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Толковый словарь английского языка Oxford English Reference - tick

 

Tick

tick
1. n. & v. --n. 1 a slight recurring click esp. that of a watch or clock. 2 esp. Brit. colloq. a moment; an instant. 3 a mark to denote correctness, check items in a list, etc. --v. 1 intr. a (of a clock etc.) make ticks. b (foll. by away) (of time etc.) pass. 2 intr. (of a mechanism) work, function (take it apart to see how it ticks). 3 tr. a mark (a written answer etc.) with a tick. b (often foll. by off) mark (an item in a list etc.) with a tick in checking. Phrases and idioms in two ticks Brit. colloq. in a very short time. tick off colloq. reprimand. tick over 1 (of an engine etc.) idle. 2 (of a person, project, etc.) be working or functioning at a basic or minimum level. tick-tack (or tic-tac) Brit. a kind of manual semaphore signalling used by racecourse bookmakers to exchange information. tick-tack-toe US noughts and crosses. tick-tock the ticking of a large clock etc. what makes a person tick colloq. a person's motivation. Derivatives tickless adj. Etymology: ME: cf. Du. tik, LG tikk touch, tick 2. n. 1 any of various arachnids of the order Acarina, parasitic on the skin of dogs and cattle etc. 2 any of various insects of the family Hippoboscidae, parasitic on sheep and birds etc. 3 colloq. an unpleasant or despicable person. Phrases and idioms tick-bird = ox-pecker. tick fever a bacterial or rickettsial fever transmitted by the bite of a tick. Etymology: OE ticca (recorded as ticia); ME teke, tyke: cf. MDu., MLG teke, OHG zecho 3. n. colloq. credit (buy goods on tick). Etymology: app. an abbr. of TICKET in phr. on the ticket 4. n. 1 the cover of a mattress or pillow. 2 = TICKING. Etymology: ME tikke, teke f. WG f. L theca f. Gk theke case
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1.
  I. noun Etymology: Middle English tyke, teke; akin to Middle High German zeche ~, Armenian tiz Date: 14th century any of a superfamily (Ixodoidea) of bloodsucking acarid arachnids that are larger than the related mites, attach themselves to warm-blooded vertebrates to feed, and include important vectors of infectious diseases, any of various usually wingless parasitic dipteran flies, II. noun see: do Date: 15th century the fabric case of a mattress, pillow, or bolster, ~ing I, III. noun Etymology: Middle English tek pat, light stroke; akin to Middle High German zic light push Date: 1680 1. a light rhythmic audible tap or beat, the time taken by the ~ of a clock ; moment, a small spot or mark, IV. verb Date: 1721 intransitive verb to make the sound of a ~ or a series of ~s, to operate as a functioning mechanism ; run , transitive verb to mark with a written ~ ; check, to mark, count, or announce by or as if by ~ing beats , to touch with a momentary glancing blow , V. noun Etymology: short for 1~et Date: 1642 credit, trust ...
Толковый словарь английского языка

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