Смысл: angeranger1.[ʹæŋgə]n <Í> 1. гнев, ярость; (крайнее) раздражение controlled [sham, hot] anger - сдерживаемый [притворный, неистовый] гнев in anger - в гневе, в ярости; в раздражении fit of anger - приступ гнева /ярости/ in a moment /fit/ of anger - в минуту гнева /ярости/ blind with anger - ослеплённый гневом to flush with anger - вспыхнуть от гнева to burn with anger - пылать гневом 2. арх.раздражение, воспаление; (жгучая) боль Í> 2.[ʹæŋgə]v <Í> 1. 1) сердить, злить, вызывать (чей-л.) гнев; раздражать to anger smb. - сердить кого-л., вызывать чей-л. гнев to be angered by smth. - быть разгневанным /рассерженным/ чем-л., разгневаться на что-л. 2) сердиться, злиться; распаляться he angers easily - он быстро выходит из себя; его легко разозлить 2. арх.вызывать раздражение, воспаление Í>
anger Идиома
a cliff-hanger
a game that is close until the end, a barnburner Every election in this town is a real cliff-hanger - a close race.
a perfect stranger
a person you have never seen, a total stranger In New York, a perfect stranger asked her to sleep with him.
a total stranger
one you have never seen, a perfect stranger """Can I give you a ride home?"" ""No. You're a total stranger."""
cliff-hanger
(See a cliff-hanger)
dog in the manger
a person who will not share something he does not use or need He's a dog in the manger about his office space. He doesn't use it, but he won't let us have it.
head (headbanger)
a person who uses drugs, junkie That school has no heads. Not one student is using drugs.
perfect stranger
(See a perfect stranger)
total stranger
(See a total stranger)
banger
1. a sausage 2. a delapidated car 3. a firework that is explosively loud but visually unstimulating 4. someone associated with gangs and murder
clanger
a mistake or blunder; see "drop a clanger"
drop a clanger
to make an obvious mistake
gang banger
a gang member
fly into the face of danger
Idiom(s): fly into the face of danger
Theme: RISK
to take great risks; to threaten or challenge danger, as if danger were a person. (This may refer to flying, as in an airplane, but not necessarily.) • John plans to go bungee-jumping this weekend. He really likes flying into the face of danger. • Willard was not exactly the type to fly into the face of danger, but tonight was an exception, and he ordered enchiladas.
armed and dangerous
Idiom(s): armed and dangerous
Theme: DANGER
pertaining to someone who is suspected of a crime and has not been captured. (This is a warning to police officers who might try to capture this suspect. Fixed order.) • Max is at large, presumed to be armed and dangerous. • The suspect has killed once and is armed and dangerous.
A little knowledge is a dangerous thing
Idiom(s): A little knowledge is a dangerous thing
Theme: KNOWLEDGE
A proverb meaning that incomplete knowledge can embarrass or harm someone or something. • The doctor said, "Just because you've had a course in first aid, you shouldn't have treated your own illness. A little knowledge is a dangerous thing." • John thought he knew how to take care of the garden, but he killed all the flowers. A little knowledge is a dangerous thing.
Truth is stranger than fiction.
Events in real life are sometimes stranger than in fiction.
A little learning is a dangerous thing
A small amount of knowledge can cause people to think they are more expert than they really are.eg. he said he'd done a course on home electrics, but when he tried to mend my table lamp, he fused all the lights! I think a little learning is a dangerous thing
Cliffhanger
If something like a sports match or an election is a cliffhanger, then the result is so close that it cannot be predicted and will only be known at the very end.
A little learning is a dangerous thing.
People with insufficient knowledge are easily misled.
a little knowledge is a dangerous thing|knowledge|
literary A person who knows a little about something may think he knows it all and make bad mistakes. A proverb. John has read a book on driving a car and now he thinks he can drive. A little knowledge is a dangerous thing.
dog in the manger|dog|manger
n. phr. A person who is unwilling to let another use what he himself has no use for. Although Valerie lives alone in that big house, she is like a dog in the manger when it comes to letting someone sharing it with her.
endangered species A group threatened with extinction or destruction. For example, Workers willing to put in overtime without extra pay are an endangered species, or With the new budget cuts, public television has become an endangered species. This expression, originally referring to species of plants or animals in danger of dying out, began in the 1980s to be extended to anything or anyone becoming rare.
little knowledge is a dangerous thing, a
little knowledge is a dangerous thing, a Also, a little learning is a dangerous thing. Knowing a little about something tempts one to overestimate one's abilities. For example, I know you've assembled furniture, but that doesn't mean you can build an entire wall system; remember, a little knowledge. This maxim, originally a line from Alexander Pope's An Essay on Criticism (1709), has been repeated with slight variations ever since. It is still heard, although less frequently, and sometimes shortened, as in the example.
live dangerously
live dangerously Take numerous risks, be daring, as in Bill never knows if he'll have enough money to pay the next month's rent—he likes to live dangerously. This expression figured in the work of such 19th-century German writers as Nietzsche, who regarded it as an admirable course of action. Today it is often used with mildly humorous effect, as in the example. [c. 1900]
more in sorrow than in anger Saddened rather than infuriated by someone's behavior. For example, When Dad learned that Jack had stolen a car, he looked at him more in sorrow than in anger. This expression first appeared in 1603 in Shakespeare's Hamlet (1:2), where Horatio describes to Hamlet the appearance of his father's ghost: “A countenance more in sorrow than in anger.”
truth is stranger than fiction
truth is stranger than fiction Real life can be more remarkable than invented tales, as in In our two-month trip around the world we ran into long-lost relatives on three separate occasions, proving that truth is stranger than fiction. This expression may have been invented by Byron, who used it in Don Juan (1833).
An anger idiom dictionary is a great resource for writers, students, and anyone looking to expand their vocabulary. It contains a list of words with similar meanings with anger, allowing users to choose the best word for their specific context.
Словарь похожих слов, Разные формулировки, Синонимы, Идиомы для Идиома anger