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Англо-русский Русско-английский экономический словарь - drug

 
 

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Перевод с английского языка drug на русский

drug
сущ. 1) лекарство 2) средство 3) наркотик • - Food and Drug Administration - drug abuse - drug in the market - drug trafficker
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См. в других словарях

1.
  1) (лекарственный) препарат; медикамент 2) наркотик – antimitotic drug ...
Англо-русский Русско-английский биологический словарь
2.
  1. лекарство, средство; медикамент; снадобье narcotic drugs —- наркотики drug of abuse —- лекарство, допускающее злоупотребление (стимулятор, наркотик, галлюциноген и т. п.) drug administration —- применение лекарств drug plant —- лекарственное растение drug industry —- фармацевтическая промышленность to be doing drugs —- разг. заниматься фармакологией 2. наркотик drug addict (fiend) —- наркоман drug habit (addiction) —- наркомания drug courier —- курьер, перевозящий наркотики drug traffic —- (разг. pushing, peddling) торговля наркотиками to take drugs —- принимать наркотики; быть наркоманом 3. неходкий товар (часто drug in или on the market) 4. допинг 5. подмешивать наркотики или яд to drug smb.'s wine —- подмешать наркотик в вино кому-л. 6. давать наркотики to drug oneself —- принять наркотик; принимать наркотики, быть наркоманом 7. злоупотреблять наркотиками, быть наркоманом 8. разг. насыщать, накачивать drugged with pleasure —- пресыщенный; ублаготворенный, размякший от удовольствия 9. лесовоз ...
Новый большой англо-русский словарь
3.
  fiend наркоман DRUG addict наркоман DRUG habit наркомания DRUG taker наркоман DRUG  1. noun  1) лекарство, медикамент  2) наркотик  3) неходкий товар; то, что никому не нужно (обыкн. drug in/on the market)  4) attr. лекарственный drug plants - лекарственные растения  5) attr. наркотический - drug addict - drug taker - drug habit Syn: medication, medicine, narcotic, pharmaceutical, remedy, specific  2. v.  1) подмешивать наркотики или яд (в пищу)  2) давать наркотики  3) употреблять наркотики  4) притуплять (чувства) ...
Англо-русский словарь
4.
  1) прицеп для перевозки (лесоматериалов) 2) бтх краситель, краска 3) лекарственное средство ...
Большой Англо-русский Русско-английский политехнический словарь
5.
  n. & v. --n. 1 a medicinal substance. 2 a narcotic, hallucinogen, or stimulant, esp. one causing addiction. --v. (drugged, drugging) 1 tr. add a drug to (food or drink). 2 tr. a administer a drug to. b stupefy with a drug. 3 intr. take drugs as an addict. Phrases and idioms drug addict a person who is addicted to a narcotic drug. drug on the market a commodity that is plentiful but no longer in demand. drug peddler (colloq. pusher) a person who sells esp. addictive drugs illegally. drug squad a division of a police force investigating crimes involving illegal drugs. Etymology: ME drogges, drouges f. OF drogue, of unkn. orig. ...
Толковый словарь английского языка Oxford English Reference
6.
   I. noun  Etymology: Middle English drogge  Date: 14th century  1.  a. obsolete a substance used in dyeing or chemical operations  b. a substance used as a medication or in the preparation of medication  c. according to the Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act  (1) a substance recognized in an official pharmacopoeia or formulary  (2) a substance intended for use in the diagnosis, cure, mitigation, treatment, or prevention of disease  (3) a substance other than food intended to affect the structure or function of the body  (4) a substance intended for use as a component of a medicine but not a device or a component, part, or accessory of a device  2. a commodity that is not salable or for which there is no demand — used in the phrase ~ on the market  3. something and often an illegal substance that causes addiction, habituation, or a marked change in consciousness  • ~gy also ~gie adjective  II. verb  (~ged; ~ging)  Date: 1605  transitive verb  1. to affect with a ~; especially to stupefy by a narcotic ~  2. to administer a ~ to  3. to lull or stupefy as if with a ~  intransitive verb to take ~s for narcotic effect  III. dialect past of drag DRUG  geographical name — see Durg ...
Merriam-Webster Collegiate Dictionary
7.
  (drugs, drugging, drugged) Frequency: The word is one of the 700 most common words in English. 1. A drug is a chemical which is given to people in order to treat or prevent an illness or disease. The drug will be useful to hundreds of thousands of infected people. ...the drug companies. N-COUNT 2. Drugs are substances that some people take because of their pleasant effects, but which are usually illegal. His mother was on drugs, on cocaine... She was sure Leo was taking drugs... ...the problem of drug abuse. N-COUNT 3. If you drug a person or animal, you give them a chemical substance in order to make them sleepy or unconscious. She was drugged and robbed. VERB: V n 4. If food or drink is drugged, a chemical substance is added to it in order to make someone sleepy or unconscious when they eat or drink it. I wonder now if that drink had been drugged... Anyone could have drugged that wine. VERB: be V-ed, V n ...
Collins COBUILD Advanced Learner's English Dictionary
8.
  ~1 n 1 an illegal substance that people smoke, inject (1) etc to make them feel happy or excited  (He was arrested for selling drugs. | take/use drugs)  (My cousin has been taking drugs for years. | do drugs slang (=take drugs habitually))  (Has she been doing drugs, or does she always act like this? | be on drugs (=use drugs regularly))  (My grandfather thinks all kids these days are on drugs. | illegal drugs)  (They test their employees for traces of illegal drugs. | drug abuse (=the use of illegal drugs))  (the problem of drug abuse in the inner city | hard drug (=a dangerous drug such as heroin, cocaine etc) | soft drug (=one that is not considered very harmful such as marijuana) | dangerous drugs)  (a well-known expert on the abuse of dangerous drugs) 2 a medicine or a substance for making medicines  (a drug used in the treatment of cancer | prescribe a drug)  (Doctors should only prescribe drugs when it's really necessary.) 3 a drug on the market something that cannot be sold because there is too much of it available  (- see also miracle drug miracle (3), designer drug) ~2 v drugged, drugging 1 to give someone a drug, especially in order to make feel them tired or go to sleep  (They had to drug the lion before they transported it.) 2 to add drugs to someone's food or drink to make them feel tired or go to sleep 3 be drugged up (to the eyeballs) especially BrE to have been given a lot of drugs by a doctor  (I tried to speak to her after the operation, but she was drugged up to the eyeballs.) 4 drugged out AmE always taking and influenced by drugs  (Greg's a real smart guy, it's too bad he's drugged out all the time.) - drugged adj ...
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
9.
  NASDAQ abbr. Dragon Pharmaceuticals ...
English abbreviation dictionary
10.
  - 14c., from O.Fr. drouge, perhaps from M.Du. or M.L.G. droge-vate "dry barrels," with first element mistaken as word for the contents (see dry goods). Application to "narcotics and opiates" is 1880s, though association with "poisons" is 1500s. Druggie first recorded 1968. ...
Английский Этимологический словарь

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