walk off with v slovarju Oxford-Hachette French Dictionary

Prevodi za walk off with v slovarju angleščina»francoščina

I.walk [brit. angl. wɔːk, am. angl. wɔk] SAM. à pied is often omitted with movement verbs if we already know that the person is on foot. If it is surprising or ambiguous, à pied should be included.

1. walk:

promenade ž. spol
tour m. spol
randonnée ž. spol

1. walk:

I.view [brit. angl. vjuː, am. angl. vju] SAM.

1. view:

vue ž. spol
vue ž. spol
to take the long(-term)/short(-term) view of sth

2. view (field of vision, prospect):

view dobes., fig.
vue ž. spol
to keep sth in view dobes., fig.

with [brit. angl. wɪð, am. angl. wɪð, wɪθ] PREDL. If you have any doubts about how to translate a phrase or expression beginning with with (with a vengeance, with all my heart, with luck, with my blessing etc.) you should consult the appropriate noun entry (vengeance, heart, luck, blessing etc.).
with is often used after verbs in English (dispense with, part with, get on with etc.). For translations, consult the appropriate verb entry (dispense, part, get etc.).
This dictionary contains usage notes on such topics as the human body and illnesses, aches and pains which use the preposition with. For the index to these notes .
For further uses of with, see the entry below.

glej tudi wrong, what, vengeance, trouble, part, matter, luck, heart, get, dispense, blessing

I.wrong [brit. angl. rɒŋ, am. angl. rɔŋ] SAM.

II.wrong [brit. angl. rɒŋ, am. angl. rɔŋ] PRID.

1. wrong (incorrect):

to take the wrong turning brit. angl. or turn am. angl.

III.wrong [brit. angl. rɒŋ, am. angl. rɔŋ] PRISL.

I.what [brit. angl. wɒt, am. angl. (h)wət, (h)wɑt] ZAIM.

1. what (what exactly):

4. what (in clauses):

8. what brit. angl. (as question tag) zastar.:

II.what [brit. angl. wɒt, am. angl. (h)wət, (h)wɑt] DOL.

VII.what [brit. angl. wɒt, am. angl. (h)wət, (h)wɑt] MEDM.

VIII.what [brit. angl. wɒt, am. angl. (h)wət, (h)wɑt]

vengeance [brit. angl. ˈvɛn(d)ʒ(ə)ns, am. angl. ˈvɛndʒəns] SAM.

I.trouble [brit. angl. ˈtrʌb(ə)l, am. angl. ˈtrəb(ə)l] Troubles SAM.

1. trouble U (problems):

problèmes m. spol mn.
problème m. spol
ennuis m. spol mn.
mal m. spol de dos

3. trouble (effort, inconvenience):

peine ž. spol

4. trouble:

problèmes m. spol mn.
histoires ž. spol mn. pog.
ennuis m. spol mn.
conflits m. spol mn.
incidents m. spol mn.
remous m. spol
il a une sale gueule sleng

III.trouble [brit. angl. ˈtrʌb(ə)l, am. angl. ˈtrəb(ə)l] Troubles GLAG. preh. glag.

I.part [brit. angl. pɑːt, am. angl. pɑrt] SAM.

1. part (of whole):

partie ž. spol
région ž. spol
to be (a) part of
to be good in parts brit. angl.
in parts it's very violent brit. angl.

II.part [brit. angl. pɑːt, am. angl. pɑrt] PRISL. (partly)

I.matter [brit. angl. ˈmatə, am. angl. ˈmædər] SAM.

1. matter:

chose ž. spol
affaire ž. spol
problème m. spol
point m. spol
affaires ž. spol mn.
questions ž. spol mn. d'argent
matters arising ADMIN. JEZ.

II.matter [brit. angl. ˈmatə, am. angl. ˈmædər] GLAG. nepreh. glag.

1. luck (fortune):

chance ž. spol
malchance ž. spol
+ sub. bad or hard luck!

2. luck (good fortune):

chance ž. spol

I.heart [brit. angl. hɑːt, am. angl. hɑrt] SAM.

2. heart (site of emotion, love, sorrow etc):

cœur m. spol

8. heart (of artichoke, lettuce, cabbage, celery):

cœur m. spol

I.get <sed. del. getting, prét got, del. Pf. got, gotten am. angl.> [ɡet] GLAG. preh. glag. This much-used verb has no multi-purpose equivalent in French and therefore is very often translated by choosing a synonym: to get lunch = to prepare lunch = préparer le déjeuner.
get is used in many idiomatic expressions (to get something off one's chest etc.) and translations will be found in the appropriate entry (chest etc.). This is also true of offensive comments (get stuffed etc.) where the appropriate entry would be stuff.
Remember that when get is used to express the idea that a job is done not by you but by somebody else (to get a room painted etc.) faire is used in French followed by an infinitive (faire repeindre une pièce etc.).
When get has the meaning of become and is followed by an adjective (to get rich/drunk etc.) devenir is sometimes useful but check the appropriate entry (rich, drunk etc.) as a single verb often suffices (s'enrichir, s'enivrer etc.).
For examples and further uses of get see the entry below.

