| Question | Answer | 
        
        | start learning |  |   This will be a sign to you: You will find a baby wrapped in cloths and lying in a manger.” |  |  | 
|   zwinny(system zarządzania), zręczny, sprawny)   skillfulstart learning |  |  able to move your body quickly and easily. able to think quickly and clearly. used for describing ways of planning and doing work in which it is understood that making changes as they are needed is an important part of the job   Monkeys are very agile climbers. You need to have agile fingers to do this kind of work. For a man of 80, he has a remarkably agile mind. |  |  | 
|  start learning podporządkowywać coś czemuś, podwładny w organizacji, niższy rangą  |  |  be subordinate to- podlegać komuś. having a lower or less important position   The individual's needs are subordinate to those of the group. Her personal life has been subordinated to her career. |  |  | 
|  start learning dwujęzyczny dwujęzyczność  |  |  able to use two languages equally well:   They are raising bilingual children. She works as a bilingual secretary for an insurance company. |  |  | 
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| start learning |  |  skilled and experienced   a proficient swimmer, It takes a couple of years of regular driving before you become proficient at it. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  to increase or make something increase, especially an emotion or effect,. heightening   The strong police presence only heightened the tension among the crowd. |  |  | 
|  start learning ułomność, przeszkoda, utrudnienie  |  |  a condition in which part of your body or mind has been permanently damaged or does not work normally. This word is now considered offensive by many people, who prefer the word disability   My disability is a handicap, but I learned to overcome it. Despite his handicap, he lives a regular life. |  |  | 
|  start learning być w kontakcie z kimś, skontaktować się z kimś, dodzwonić się  |  |   I haven’t talked to her in years, so I wouldn’t know how to get hold of her anymore. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  to obtain something   Where can I get hold of today’s newspaper? |  |  | 
|  start learning nabycie, nabytek(zakup), zdobywanie wiedzy  |  |  the process of getting something, something that someone buys, often to add to a collection of things   This TV is my latest acquisition. Language acquisition is the basis of logical thinking and contextual understanding. The acquisition of huge amounts of data has helped our research enormously. |  |  | 
|  start learning obiekt(np. sportowy), funkcja, talent i zręczność, łatwość  |  |  an ability to do something easily or well:   We want to expand the facilities of this computer. The government spent a lot of money on the new sports facilities. He has a facility for languages. He can write poems with facility. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  the quality of being new and unusual:   That is certainly a novelty - something that I think virtually none of us have encountered before. The novelty of these toys soon wore off and the children became bored with them. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  in an opposite way   Poor health is accepted as an attribute of normal ageing. Conversely, youth is depicted as a time of vitality and good health. No matter what I say, he always takes a converse position. |  |  | 
|  start learning racjonalny, rozsądny, rozumny  |  |  based on clear thought and reason:   There must be some rational explanation for what happened. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |   Virtually all of our stuff have been stolen at the airport. |  |  | 
|  start learning odprężyć się, wyluzować się  |  |  to stop doing things and relax   She kicked back and fell asleep with a book in her hand. How can I kick back in a moment like this? What good is life if a guy can’t kick back and watch a good movie? |  |  | 
|  start learning respekt, nabożna cześć, trwoga, napawać trwogą  |  |  a feeling of great respect sometimes mixed with fear or surprise   As children we were rather in awe of our grandfather. The audience was awed into silence by her stunning performance |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  something, such as a swimming pool or shopping centre, that is intended to make life more pleasant or comfortable for the people in a town, hotel, or other place:   We've got modern amenities like the elevator. Our facility needs the amenities for the disabled. |  |  | 
|  start learning stronniczość, uprzedzenie, zamiłowanie nastawiać(wpływać)  |  |  the action of supporting or opposing a particular person or thing in an unfair way, because of allowing personal opinions to influence your judgment:   The senator has accused the media of bias. There was clear evidence of a strong bias against her. My son has a musical bias. We can't bias the judge in favour of us |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  circumcise, to cut the protecting loose skin off a boy's or man's penis, for medical, traditional, or religious reasons   The United States has a strong tradition of circumcising baby boys. 5% of intact adult males eventually get circumcised for medical reasons. |  |  | 
