Results for: quick way out of a building
English English
account of facts, decorate with legendary scenes, factual or fictional narrative, falsehood, floor in building, legend or romance, news report, plot of fiction or drama, rooms on one building level, short fictional prose piece, story line, subject for ...story
act of building; something that has been built; meaning, act or process of constructing, building industry, built structure, combination of words, creation of something, geometric shape, work of art, workmanship and materialsconstruction
act of covering with a protective layer; act of bonding one layer of metal to another, metal coating, outer layer on buildingcladding
act of cutting across, quick movement between sequencescrosscutting
act of cutting off the scalp of an enemy; act of buying and selling stocks quickly in order to earn quick profits; act of selling tickets at an inflated price (Slang)scalping
act of designing or building in a form which offers minimum resistance to a current of air or fluid; act of making more efficient, simplificationstreamlining
act of jumping, leap, spring; rapid or sudden increase; sudden upward movement; jerk; hurdle, something that must be leaped over; move; short quick trip; leap made from an airplane with a parachute, spring; get up quickly; move suddenly, jerk; act quic...jump
act of locking up; prison, jail; temporary detention center, long investment, may be locked up, place with prison cells, securing of building, time for locking buildinglockup
act of shuffling cards; part of a stream with a strong swift current, rapid, become choppy, flick through pages, grooved part of sluice, quick look at book, rough water, shuffle cards, shuffle cards; leaf through, thumb through; turn pages quickly, sub...riffle
actor employed as walk-on, building superintendent, especially, excellent, excessive, great!, high-octane gasoline, open-weave fabric for book bindings, pref. over, above; superior in quantity or quality, something bigger or better, strengthen with sup...super
add something to something, attach a quality to something, attached document, attachment, auxiliary building, incorporate, append (territory, etc.); join, connect, see also:annexe, steal, take over territoryannex
add support to building, cover a wall or embankment with stone or cementrevet
added to next payment, consecutive, created by gradual additions, entitling shareholder to claim dividend arrears, gradually building up, including all given values of variable, increasing with successive measurements, accruing, snowballing, more sever...cumulative
addition to a building, additional period of time, additional piece, additional telephone line, broader sense of an expression, expansion; branch of a telephone network; supplement, elongation; reprieve; group of letters (in DOS - 3 letters) which indi...extension
adept, skillful; dexterous, agile, nimble, clever, quick and skillfuldeft
 

Translations: 3145 / 487

Your Recent Searches

Total number of language pairs: 544
Total number of translations (in millions): 15.4

About Eudict

EUdict (European dictionary) is a collection of online dictionaries for the languages spoken mostly in Europe. These dictionaries are the result of the work of many authors who worked very hard and finally offered their product free of charge on the internet thus making it easier to all of us to communicate with each other. Some of the dictionaries have only a few thousand words, others have more than 320,000. Some of the words may be incorrectly translated or mistyped.

Options

There are several ways to use this dictionary. The most common way is by word input (you must know which language the word is in) but you can also use your browser's search box and bookmarklets (or favelets).

Look at the complete list of languages: Available language pairs

There are two Japanese-English (and Japanese-French) dictionaries and one contains Kanji and Kana (Kana in English and French pair due to improved searching). For the same reason the Chinese dictionary contains traditional and simplified Chinese terms on one side and Pinyin and English terms on the other.

Esperanto is only partially translated. Please help us improve this site by translating its interface.

Browser integration (Search plugins)

Perhaps the best way to enable dictionary search is through integration into the search field of your browser. To add EUdict alongside Google, Yahoo!, Amazon and other search engines in Mozilla Firefox or Internet Explorer, simply click on link after the title Browser integration, select appropriate language pair and confirm your decision. And you're ready to go; select EUdict from the drop-down list in search field (Firefox) or address bar (IE), input a word and press Enter. In Chrome, first click on a language pair and change the search keyword in the field 'Keyword' to a keyword (eg: 'eudict'). Afterwards, you simply type the chosen keyword in the address bar to start the search in the chosen dictionary.

Bookmarklets

There is a way to enable word translation from any page: Bookmarklets. A bookmarklet is a small JavaScript code stored as a bookmark in you browser.

Tips and tricks

If you want to type a character which isn't on your keyboard, simply pick it from a list of special characters. If you are unable to add a bookmarklet in Mozilla Firefox according to the instructions above, there is another way; right click on a link and select Bookmark this link… Now you can drag this link from Bookmarks to the Bookmarks Toolbar.

Instead of clicking the Search button, just press Enter. Although EUdict can't translate complete sentences, it can translate several words at once if you separate them with spaces or commas. Sometimes you can find translation results directly from Google by typing: eudict word. If you are searching for a word in Japanese (Kanji) dictionary and not receiving any results, try without Kana (term in brackets). If you are searching for a word in the Chinese dictionary and not receiving any results, try without Pinyin (term in brackets). Disable spellchecking in Firefox by going to Tools → Options → Advanced → Check my spelling as I type. Why not add a EUdict search form to your web site? Form

Credits

My name is Tomislav Kuzmic, I live in Croatia and this site is my personal project. I am responsible for the concept, design, programming and development. I do this in my spare time. To contact me for any reason please send me an email to tkuzmic at gmail dot com. Let me take this chance to thank all who contributed to the making of these dictionaries and improving the site's quality:

EUdict is online since May 9, 2005 and English<>Croatian dictionary on tkuzmic.com since June 16, 2003.

Recent searches