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Англо-русский Русско-английский биологический словарь - volley

 
 

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Перевод с английского языка volley на русский

volley
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1.
  1. залп to fire (to discharge) a volley —- дать залп 2. ам. очередь volley fire —- воен. беглый огонь 3. ливень, град a volley of arrows —- град (туча) стрел 4. поток (насмешек и т. п.) volleys of laughter —- взрывы смеха 5. спорт. удар с лета low volley —- удар с лета в низкой точке (теннис) volley pass —- передача без остановки (футбол) 6. стрелять залпами; давать залп или очередь 7. воен. вести беглый огонь 8. осыпать градом (стрел, камней) 9. сыпаться градом (об упреках, насмешках и т. п.) 10. ударить с лета (теннис) ...
Новый большой англо-русский словарь
2.
   1. noun  1) залп  2) град, поток (упреков и т.п.)  3) удар с лета (в теннисе и т.п.)  2. v.  1) стрелять залпами  2) сыпаться градом  3) испускать (крики, жалобы; обыкн. volley forth, volley off, volley out)  4) ударить (мяч) с лета ...
Англо-русский словарь
3.
  залп, залповый ...
Англо-русский Русско-английский научно-технический словарь
4.
  n. & v. --n. (pl. -eys) 1 a the simultaneous discharge of a number of weapons. b the bullets etc. discharged in a volley. 2 (usu. foll. by of) a noisy emission of oaths etc. in quick succession. 3 Tennis the return of a ball in play before it touches the ground. 4 Football the kicking of a ball in play before it touches the ground. 5 Cricket a a ball pitched right up to the batsman or the stumps without bouncing. b the pitching of the ball in this way. --v. (-eys, -eyed) 1 tr. (also absol.) Tennis & Football return or send (a ball) by a volley. 2 tr. & absol. discharge (bullets, abuse, etc.) in a volley. 3 intr. (of bullets etc.) fly in a volley. 4 intr. (of guns etc.) sound together. 5 intr. make a sound like a volley of artillery. Derivatives volleyer n. Etymology: F vol{eacute}e ult. f. L volare fly ...
Толковый словарь английского языка Oxford English Reference
5.
   I. noun  (plural ~s)  Etymology: Middle French volee flight, from voler to fly, from Old French, from Latin volare  Date: 1573  1.  a. a flight of missiles (as arrows)  b. simultaneous discharge of a number of missile weapons  c. one round per gun in a battery fired as soon as a gun is ready without regard to order  d.  (1) the flight of the ball (as in ~ball or tennis) or its course before striking the ground; also a return of the ball before it touches the ground  (2) a kick of the ball in soccer before it rebounds  (3) the exchange of the shuttlecock in badminton following the serve  2.  a. a burst or emission of many things or a large amount at once received a ~ of angry letters a ~ of praise  b. a burst of simultaneous or immediately sequential nerve impulses passing to an end organ, synapse, or center  II. verb  (~ed; ~ing)  Date: 1591  transitive verb  1. to discharge in or as if in a ~  2. to propel (an object) while in the air and before touching the ground; especially to hit (a tennis ball) on the ~  intransitive verb  1. to become discharged in or as if in a ~  2. to make a ~; specifically to ~ an object of play (as in tennis)  • ~er noun ...
Merriam-Webster Collegiate Dictionary
6.
  (volleys, volleying, volleyed) 1. In sport, if someone volleys the ball, they hit it before it touches the ground. He volleyed the ball spectacularly into the far corner of the net... McNeil volleyed more effectively in the second set. VERB: V n prep/adv, V • Volley is also a noun. She hit most of the winning volleys. N-COUNT 2. A volley of gunfire is a lot of bullets that travel through the air at the same time. It’s still not known how many died in the volleys of gunfire... N-COUNT: oft N of n ...
Collins COBUILD Advanced Learner's English Dictionary
7.
  ~1 n 1 a large number of shots fired from a gun at the same time + of  (a volley of bullets) 2 a lot of questions, insults, attacks etc that are all said or made at the same time + of  (a volley of abuse | a volley of blows) 3 a hit in tennis, a kick in football etc when the player hits or kicks the ball before it touches the ground 4 a lot of objects that are thrown through the air at the same time + of  (a volley of stones) ~2 v 1 to hit or kick a ball before it touches the ground, especially in tennis or football  (Ince volleyed the ball over the net.) 2 if a large number of guns volley, they are all fired at the same time ...
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
8.
  - 1573, "discharge of a number of guns at once," from M.Fr. volee "flight," from L. volatum, pp. of volare "to fly." Sporting sense (originally in tennis) is from 1819 (v.), 1862 (n.), from notion of hitting the ball in flight. ...
Английский Этимологический словарь

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