cover
Reikšmė (anglų kalba)
-
- A lid.
- Area or situation which screens a person or thing from view.
- The front and back of a book, magazine, CD package, etc.
- The top sheet of a bed.
- A cloth or similar material, often fitted, placed over an item such as a car or sofa or food to protect it from dust, rain, insects, etc. when not being used.
- A cover charge.
- A setting at a restaurant table or formal dinner.
- A new performance or rerecording of a previously recorded song; a cover version; a cover song.
- A fielding position on the off side, between point and mid off, about 30° forward of square; a fielder in this position.
- A collection (or family) of subsets of a given set, whose union contains every element of said original set.
- An envelope complete with stamps and postmarks etc.
- A solid object, including terrain, that provides protection from enemy fire.
- In commercial law, a buyer’s purchase on the open market of goods similar or identical to the goods contracted for after a seller has breached a contract of sale by failure to deliver the goods contracted for.
- An insurance contract; coverage by an insurance contract.
- A persona maintained by a spy or undercover operative; cover story.
- A swindler's confederate.
- The portion of a slate, tile, or shingle that is hidden by the overlap of the course above.
- In a steam engine, the lap of a slide valve.
- The distance between reinforcing steel and the exterior of concrete.
Sinonimai
spread over
cover over
stretch over
hide from view
book cover
make up for
cover with
extend over
follow closely
keep secret
natural covering
cover with a lid
book jacket
front cover
clothe someone
keep under surveillance
put something over
book binding
insurance cover
head cover
address
place over
press down
quiten
read through
set a trap
shoot dead
sweep over
tie on
laddle
top cap
top cover
stand sentinel
travel through
turn off
be all over
bind on
cover oneself
cover oneself with
dress oneself
fall-board
fascia board
give abundantly
hang round
media coverage
put clothes on
put on a hat
put on top
roof in
tomate
top coat
pour upon
turn something over
travel over
upper part
wrap oneself up
Interpret speciously
magic cloak of invisibility
build around
plate something
lay something upside down
give board to
provide meals
lay something on
warrant money
stand watch
rain upon
funk-hole
cup in one’s hand
fill completely
book-cover
have implications
have meanings
make a shelter for
reach down beyond
scatter over
silver genital-cover of a girl
contend over
face with
safty goggles
shower upon
suppressive fire
that which covers
cloth covering
mound over
nominal head
short covering
put a lid on
valve cap
end cover
protecting cap
surface course
surface dressing
end closure
covering bid
overburden layer
overlying stratum
concrete cover
make close
lid flowrish
crust tyre
the top
hide something
curtain board
bear covering
cover tightly
make up recover
end housing
metal cover
shell cover
protecting case
skin coat
thin-gauge skin
covering overlay
cover to reinforcement
valve deck
crown tap
cape hood
keep someone in the dark
tailored cover
bed-clothes
canopy of heaven
compensate for
counter balance
end plate
grow over
keep guard
landing deck
Dažnis
Tariama kaip (IPA)
/ˈkʌvɚ/
Etimologija (anglų kalba)
Etymology tree Proto-Indo-European *ḱe-? Proto-Indo-European *ḱóm Proto-Italic *kom Old Latin com Latin cum Latin con- Proto-Indo-European *h₁ep-? Proto-Indo-European *h₁epi Proto-Indo-European *h₂wer- Proto-Indo-European *-yeti Latin operiō Latin cooperiō Old French covrirbor. Middle English coveren English cover From Middle English coveren, borrowed from Old French covrir, cueuvrir (modern French couvrir), from Late Latin coperire, from Latin cooperiō (“I cover completely”), from co- (intensive prefix) + operiō (“I close, cover”). Displaced native Middle English thecchen and bethecchen (“to cover”) (from Old English þeccan, beþeccan (“to cover”)), Middle English helen, (over)helen, (for)helen (“to cover, conceal”) (from Old English helan (“to conceal, cover, hide”)), Middle English wrien, (be)wreon (“to cover”) (from Old English (be)wrēon (“to cover”)), Middle English hodren, hothren (“to cover up”) (from Low German hudren (“to cover up”)). According to the Oxford English Dictionary, the original sense of the verb and noun cover was “hide from view” as in its cognate covert. Except in the limited sense of “cover again”, the word recover is unrelated and is cognate with recuperate. Cognate with Spanish cubrir (“to cover”).
Pagerinkite savo tarimą
Pradėkite mokytis anglų naudodami learnfeliz .
Treniruokitės kalbėti ir įsiminti " cover " ir daug kitų žodžių ir sakinių anglų .
Eikite į mūsų kurso puslapį anglų
Notes
Sign in to write sticky notes
Questions