vārdnīca angļu - angļu

English - English

exceed angļu valodā:

1. excess


Working to excess will do you harm.
The load of the truck was in excess of three tons.
He drinks to excess.
Five tremors in excess of magnitude 5.0 on the Richter scale have shaken Japan just this week, but scientists are warning that the largest expected aftershock has yet to hit.
He tends to do everything to excess.
Don't eat to excess.
Exercise, if carried to excess, will do you more harm than good.
Never spend in excess of your income.
In this season we often suffer from an excess of rain.
In charity there is no excess.
Kindness in excess is too much of a good thing.
Tomatoes are good for people who suffer stomach pain from excess stomach acid when their stomach is empty.
How much per kilo for excess?
The road of excess leads to the palace of wisdom.
She praised her husband to excess.

Angļu vārds "exceed"(excess) notiek komplektos:

Word Formation (Year 3)

2. go over


I think we should go over your files. / We'll go over the contract to sign on Thursday.
Could you go over this report and correct any mistakes?
Let us go over all the facts of the case again very carefully and see if we can't discover where we are making a mistake.
You should go over your homework.
to go over the details
Remember to go over your essay to check for grammar and spelling mistakes
I'll go over the details again. We're meeting on Friday by the fountain, ok?
The bank manager wants to go over the details of the contract before he approves it.
I always go over my work to look for mistakes.
Let me go over what we have agreed
You will learn the new vocabulary if you go over word lists every now and then.
Sue’s going to help me go over my lines for the play.
I don't understand. Could you go over that again?
With my getting back so late, we haven't had time to go over timetables, and school starts on Monday
I think we should go over our plan again before we tell the managing director.

3. exceed something to be greater than a particular number or amount



Angļu vārds "exceed"(exceed something to be greater than a particular number or amount) notiek komplektos:

listening and speaking mid term test

4. make too big



5. to go beyond an official or legal limit



6. take up


I thought I'd take up fishing...
In my defence, all I can say is, you do take up a lot of space.
take up a hobby\sport
take up swimming / take up a career as an actor
Computers used to take up a whole room, and now you can carry one in your pocket.
I'd like to take up Spanish so that I can go to Argentina for a holiday.
Do you know how to take up trousers?
One day I came up an idea that I will take up guitar.
He could take up skateboarding <begin a new activity or hobby>
When people retire, they usually take up a hobby, or a sport of some description, or do some gardening.
Reluctant users slow to take up videoconferncing
Please, you take up my challenge!
He says he's now looking for a woman to take up with.
The CEO would be happy to take up your kind offer.
to take up too much space. the shopping took (up) a lot of time