.
  (monkeys) 1. A monkey is an animal with a long tail which lives in hot countries and climbs trees. N-COUNT 2. If you refer to a child as a monkey, you are saying in an affectionate way that he or she is very lively and naughty. She’s such a little monkey. N-COUNT: usu adj N c darkgreen]feelings ...
Collins COBUILD Advanced Learner's English Dictionary
9.
  ~1 n 1 »ANIMAL« a small brown animal with a long tail, which uses its hands to climb trees and lives in hot countries 2 »CHILD« informal a small child who is very active and likes to play tricks  (Stop that, you little monkey!) 3 monkey business informal behaviour that may cause trouble or may be dishonest  (The boys are awfully quiet - I think they're up to some monkey business.) 4 make a monkey (out) of sb to make someone seem stupid  (They got into the palace in broad daylight, and made monkeys out of the security men.) 5 I don't give a monkey's BrE spoken used to say that you do not care at all about something  (To be honest I don't give a monkey's what they do.) 6 a monkey on your back AmE informal a serious problem that makes your life very difficult, especially being dependent on drugs ~2 v monkey around also monkey about phr v BrE informal to behave in a stupid or careless way  (They were monkeying around in the playground and one of them got hurt.)  (I wish those kids would stop monkeying around with the remote control!) ...
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
10.
  See: GREASE MONKEY, MAKE A FOOL OF or MAKE A MONKEY OF. ...
Английский словарь американских идиом
11.
  - 1530, from M.L.G. Moneke, Ger. version of the name of the son of Martin the Ape in the popular medieval beast story "Roman de Renart" ("Reynard the Fox"); in O.Fr., the name was Monequin, and is evidently a dim. of some personal name, or of O.It. monna or Sp. mona "female ape," both probably from Ar. maimun "monkey." Used affectionately for "child" since 1605. Monkeyshines is 1832, Amer.Eng.; monkey business attested from 1883. Monkey suit "fancy uniform" is from 1886. To have a monkey on one's back "be addicted" is 1930s narcotics slang, though the same phrase in the 1860s meant "to be angry." There is a story in the Sinbad cycle about a tormenting ape-like creature that mounts a man's shoulders and won't get off, which may be the root of the term. In 1890s British slang, to have a monkey up the chimney meant "to have a mortgage on one's house." ...
Английский Этимологический словарь

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