vārdnīca angļu - angļu

English - English

big angļu valodā:

1. big big


a big fish
Part of the charm of a big city lies in the variety of styles that can be seen in the architecture of its buildings.
According to a study, big women are more prone to have twins.
You should stockpile necessary supplies in case of a big earthquake.
She bought him a camera that was too big to fit in his shirt pocket.
Our negotiations to lower export taxes suffered a big setback.
In city after city, big public meetings were held.
The pressures of supporting a big family are beginning to catch up with him.
A big bomb fell, and a great many people lost their lives.
The buying and selling of peoples' personal information is becoming a big issue.
Tom can't forget the time he and Mary had their first big argument.
The theory of the Big Bang was proposed in 1927 and expanded in 1929.
When a big ape emerged from the cave, they got frightened and ran away.
Tom is used to driving a pickup truck, but he's never driven one of those really big trucks.
It must have been something really big for him to strike a triumphant pose like that.

Angļu vārds "big"(big) notiek komplektos:

Ewa: Jump with Joey 2,3
Pebbles 1 My Pets

2. enormous enormous


enormous problem
No one knows how he has amassed his enormous fortune.
Tom claimed that the enormous property was at his disposal.
Stress can have an enormous negative impact on your health.
His house is enormous and has six bedrooms.
Among my cousins, you know, there's a girl with the most enormous breasts.
Ordinary people possess enormous power.
Questions and answers play an enormous role in interaction.
У него огромная квартира|He has an enormous flat
My room in the hotel was enormous – big enough for four people!
The enormous birthday cake dwarfed everything else on the table.
Which European countries suffered from enormous economic problems in 2010?
- Mom! Look at that lady, she is enormous! - She is pregnant, not enormous!
extraordinarily large in size or extent or amount or power or degree, The word enormous contains within it, if you look closely, the root norm, as in normal. So what you’re saying when you call something enormous is that it’s beyond what is normal;
This couple approaches humor so dryly that enormous chains of jokes will blossom without an iota of laughter.

Angļu vārds "big"(enormous) notiek komplektos:

Strong adjective 2A
strong adjectives

3. small small


It's too small.
The village which I visited last summer was a small one in Nagano Prefecture.
It's only a small house but it meets my needs perfectly.
My what a narrow waist! Her face is small, she really looks just like a doll!
Small cars are very economical because of their low fuel consumption.
His company was singled out as the most successful small business in the region.
The small fork is for your salad, and the large one is for the main course.
I didn't realize till I visited Australia how small Japan really is.
Her hands are small, but not so small that she can't play the piano.
A small border dispute ballooned into a major international incident.
I like his new house, but I had not expected it to be so small.
Small businesses will have to tighten their belts to survive.
It's a small noisy apartment, but it's where I live and I call it home.
I doubt that Tom would ever consider driving such a small car.
Small children tend to wander off if you don't watch them all the time.

Angļu vārds "big"(small) notiek komplektos:

A14 Adjectives - OPPOSITES
przymiotniki przeciwieństwa

4. sizeable


His hopes for a sizeable income and stable job vanished
a sizeable fortune
He got a sizeable inheritance from his uncle although he expected more.
He won a sizeable amount of money in the lottery.
The town has a sizeable Sikh population.
a sizeable crowd
A sizeable group of students failed their final exams last year

Angļu vārds "big"(sizeable) notiek komplektos:

GENERAL ENGLISH