dictionnaire Polonais - Anglais

język polski - English

chrząkanie Anglais:

1. grunt


He pulled harder on the rope, grunting with the effort.
He grunted some more and promised to scold her when she got home
The pigs grunted when they smelled the food.
Grunt when lifting a heavy suitcase. OR When I asked him if he was annoyed with me, he just grunted.
More beer means more grunts.
Where's your bathroom? I've gotta grunt.
O.K. I'm a grunt. But at least I have a chance to accomplish something in my life this way.
Did you see that grunt on TV? A real caveman.
I grunted and groaned.
Eddie mostly grunted, never saying much.
He seldom slept, for one thing, and he had that peculiarly American ability to exhibit contempt for the working class while also resonating powerfully with it—in his case as a self-made grunt, a latter-day Pete Rose.

2. hawking


It was clear that Hawking would live longer than was first thought.
Hawking went back to his studies.
When Hawking graduated from college in 1962, he began studying for a Ph.D. in physics.
... survive by unloading lorries, hawking crafts and selling sex.
Then Hawking wanted to finish his degree, work at Cambridge, and keep on living.
One October morning in 1987, Stephen Hawking sat before his computer.
The words Dr. Hawking was choosing this morning would be printed out and sent to the publisher of his book.
Rejecting the urging of his physician father to study medicine, Hawking chose instead to concentrate on mathematics and physics.
Again, Hawking was almost ready to give up.
When he started the book, Hawking was unable to write by hand at all.

3. oink


What did that oink want?
The cow goes "moo," the rooster goes "cock-a-doodle-doo," the pig goes "oink, oink," the duck goes "quack, quack" and the cat goes "meow."