II.get <sed. del. getting, prét got, del. Pf. got, gotten am. angl.> [ɡet] GLAG. nepreh. glag.

get along with you pog.!
get away with you pog.!
get her pog.!
get him pog. in that hat!
il a cassé sa pipe pog.
to get it up vulg.
bander vulg.
to get it up vulg.
to get one's in am. angl. pog.
to get with it pog.

dispense [brit. angl. dɪˈspɛns, am. angl. dəˈspɛns] GLAG. preh. glag.

blessing [brit. angl. ˈblɛsɪŋ, am. angl. ˈblɛsɪŋ] SAM.

I.off [brit. angl. ɒf, am. angl. ɔf, ɑf] SAM. pog. (start) Off is often found as the second element in verb combinations (fall off, run off etc.) and in offensive interjections (clear off etc.). For translations consult the appropriate verb entry (fall off, run off, clear off etc.).
off is used in certain expressions such as off limits, off piste etc. and translations for these will be found under the noun entry (limit, piste etc.).
For other uses of off see the entry below.

II.off [brit. angl. ɒf, am. angl. ɔf, ɑf] PRISL.

III.off [brit. angl. ɒf, am. angl. ɔf, ɑf] PRID.

V.off [brit. angl. ɒf, am. angl. ɔf, ɑf] PREDL.

VI.off [brit. angl. ɒf, am. angl. ɔf, ɑf] MEDM.

glej tudi well off, street, run off, piste, on, limit, fall off, clear off, better off

I.well off [brit. angl. wɛlˈɒf] SAM. + glag. mn.

I.street [brit. angl. striːt, am. angl. strit] SAM.

II.street [brit. angl. striːt, am. angl. strit] PRID.

II.run off GLAG. [brit. angl. rʌn -, am. angl. rən -] (run off [sth], run [sth] off)

piste [brit. angl. piːst, am. angl. pist] SAM.

I.on [brit. angl. ɒn, am. angl. ɑn, ɔn] PREDL. When on is used as a straightforward preposition expressing position (on the beach, on the table) it is generally translated by sur: sur la plage, sur la table; on it is translated by dessus: there's a table over there, put the key on it = il y a une table là-bas, mets la clé dessus.
on is often used in verb combinations in English (depend on, rely on, cotton on etc.). For translations, consult the appropriate verb entry (depend, rely, cotton on etc.).
If you have doubts about how to translate a phrase or expression beginning with on (on demand, on impulse, on top etc.) consult the appropriate noun or other entry (demand, impulse, top etc.).
This dictionary contains usage notes on such topics as dates, islands, rivers etc. Many of these use the preposition on. For the index to these notes .
For examples of the above and further uses of on, see the entry below.

II.on [brit. angl. ɒn, am. angl. ɑn, ɔn] PRID.

III.on [brit. angl. ɒn, am. angl. ɑn, ɔn] PRISL.

IV.on [brit. angl. ɒn, am. angl. ɑn, ɔn] on and off, a. off and on PRISL.

VI.on [brit. angl. ɒn, am. angl. ɑn, ɔn]

I.limit [brit. angl. ˈlɪmɪt, am. angl. ˈlɪmɪt] SAM.

II.limit [brit. angl. ˈlɪmɪt, am. angl. ˈlɪmɪt] GLAG. preh. glag. (restrict)

III.limit [brit. angl. ˈlɪmɪt, am. angl. ˈlɪmɪt] GLAG. povr. glag.

1. fall off dobes. person, leaf, hat, label:

I.clear off GLAG. [brit. angl. klɪə -, am. angl. ˈklɪr -] (clear off) pog. brit. angl.

II.clear off GLAG. [brit. angl. klɪə -, am. angl. ˈklɪr -] (clear off [sth]) am. angl.

walk off with v slovarju PONS

Prevodi za walk off with v slovarju angleščina»francoščina

III.off [ɒf, am. angl. ɑ:f] PRID. nesprem.

IV.off [ɒf, am. angl. ɑ:f] SAM. no mn. brit. angl.

V.off [ɒf, am. angl. ɑ:f] GLAG. preh. glag. am. angl. pog. (kill)

ameriška angleščina

Enojezični primeri (nepregledani od uredništva PONS)

angleščina
They accept and walk off with the girls, who are so high they don't even know who they're supposed to be with.
en.wikipedia.org
I holed a few putts and you walk off with a good score.
www.rte.ie
They hope to bottle whatever late-game magic helped them walk off with one of the most memorable playoff victories in franchise history.
www.theglobeandmail.com
It's kind of surprising, it would be pretty hard to just walk off with it.
www.delta-optimist.com
I walk off with steam coming out of my ears because the quality is really high in our squad at the moment.
www.bbc.co.uk
Police say they have a hallmark approach of almost casual attitude as they coolly threaten bar staff and walk off with the loot.
www.stuff.co.nz
How easy would it be for a thief to casually walk off with the goodies, and perhaps palm them off to accomplices on the outside?
www.stuff.co.nz
They proceeded to walk off with another man into the sunset while he was still celebrating.
www.football365.com
You don't want to walk off with something shoddy.
www.joe.ie
In the end social media will walk off with your dignity and your money.
www.dw.com

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