Словарь американских идиом: 8000 единиц
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Это обновленное и дополненное издание, содержащее более 8000 идиоматическихслов и выражений, причем каждое из которых снабжено грамматическим объяснениеми практическим примером. Словарь содержит лексемные идиомы, фразеологическиеединицы и поговорки, имеющие особенное значение. В нем приведены наиболееупотребительные выражения только американского английского языка. Этот словарь?—?идеальное пособие для студентов, часто разъезжающих бизнесменов и простопутешественников.
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[pay attention]{v. phr.} To listen to someone; hear and understand someone alertly. •/"Pay attention, children!" the teacher cried, "Here is your homework for next week!"/
[pay court to]{v. phr.} To woo; to shower with attention. •/He had been paying court to her for three long years before he worked up the courage to ask her to marry him./
[pay dirt]{n.}, {slang} 1. The dirt in which much gold is found. •/The man searched for gold many years before he found pay dirt./ 2. {informal} A valuable discovery. — Often used in the phrase "strike pay dirt". •/When Bill joined the team, the coach struck pay dirt./ •/Jean looked in many books for facts about her hometown, and finally she struck pay dirt./ Compare: STRIKE IT RICH.
[pay down]{v. phr.} 1. To give as a deposit on some purchase, the rest of which is to be paid in periodic installments. •/"How much can you pay down on the house, sir?" the realtor asked./ 2. To decrease a debt with periodical payments. •/I’d like to pay down the charges on my credit cards./ Compare: DOWN PAYMENT.
[pay for]{v.} To have trouble because of (something you did wrong or did not do); be punished or suffer because of. •/When Bob could not get a good job, he realized he had to pay for all the years of fooling around instead of working in school./ •/Mary was very mean to John because she wanted to make him pay for all the years in which he had ignored her./ Compare: MAKE UP(3b), PAY OFF.
[pay in advance] See: IN ADVANCE.
[pay lip service to] See: LIP SERVICE.
[payoff]{n.} Culmination point; climax. •/After many months of patient labor on your book, the payoff comes when you see the first printed copy./
[pay off]{v. phr.} 1. To pay the wages of. •/The men were paid off just before quitting time, the last day before the holiday./ 2. To pay and discharge from a job. •/When the building was completed he paid off the laborers./ 3. To hurt (someone) who has done wrong to you; get revenge on. •/When Bob tripped Dick, Dick paid Bob off by punching him in the nose./ Syn.: PAY BACK. 4. {informal} To bring a return; make profit. •/At first Mr. Harrison lost money on his investments, but finally one paid off./ 5. {informal} To prove successful, rewarding, or worthwhile. •/Ben’s friendship with the old man who lived beside him paid off in pleasant hours and broadened interests./ •/John studied hard before the examination, and it paid off. He made an A./
[pay one a left-handed compliment] See: LEFT-HANDED COMPLIMENT.
[pay one back in his own coin]{v. phr.} To retaliate. •/Jim refused to help Bob when he needed it most, so Bob decided to pay him back in his own coin and told him to go and look for help elsewhere./
[pay one’s respect to]{v. phr.} To discharge one’s social obligations by visiting someone or by calling them on the phone. •/The newly arrived people paid their respects to their various neighbors during their first couple of weeks in town./
[pay one’s way]{v. phr.} 1. To pay in cash or labor for your expenses. •/He paid his way by acting as a guide./ 2. To be profitable; earn as much as you cost someone; be valuable to an employer; to yield a return above expenses. •/The bigger truck paid its way from the start./ •/We had to offer our new manager a large salary, but he was a capable man, and paid his way./ Compare: WORTH ONE’S SALT.
[pay out] See: PAY OFF.
[pay the piper] or [pay the fiddler] {v. phr.} To suffer the results of being foolish; pay or suffer because of your foolish acts or wasting money. •/Bob had spent all his money and got into debt, so now he must pay the piper./ •/Fred had a fight, broke a window, and quarreled with his counselor so now he must pay the fiddler./ Compare: PACE THE MUSIC(2). (From the proverb "He who dances must pay the piper (or the fiddler).")
[pay through the nose]{v. phr.}, {informal} To pay at a very high rate; pay too much. •/He had wanted experience, but this job seemed like paying through the nose for it./ •/There was a shortage of cars; if you found one for sale, you had to pay through the nose./
[pay up]{v.} To pay in full; pay the amount of; pay what is owed. •/The monthly installments on the car were paid up./ •/He pays his dues up promptly./ •/He gets behind when he is out of work but always pays up when he is working again./
[peace] See: HOLD ONE’S PEACE.
[pearl] See: CAST PEARLS BEFORE SWINE or CAST ONE’S PEARLS BEFORE SWINE.
[pebble] See: NOT THE ONLY PEBBLE ON THE BEACH.
[peck] See: HUNT AND PECK.
[pecking order]{n.} The way people are ranked in relation to each other (for honor, privilege, or power); status classification; hierarchy. •/After the president was in office several months, his staff developed a pecking order./
[pedestal] See: ON A PEDESTAL.
[peel] See: KEEP ONE’S EYES PEELED.
[peel off]{v.} To dive away from a group of airplanes in a flight formation; bring one plane down from a group. •/As the group neared the home base, pilot after pilot peeled off for a landing./
[peeping Tom]{n.} A man or boy who likes sly peeping. •/He was picked up by the police as a peeping Tom./
[peg] See: SQUARE PEG IN A ROUND HOLE, TAKE DOWN A PEG.
[peg away]{v.} To work methodically, industriously, or steadily •/Thomson pegged away for years at a shoe repair business./ •/Jones kept pegging away, and finally recognition came./
[pen] See: POISON-PEN, SLIP OF THE PEN.
[penalty box]{n.} A place where penalized hockey players are required to go to wait until the penalty is over. •/Two players got into a fight and were sent to the penalty box for two minutes./
[penny for one’s thoughts] Please tell me what you are thinking about; what’s your daydream. •/"A penny for your thoughts!" he exclaimed./
[penny pincher], [penny pinching] See: PINCH PENNIES.
[penny wise and pound foolish] Wise or careful in small things but not careful enough in important things. — A proverb. •/Mr. Smith’s fence is rotting and falling down because he wouldn’t spend money to paint it. He is penny wise and pound foolish./
[pen pal]{n.} A friend who is known to someone through an exchange of letters. •/John’s pen pal writes him letters about school in Alaska./
[people who live in glass houses should not throw stones] Do not complain about other people if you are as bad as they are. — A proverb. •/Mary says that Betty is jealous, but Mary is more jealous herself. People who live in glass houses should not throw stones./
[pep talk]{n.}, {informal} A speech that makes people feel good so they will try harder and not give up. •/The football coach gave the team a pep talk./ •/Mary was worried about her exams, but felt better after the teacher’s pep talk./
[period of grace] See: GRACE PERIOD.
[perish the thought]{v. phr.} Let us not even think of it; may it never come true. — Used as an exclamation. •/If John fails the college entrance exam — perish the thought — he will go back to high school for one more year./ •/Perish the thought that Mary should have cancer./ Compare: GOD FORBID.
[perk up]{v.} To get or give back pep, vigor, health, or spirit; become or make more lively; liven up. •/He perked up quickly after his illness./ •/The rain perked up the flowers wonderfully./