|  start learning niezdrowy, nieprzyjemny, szkodliwy  |  |  not good for you, and likely to have a bad effect on your life either physically, morally, or emotionally:   She stays up all night in unwholesome places. We avoid alcohol, tobacco, and other unwholesome things. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |   I've bought a pair of new sneakers for Adam |  |  | 
|  start learning smucić, martwić się, rozpaczać, opłakiwać  |  |  to feel or express great sadness, especially when someone dies:   It grieves me to see how selfish you have become. He is still grieving for/over his wife. |  |  | 
|  start learning zrównoważony, nienaruszający równowagi(ekologicznej), długotrwały  |  |  |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  the number of people or things in a place when compared with the size of the place   Europe's population density is much higher than in the US. Density is a property that affects the weight of an element |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  to appear as a large, often frightening or unclear shape or object   Dark storm clouds loomed on the horizon. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  to use a final solution, to turn to, refer to (as a last resort, as a final possible solution)   My father never resorts to violence. She resorted to a lie. |  |  | 
|  start learning odbywać rejs, poruszać się ze stałą prędkością, krążyć, jeździć bez celu, gładko zmierzać (np. do zwycięstwa, do celu)  |  |  to move or travel slowly around an area, usually looking for something or someone   We cruised to our destination. We cruised around the world. We cruised the city twice because we were bored. The plane was cruising and I felt calm. I was cruising around the car park looking for a space. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |   millstone around somebody's neck   An extremely difficult or disadvantageous burden or hindrance.   I wish I hadn't bought that house—the mortgage is a millstone around my neck. |  |  | 
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|  start learning pomijać, pominąć, nie zrobić czegoś  |  |  to fail to include or do something   She was omitted from the list of contributors to the report. The Prince's tour conveniently omitted the most deprived areas of the city. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |   He wasn't convinced in the slightest |  |  | 
| start learning |  |   There was no alcohol whatsoever |  |  | 
|  Ten przemysł nie zasługuje na wrogość ekologów, która tak często jest w niego wymierzona.)start learning |  |   This industry does not deserve the environmentalist hostility which is often heaped upon it. |  |  | 
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| start learning |  |   a ring of stiff plastic, metal, etc. worn around the wrist or arm as jewellery |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  a wax structure containing many small holes, made by bees to store their honey |  |  | 
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| start learning |  |  extremely cold, I felt her hand and it was ice-cold. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  I was really stressed out before finals. |  |  | 
|  start learning introspekcja, introspekcja(rozmyślający nad sobą)  |  |   introspective, introspection   examining and considering your own ideas, thoughts, and feelings, instead of talking to other people about them:   an introspective journey, She is famous for her introspective songs about failed relationships. |  |  | 
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|  start learning spółdzielnia, zbiorowość społeczna, wspólna (decyzja)  |  |  of or shared by every member of a group of people.   collective responsibility/leadership |  |  | 
| start learning |  |   the community-created loop path. I tied a loop at the end of the string. |  |  | 
|  start learning podział, przepaść, przelom podzielić, dzielić  |  |  divide≠multiply, to (cause to) separate into parts or groups, to share   I wrote a book about a divide in my personal life. We can't overcome the divide between us. They divided into 3 teams. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |   Treat minor ailments yourself. I have concocted remedies for almost every known ailment. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  big problems or troubles   Unusually poor harvests have added to the country's woes. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  having no problems or not being worried about anything   I remember my carefree student days. |  |  | 
|  start learning rozmoczony(chleb), mokry(grunt)  |  |  (of things that can absorb water, especially food) unpleasantly wet and soft   I had to answer the phone and meantime my cereal went soggy. The ground was too soggy to build a house on it. I hate it when cereal goes soggy. |  |  | 
|  start learning stabilny, regularny, ciągły, stabilnie, podtrzymywać, podpierać, stabilizować, uspokajać, uważnie  |  |  happening in a smooth, gradual, and regular way, not suddenly or unexpectedly   The procession moved through the streets at a steady pace. Orders for new ships are rising, after several years of steady decline. You should steady your schedule. You can steady your daughter, she passed the exam. He walked steadily. he looked steadily |  |  | 
