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Англо-русский Русско-английский биологический словарь - swamp

 
 

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Перевод с английского языка swamp на русский

swamp
болото; лесное болото; топь, трясинаalder swamp – back swamp – lowland swamp – mangrove swamp – peat swamp – reed swamp – salt swamp – transitional swamp – upland swamp – wood swamp
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1.
  1. болото, топь, трясина 2. заливать, затоплять a big eave swamped the boat —- большая волна залила лодку 3. погружаться, тонуть 4. засыпать, заваливать (письмами, заявлениями и т. п.) they swamped him with questions —- они засыпали его вопросами he was swamped with work —- он был завален работой 5. наводнять they swamped the village —- они наводнили всю деревню 6. губить he had debts enough to swamp any man —- у него было столько долгов, что это бы разорило любого 7. обыкн. pass засасывать 8. ам. очищать волок (от подлеска, хвороста и т. п.) ...
Новый большой англо-русский словарь
2.
   1. noun  1) болото, топь  2) attr. болотный; болотистый; swamp fever - малярия; swamp ore - болотная железная руда, лимонит Syn: see marsh  2. v.  1) заливать, затоплять (with); Last nights storm has swamped the wheat fields with rain.  2) usu. past part. засыпать, заваливать (письмами, заявлениями и т.п.) (with); The office has been swamped with complaints about the washing machines.  3) usu. past part. засасывать Syn: see flood ...
Англо-русский словарь
3.
  1) болотоходный 2) заболачивать 3) заболотить 4) тех. заглушать - swamp gas - swamp tractor ...
Англо-русский Русско-английский научно-технический словарь
4.
  болото; заболоченная (затопляемая) местность ...
Англо-русский строительный словарь
5.
  1) болото заболачивать(ся) 2) местное понижение угольного пласта 3) обрубать; вырубать to swamp out — подавлять (собственные шумы) ...
Большой Англо-русский Русско-английский политехнический словарь
6.
  n. & v. --n. a piece of waterlogged ground; a bog or marsh. --v. 1 a tr. overwhelm, flood, or soak with water. b intr. become swamped. 2 tr. overwhelm or make invisible etc. with an excess or large amount of something. Derivatives swampy adj. (swampier, swampiest). Etymology: 17th c., = dial. swamp sunk (14th c.), prob. of Gmc orig. ...
Толковый словарь английского языка Oxford English Reference
7.
   I. noun  Etymology: perhaps alteration of Middle English sompe, from Middle Dutch somp morass; akin to Middle High German sumpf marsh, Greek somphos spongy  Date: 1624  1. a wetland often partially or intermittently covered with water; especially one dominated by woody vegetation  2. a tract of ~  3. a difficult or troublesome situation or subject  • ~ adjective  II. verb  Date: 1784  transitive verb  1.  a. to fill with or as if with water ; inundate, submerge  b. to overwhelm numerically or by an excess of something ; flood ~ed with work  2. to open by removing underbrush and debris  intransitive verb to become submerged ...
Merriam-Webster Collegiate Dictionary
8.
  (swamps, swamping, swamped) 1. A swamp is an area of very wet land with wild plants growing in it. N-VAR 2. If something swamps a place or object, it fills it with water. A rogue wave swamped the boat... VERB: V n 3. If you are swamped by things or people, you have more of them than you can deal with. He is swamped with work... VERB: usu passive, be V-ed ...
Collins COBUILD Advanced Learner's English Dictionary
9.
  ~1 n land that is always very wet or slightly covered with water  (- compare marsh) - swampy adj  (swampy ground) ~2 v 1 usually passive to suddenly give someone a lot of work, problems etc to deal with  (swamp sb with sth)  (We've been swamped with calls since we put the ad in the paper.) 2 to suddenly cover something with a lot of water, especially in a way that causes damage  (The shoreline was swamped by the high tides.) ...
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
10.
  ocean sc. abbr. Southwest Area Monsoon Project funny abbr. Sflis Wing Of Anime And Manga People gen. bus. abbr. Starting With A Marketing Plan ...
English abbreviation dictionary
11.
  - 1624 (first used by Capt. John Smith, in reference to Virginia), perhaps from an O.E. cognate of O.N. svoppr "sponge, fungus," from P.Gmc. *swampuz; but traditionally connected with M.E. sompe "morass, swamp," probably from M.Du. somp or M.L.G. sump "swamp." The verb sense of "overwhelm, sink as if in a swamp" is first recorded 1818. ...
Английский Этимологический словарь

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