słownik angielsko - angielski

English - English

flight po angielsku:

1. lot lot


Your words of encouragement meant a lot to me.
He eats a lot.
The author illustrated his book with a lot of pictures.
You must remember the fact that you owe her a lot.
Did you have a lot of happy experiences in your childhood?
We had a bad rice crop last year because it rained a lot.
A lot of people are going to tell you that you shouldn't have done that.
Tom and Mary argue a lot, but they still get along quite well together.
CO₂ has a lot to do with the so-called greenhouse effect.
It sometimes is the case that there is a lot of disagreement.
He has bought a lot in the suburbs with a view to building a house.
It's a lot less likely for a Macintosh computer to have a virus than a computer running Windows.
A lot of reports came to the policeman that a wild monkey was found.
I like you a whole lot.
A lot of buildings collapsed in Japan due to the earthquake yesterday.

Angielskie słowo "flight" (lot) występuje w zestawach:

Unit 3 słownictwo

2. a journey by air a journey by air



3. fought fought fought fought



Angielskie słowo "flight" (fought fought) występuje w zestawach:

Czasowniko nieregularne

4. fly fly


Birds fly.
On the fifteenth of August, thousands of people fly kites.
Birds can fly thousands of miles away and return to the same place every year.
This wasn't here this morning ... looks like somebody's been fly tipping.
We have new data about production and sale of electric fly swatters worldwide.
Baseball players should allow for the wind in catching a fly.
It takes eight hours to fly from Zurich to Boston, but only six for the return trip.
When booking flights, I decided the easiest way would be to fly to Beijing first, then get the train to complete my journey.
What am I going to do? I can't close my fly.
I wonder if they don't have meetings anymore where strong words fly and everyone goes at each other tooth and nail.
fly {rzecz.} ucieczka, mucha, latanie, rozporek | fly {przym.} szybkie, przebiegły, szybki, zamek błyskawiczny, szybka, wartki | to fly {czas.} lecieć, polecieć, latać, przelatywać, śpieszyć, pilotować, pierzchać, śpieszyć się, uciekać, fruwać
You can use a rolled-up newspaper for killing a fly or moth.
To fly big passenger airliners calls for long training and experience.
Fred has very little patience, and it doesn't take much to make him fly off the handle.