dictionnaire Polonais - Anglais

język polski - English

szarpniecie Anglais:

1. jerk


Lucy jerked awake from a nightmare.
She dumped him because she thought he was a jerk.
The car made a strange noise and then jerked to a halt.
He's such a jerk! He told us we were the worst class he's ever taught.
Ern jerked the steering wheel so hard that a whole farmhouse had to jump aside to avoid the bus.
Tell him I'm not home. I don't wanna talk to that jerk.
What a bunch of incompetent jerks.
... to have someone else jerk the strings that tie...
He's such a shameless jerk.
He's completely convinced of his own greatness but to the people around him he's just a selfish jerk.
Suppose there's some jerk you just can't get on with.
You're a jerk.
Get lost, stupid jerk!
The jerk factory called. They want their product back.

Anglais mot "szarpniecie"(jerk) se produit dans des ensembles:

Friends 1 (14)
Harry part 1

2. jolt


The car gave a jolt.
we were jolted about, it jolted him out of his routine
His look held me just a moment too long, and I felt a jolt.
I jolt myself out of it.
It has an icky taste but it also has a jolt.
With a sudden jolt the train started moving again.
I felt a jolt in my arm 2. The passengers were jolted as the plane started descending.

3. pluck


expertly plucked eyebrows
it must have taken a lot of pluck to walk along a path marked ‘Danger’
Birds pluck out their feathers. He plucked the letter from my hand. He was plucked from obscurity to star in the film.
Not unless he wanted to pluck up the courage
To pluck a chicken.
Gary has to pluck a whole lot of thorns out of his leg every time he trips over the rosebush.
The last passengers were plucked from the ship just seconds before it sank.
He leaned down and plucked the red rose.
And their response, of course, was no more than we wanted to stop the genocide and put our troops in harm’s way to do that, nor do we now want to get in the way and pluck genocidaires from camps.
She gave a pluck at my elbow.
Or would I were a little burnish'd apple For you to pluck me, gliding by so cold, While sun and shade your robe of lawn will dapple, Your robe of lawn, and your hair's spun gold.

4. tugging


I didn’t break the piñata; I don’t think I even hit it—the adult who was tugging at the rope from which the piñata was suspended to “make the game more challenging” saw to that.

5. tug


He felt a tug of jealousy.
She tugged at his sleeve to get his attention.
When stay-at-home parents gather at the school gate to collect their little ones and your daughter sees them go on for tea at each other’s homes, such a request as Emily’s tugs at the heart strings
All you need to do is tug the strip as shown below.
Tom tugged at his mother's arm.
I can take a fellow's head clean off with just a little tug.
I would tug it like Reksio would tug ham.
Parliamentary activity has become a political tug of war between the ruling and opposition parties over the issue.