|  start learning poparcie, aprobata (np. dla kandydata)  |  |  the act of saying that you approve of or support something or someone(approval)   The campaign hasn't received any political endorsements. He hoped to secure quick endorsement of the plan from the president. I fully endorse everything the chairperson has said. I expect the boss to endorse these recommendations. |  |  | 
|  start learning tworzyć wizję, wyobrażać sobie, opracowywać  |  |  to imagine or expect that something is a likely or desirable possibility in the future   The company envisions adding at least five stores next year. He envisioned a partnership between business and government. |  |  | 
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|  start learning poprzeczny, przecinać w poprzek  |  |  in a position or direction that is at an angle of 90° to something else:   The main roof beams are given extra support by the smaller transverse beams. It transverses deep forests and mountains. The surgeon made a transverse incision across her abdomen. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  friendly and welcoming to guests and visitors:   The villagers were very hospitable to/towards anyone who passed through. |  |  | 
|  start learning brzeg, nasyp, obłok, tuman, rząd (telewizorów)  |  |   Let's sit down on the sandy river bank. I saw a bank of clouds in the sky. I have a bank of monitors in my office. |  |  | 
|  start learning pielęgnować, rozwijać, wspierać(rozwój, współpracę), brać na wychowanie  |  |   fostering cultural understanding |  |  | 
|  start learning Wysokość(względem czegoś)  |  |  height above sea level:   We are currently flying at an altitude of 15,000 metres. Mountain climbers use oxygen when they reach higher altitudes. altitude sickness |  |  | 
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|  start learning tor, bieżnia, okrążenie, obchód, cykl, robić okrążenie, obwód  |  |   I used to see her all the time, on the circuit. Perhaps we could make one more circuit and be off. The guard finished his circuit. The circuit lasts precisely one hour. |  |  | 
|  start learning kropka, punkt, postawić kropkę (nad i) rozrzucić  |  |   You forgot to dot the j. He dotted pins next to my bed. |  |  | 
|  start learning pieczęć, znamię, stąpać, tupać, pieniądz papierowy  |  |   She stamped loudly to show that she's angry. This application needs a date stamp. I have a stamp on my left arm. |  |  | 
|  start learning skłonić, podpowiadać (aktorowi), naciskać (na kogoś), wywoływać (uczucia)  |  |  to make someone decide to say or do something:   What prompted you to say that? Parents usually prompt their children to say thank you |  |  | 
|  start learning zamożniejszy, lepiej sytuowany, w lepszej kondycji, ludzie zamożniejsi  |  |  to have more money than you had in the past or more money than most other people   What's most important all of our family are better off than rest of the society. Obviously we're better off now that we're both working. When his parents died, he found himself $100,000 better off (= he had $100,000 more than before) |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  to relax and enjoy yourself, doing very little   We spent the day lazing around on the beach. |  |  | 
|  start learning mizerny, wychudzony, zachwaszczony  |  |  used to describe a person who is thin and physically weak, containing a lot of weeds   a weedy child, a weedy pavement |  |  | 
|  start learning pretekst, pozór, udawanie, pretensja, roszczenie  |  |  a way of behaving that is intended to deceive people   She made absolutely no pretence of being interested. They kept up (= continued) a pretence of normality as long as they could. |  |  | 
|  start learning wylot, krater(np. wulkanu, jaskini), ujście rzeki, szyjka butelki, powiedzieć bezgłośnie  |  |  the opening of a narrow container, the opening of a hole or cave, or the place where a river flows into the sea:   We visited a mouth of an old volcano, it was very interesting. The mouth of the bottle is dirty. The mouth of the river Vistula is a part of Gdansk's port. Because of noise, he mouthed something to me. |  |  | 
|  start learning proca, rzucić komuś coś (klucze), ciskać, miotać (torbę do samochodu)  |  |   He slung the letter in the bin. She slung him the keys. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  a fence made from a series of vertical metal posts, or one of these posts:   Tourists pressed their faces against the palace railings. |  |  | 
|  start learning pleść, paplać (pejoratywnie)  |  |  to speak or say something quickly in a way that is difficult to understand   He jabbered (out) something about an accident further down the road. |  |  | 
|  start learning lepszy, bardziej pożądany, bardziej odpowiedni  |  |  better or more suitable   Surely a diplomatic solution is preferable to war. |  |  | 
|  start learning zaparowany(szyba), parny(dzień), erotyczny, zmysłowy  |  |  filled with steam, or hot and wet like steam, sexually exciting or including a lot of sexual activity:   a steamy love scene, His new novel is advertised as his steamiest yet. steamy summer weather |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  if possible   Water the plants twice a week, preferably in the morning. |  |  | 
