dictionnaire islandais - Anglais

Íslenska - English

fótur Anglais:

1. leg leg


This drawing is less than great. He needs to do something with the line here at the back of the leg.
After a six month period, his leg was healed and is normal again.
Tom hacked Mary's leg off with a rusty machete.
Tom broke his right leg and was taken to hospital a few weeks before Christmas.
leg ache
Klava pulled everybody's leg.
Prices for land in Tokyo now are an arm and a leg for even the smallest place.
His leg was in critical condition, but fortunately it got better.
Proceeding from warm-up exercises to leg kick practice without a hitch, the lesson went completely smoothly.
A scanner allowed one to determine if one's leg was really broken.
[lɛg] leg
I'm trying out some new leg exercises.
My leg cramped up as I ran down the stairs to catch a train, and I had to sit down right there in the middle of the stairway.
He was still mumbling something about hospitals at the end of the party when he slipped on a piece of ice and broke his left leg.
Chris has very strong legs because he cycles twenty miles every day.

2. foot foot


The area of an 8-foot square room is 64 square feet.
foot ache
Football originally meant "a game played with a ball on foot" - unlike a game played on horseback, such as polo.
Now you are in Old Town, so it will be best to go by foot across Charles Bridge and then along Mostecká Street to Malostranské Square.
Her ceaseless caterwauling alarmed every dog within a 500-foot radius.
A black crocodile, troubling his rest, grabbed him suddenly by his rough and heavy foot.
In 776 B.C., the first Olympic Games were held at the foot of Mount Olympus to honor the Greeks' chief god, Zeus.
My dog was run over by a truck. He was not killed, but his foot was badly injured.
It's better not to prattle on about meaningless things. The more you open your mouth the more likely you are to put your foot in it.
Not knowing that Nancy had left him, I put my foot in my mouth when I asked Paul how she was.
There are 12 inches (30.48 centimetres) in a foot.
Once upon a time, there was a man and his wife. They had no house. They were living in the fields and sleeping at the foot of a tree.
Not thinking before he speaks, he invariably proceeds to stick his foot in his mouth.
Nay, since you will not love, would I were growing A happy daisy, in the garden path That so your silver foot might press me going, Might press me going even unto death.