wring

wring
transitive verb,
wrung
1) wringen

wring out — auswringen

wring the water out of the towels — das Wasser aus den Handtüchern wringen

2) (squeeze forcibly)

wring somebody's hand — jemandem fest die Hand drücken; (twist forcibly)

wring one's hands — die Hände ringen (geh.)

wring the neck of an animal — einem Tier den Hals umdrehen

I could have wrung his neck — (fig.) ich hätte ihm den Hals umdrehen können

3) (extract) wringen

wring something from or out of somebody — (fig.) jemandem etwas abpressen

* * *
[riŋ]
past tense, past participle - wrung; verb
1) (to force (water) from (material) by twisting or by pressure: He wrung the water from his soaking-wet shirt.) wringen
2) (to clasp and unclasp (one's hands) in desperation, fear etc.) ringen
- academic.ru/83198/wringer">wringer
- wringing wet
* * *
wring
<wrung, wrung>
[rɪŋ]
I. n usu sing [Aus]wringen nt
II. vt
1. (twist)
to \wring sth etw auswringen
2. (break)
to \wring an animal's neck einem Tier den Hals umdrehen
to \wring sb's neck (fig) jdm den Hals umdrehen fam
3. (squeeze)
to \wring sb's hand jdm fest die Hand drücken
4. (obtain)
to \wring sth from [or out of] sb etw aus jdm herauspressen
to \wring concessions from sb jdm Zugeständnisse abpressen
5.
to \wring one's hands die Hände ringen
* * *
[rɪŋ] vb: pret, ptp wrung
1. vt
1) clothes, wet rag etc auswringen, auswinden

to wring water out of clothes — (nasse) Kleider auswringen or auswinden

"do not wring" (on washing instructions)nicht wringen

2) hands (in distress) ringen

to wring a duck's neck — einer Ente (dat) den Hals umdrehen

I could have wrung his neck — ich hätte ihm den Hals or den Kragen (inf) umdrehen können

he wrung my hand — er schüttelte mir (kräftig) die Hand

to wring sb's heart — jdm in der Seele wehtun

3)

(= extract) to wring sth out of or from sb — etw aus jdm herausquetschen, jdm etw abringen

2. n

to give clothes a wring — Kleider auswringen or auswinden

* * *
wring [rıŋ]
A v/t prät und pperf wrung [rʌŋ]
1. oft wring out Wäsche etc (aus)wringen, auswinden
2. oft wring out Früchte etc ausdrücken, -pressen
3. oft wring out Saft etc herausdrücken, -pressen, -quetschen (of aus)
4. a) einem Tier den Hals abdrehen
b) jemandem den Hals umdrehen:
I’ll wring your neck
5. die Hände (verzweifelt) ringen
6. jemandem die Hand (kräftig) drücken, pressen
7. jemanden drücken (Schuh etc): withers
8. fig quälen, bedrücken:
wring sb’s heart jemandem ans Herz greifen, jemandem in der Seele wehtun
9. etwas abringen, entreißen, -winden (from dat):
wring admiration from sb jemandem Bewunderung abnötigen;
wring a confession from sb jemandem ein Geständnis abringen;
wring a bitter laugh from sb jemandem ein bitteres Lachen abringen;
wring the truth out of sb die Wahrheit aus jemandem herausholen
10. fig Geld, Zustimmung erpressen (from, out of von)
11. wrench B 3
B s
1. (Aus)Wringen n, Auswinden n:
give sth a wring A 1
2. Pressen n, Druck m:
he gave my hand a wring er drückte mir (kräftig) die Hand
3. wringer
* * *
transitive verb,
wrung
1) wringen

wring out — auswringen

wring the water out of the towels — das Wasser aus den Handtüchern wringen

2) (squeeze forcibly)

wring somebody's hand — jemandem fest die Hand drücken; (twist forcibly)

wring one's hands — die Hände ringen (geh.)

wring the neck of an animal — einem Tier den Hals umdrehen

I could have wrung his neck — (fig.) ich hätte ihm den Hals umdrehen können

3) (extract) wringen

wring something from or out of somebody — (fig.) jemandem etwas abpressen

* * *
v.
(§ p.,p.p.: wrung)
= abbringen v.
wringen v.
(§ p.,pp.: wrang, gewrungen)

English-german dictionary. 2013.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать реферат

Schlagen Sie auch in anderen Wörterbüchern nach:

  • Wring — Wring, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Wrung}, Obs. {Wringed}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Wringing}.] [OE. wringen, AS. wringan; akin to LG. & D. wringen, OHG. ringan to struggle, G. ringen, Sw. vr[ a]nga to distort, Dan. vringle to twist. Cf. {Wrangle}, {Wrench},… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • wring — [rıŋ] v past tense and past participle wrung [rʌŋ] [T] [: Old English; Origin: wringan] 1.) [always + adverb/preposition] to succeed in getting something from someone, but only after a lot of effort = ↑squeeze wring sth from/out of sb ▪ They are… …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • wring — [ rıŋ ] (past tense and past participle wrung [ rʌŋ ] ) verb transitive wring or wring out to twist and squeeze something in order to remove liquid from it: I ll just wring out this dress and hang it up. wring someone s neck used for emphasizing… …   Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • wring — O.E. wringan press, strain, wring, twist (class III strong verb; past tense wrang, pp. wrungen), from P.Gmc. *wrenganan (Cf. O.E. wringen to wring, press out, O.Fris. wringa, M.Du. wringhen, Du. wringen to wring, O.H.G. ringan to move to and fro …   Etymology dictionary

  • wring — ► VERB (past and past part. wrung) 1) squeeze and twist to force liquid from. 2) break (an animal s neck) by twisting forcibly. 3) squeeze (someone s hand) tightly. 4) (wring from/out of) obtain with difficulty or effort. 5) cause great pain or… …   English terms dictionary

  • Wring — Wring, v. i. To writhe; to twist, as with anguish. [1913 Webster] T is all men s office to speak patience To those that wring under the load of sorrow. Shak. [1913 Webster] Look where the sister of the king of France Sits wringing of her hands,… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Wring — Wring, n. A writhing, as in anguish; a twisting; a griping. [Obs.] Bp. Hall. [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • wring — wring·er; wring; …   English syllables

  • wring — [riŋ] vt. wrung or Rare wringed, wringing [ME wringen < OE wringan, to press, compress, strain, akin to Ger ringen, to struggle, wrestle < IE * wreng < base * wer , to turn, bend > WORM] 1. a) to squeeze, press, twist, or compress,… …   English World dictionary

  • wring — index distill, exact, extort, press (constrain) Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …   Law dictionary

  • wring — [v] twist, contort choke, coerce, compress, draw out, exact, extort, extract, force, gouge, hurt, pain, pinch, pry, push, screw, shake down, squeeze, strain, strangle, throttle, turn, wrench, wrest; concepts 142,206,208 Ant. untwist …   New thesaurus

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”