- trip trap
- trip traptrip trap udråbsord
Dansk ordbog. 2015.
Dansk ordbog. 2015.
trip — trap trip |trap Mot Agut Nom masculí … Diccionari Català-Català
trap — trap1 [trap] n. [ME trappe < OE træppe, akin to treppan, to step, Ger treppe, stairway < IE * dreb , to run, step, trip (var. of base * drā ) > Pol drabina, ladder] 1. any device for catching animals, as one that snaps shut tightly when… … English World dictionary
Trap-ball — Trap ball, Knur and Spell, or Nipsy is an old English game. It can be traced back to the beginning of the fourteenth century and was commonly played in northern England as late as 1825, but has since been practically confined to children. As late … Wikipedia
trap — [n] snare, trick allurement, ambuscade, ambush, artifice, bait, booby trap*, come on*, conspiracy, deception, decoy, device, dragnet, enticement, feint, gambit, hook*, intrigue, inveiglement, lasso*, lure, machination, maneuver, net, noose,… … New thesaurus
trip — {{11}}trip (n.) act or action of tripping, 1650s, from TRIP (Cf. trip) (v.); sense of a short journey or voyage is from 1690s, originally a nautical term, the connection is uncertain. The meaning psychedelic drug experience is first recorded 1959 … Etymology dictionary
trap — 1. noun 1) an animal caught in a trap Syn: snare, net, mesh, deadfall, leghold (trap), pitfall 2) the question was set as a trap Syn: trick, ploy, ruse, deception, subterfuge; … Thesaurus of popular words
trap — 01. We put a rotten fish head in the [trap] to attract the shrimp. 02. The children got [trapped] on a small rock in the middle of the water when the tide came in while they were playing. 03. A local adventurer became [trapped] underground for 30 … Grammatical examples in English
trap — Synonyms and related words: Dionaea, French door, John Law, allure, allurement, ambuscade, ambush, ambushment, archway, artifice, back door, bag, bait, bait the hook, baited trap, barway, bazoo, beguile, birdlime, blind, bobby, booby trap,… … Moby Thesaurus
trip — I. verb (tripped; tripping) Etymology: Middle English trippen, from Anglo French treper, triper, of Germanic origin; akin to Old English treppan to tread more at trap Date: 14th century intransitive verb 1. a. to dance, skip, or caper with light… … New Collegiate Dictionary
trip — Synonyms and related words: airlift, airy nothing, allure, amble, antic, apparition, army, atrocity, autism, backslide, bad job, bait the hook, balk, barge, be all thumbs, bevue, birdlime, blooper, blow down, blow over, blunder, blunder away,… … Moby Thesaurus