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Англо-русский Русско-английский научно-технический словарь - wound

 
 

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Перевод с английского языка wound на русский

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1.
  1) виток 2) намотанный ...
Англо-русский Русско-английский словарь по машиностроению
2.
  рана; ранить ...
Англо-русский Русско-английский биологический словарь
3.
  1. рана, ранение green wound —- свежая (незажившая) рана wound in the arm —- ранение в руку wound of exit —- мед. выходное отверстие раны wound healing —- заживление раны wound shock —- травматический шок 2. душевная боль; обида, оскорбление to reopen a wound —- бередить старую рану to inflict a wound upon smb.'s honour —- оскорбить чью-л. честь lover's wound —- муки любви a wound to one's vanity —- удар по самолюбию it was a wound to my pride —- это задело мою гордость 3. порез, разрез, насечка (на дереве и т. п.) Id: to lick one's wounds —- зализывать раны Id: our team is still licking its wounds after its unexpected defeat —- наша команда все еще приходит в себя после неожиданного поражения Id: to rub salt into smb.'s wounds —- сыпать соль на раны 4. ранить wounded in the head —- раненный в голову 5. причинить боль; уколоть, задеть to wound the ear —- резать слух wounded in his deepest affections —- оскорбленный в своих лучших чувствах 6. с-х. скарифицировать (семена) 7. p. и p-p. от wind ...
Новый большой англо-русский словарь
4.
   1. noun  1) рана; ранение  2) обида, оскорбление; ущерб  2. v.  1) ранить  2) причинить боль, задеть; to wound smb. s feelings - задеть чьи-л. чувства; he was wounded in his deepest affections - он был оскорблен в своих лучших чувствах Syn: bruise, cut, lacerate, scar ...
Англо-русский словарь
5.
  1. n. & v. --n. 1 an injury done to living tissue by a cut or blow etc., esp. beyond the cutting or piercing of the skin. 2 an injury to a person's reputation or a pain inflicted on a person's feelings. 3 poet. the pangs of love. --v.tr. inflict a wound on (wounded soldiers; wounded feelings). Derivatives woundingly adv. woundless adj. Etymology: OE wund (n.), wundian (v.) 2. past and past part. of WIND(2) (cf. WIND(1) v. 6). ...
Толковый словарь английского языка Oxford English Reference
6.
   I. noun  Etymology: Middle English, from Old English wund; akin to Old High German wunta ~  Date: before 12th century  1.  a. an injury to the body (as from violence, accident, or surgery) that typically involves laceration or breaking of a membrane (as the skin) and usually damage to underlying tissues  b. a cut or breach in a plant usually due to an external agent  2. a mental or emotional hurt or blow  3. something resembling a ~ in appearance or effect; especially a rift in or blow to a political body or social group  II. verb  Date: before 12th century  transitive verb to cause a ~ to or in  intransitive verb to inflict a ~  III. past and past participle of wind ...
Merriam-Webster Collegiate Dictionary
7.
  I. [c red]VERB FORM OF ‘WIND’ Wound is the past tense and past participle of wind 2. II. [c red]INJURY (wounds, wounding, wounded) Frequency: The word is one of the 1500 most common words in English. 1. A wound is damage to part of your body, especially a cut or a hole in your flesh, which is caused by a gun, knife, or other weapon. The wound is healing nicely... Six soldiers are reported to have died from their wounds. N-COUNT 2. If a weapon or something sharp wounds you, it damages your body. A bomb exploded in a hotel, killing six people and wounding another five... The two wounded men were taken to a nearby hospital. VERB: V n, V-ed • The wounded are people who are wounded. Hospitals said they could not cope with the wounded... N-PLURAL 3. A wound is a lasting bad effect on someone’s mind or feelings caused by a very upsetting experience. (LITERARY) She has been so deeply hurt it may take forever for the wounds to heal. N-COUNT 4. If you are wounded by what someone says or does, your feelings are deeply hurt. He was deeply wounded by the treachery of close aides... = hurt VERB: be V-ed 5. to rub salt into the wound: see salt ...
Collins COBUILD Advanced Learner's English Dictionary
8.
  ~1 the past tense and past participle of wind2 ~2 n 1 an injury, especially a cut or hole made in your skin by a weapon such as a knife or a bullet  (A nurse cleaned and bandaged the wound. | gunshot wounds | flesh wound (=slight injury caused by a bullet touching your skin)) 2 a feeling of emotional or mental pain that you get when someone says or does something unpleasant to you  (the mental wounds caused by parental abuse | a wound to my pride) 3 open old wounds to remind someone of unpleasant things that happened in the past  (- see also lick your wounds lick1 (6), rub salt into sb's wounds rub1 (7)) ~3 v 1 to injure someone, especially by making a cut or hole in their skin using a knife, gun etc  (Gunmen killed two people and wounded six others in an attack today.) 2 to make someone feel unhappy or upset  (a wounding remark) ...
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
9.
  - O.E. wund "hurt, injury," from PIE base *wen-. The verb is from O.E. wundian. ...
Английский Этимологический словарь

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