|  start learning nierówny, wyboisty, krzepki, o silnej budowie, surowy  |  |  (of land) wild and not even; not easy to travel over, strong and simple; not delicate   Jeeps are rugged vehicles, designed for rough conditions. rugged landscape/terrain/hills/cliffs |  |  | 
|  start learning malowniczy(krajobraz), sceniczny  |  |  having or allowing you to see beautiful natural features   stunning scenic landscape, an area of outstanding scenic beauty, We took the scenic route home. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  Someone who is unassuming is quiet and shows no wish for attention or admiration. demure, down-to-earth, humble, lowly, meek, modest, unpretentious   He was shy and unassuming and not at all how you expect an actor to be. |  |  | 
|  start learning podążając śladami mnichów buddyjskich  |  |   following in the footsteps of Buddhist monks  |  |  | 
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|  wróżenie przez wyrocznięstart learning |  |  the skill or act of saying or discovering what will happen in the future |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  to live or exist, or to stay energetic and determined, longer than another person or thing   The empress outlasted all her children. The Orioles outlasted the Yankees, finally winning 10 to 9. |  |  | 
|  start learning przesączać, sączyć, przeciekać, wyciekać(o informacji)  |  |  to move or spread slowly out of a hole or through something   Pesticides are seeping out of farmland and into the water supply. Given the intense secrecy of the arms business, information only seeps out in company literature. |  |  | 
|  start learning jak najbardziej / oczywiście  |  |  used to give permission:   May I borrow this book?" "By all means |  |  | 
|  start learning uchwała, postanowienie, rozdzielczość  |  |  an official decision that is made after a group or organization has voted, a promise to yourself to do or to not do something   I made a resolution to give up chocolate. The United Nations passed (= voted to support) a resolution to increase aid to developing nations |  |  | 
| start learning |  |   pigheaded. as stubborn as a mule   showing unreasonable support for an opinion or plan of action and refusing to change or listen to different opinions |  |  | 
|  start learning dachówka, kafelek, płytka, wykładać kafelkami, kryć dachówkami  |  |  a thin, usually square or rectangular piece of baked clay, plastic, etc. used for covering roofs, floors, walls, etc   They covered the floor with tiles. All they needed to do was tile the roof. roof tiles |  |  | 
|  start learning chluba, gwóźdź programu, główna ozdoba, największa atrakcja  |  |   As the centrepiece of the ceremony, the stadium floor filled with water and a young boy in a small boat sailed across it |  |  | 
|  start learning główna atrakcja, punkt kulminacyjny  |  |   Meeting his parents was the highlight of the evening. |  |  | 
|  start learning ekscentryczność, dziwaczność  |  |  strange or unusual, sometimes in a humorous way, the state of being eccentric   eccentric behaviour. She was an elderly eccentric who lived with 25 cats. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  the condition of having great detail, or of being complete, correct, or true in every way:   He paints with photographic exactness. |  |  | 
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| start learning |  |  to make a noise like a long s sound: to say something in a quiet angry way   Why do snakes hiss? The iron was hissing and spluttering. Shut up, Tom!" she hissed. |  |  | 
|  start learning bełkotać, wykrztuszać (słowa), wyrzucać z siebie niezrozumiałe wyrazy, prychać, parskać  |  |  to speak in a quick and confused way, producing short, unclear noises because of surprise, anger, etc   But, er ... when, um, ... how?" he spluttered. The old gentleman was spluttering with indignation |  |  | 
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| start learning |  |  the coloured circular part of that eye that surrounds the black pupil (= central part)   Iris recognition may be used to identify people. |  |  | 
|  start learning niedobór, brak(gotówki, pracowników), deficyt  |  |  a situation in which there is not enough of something   There's a shortage of food and shelter in the refugee camps. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  exactly right:   How old do I reckon she is? I'd say 38." "Spot on." |  |  | 
|  start learning czarodziej, czarnoksiężnik  |  |  a man who is believed to have magical powers, usually to do evil |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  to make something from a piece of wood by cutting off small, thin pieces: dockside-nabrzeże   An old sailor sat on the dockside, whittling a toy boat. |  |  | 
|   dalekowzroczny, przewidujący, zapobiegliwy, przezorny   share-akcje, udziałstart learning |  |  having good judgment about what will be needed in the future and making wise decisions based on this:   Buying those shares was a very far-sighted move - they must be worth ten times their original value now. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  bad sexual behaviour, drinking too much alcohol, taking drugs, etc.: |  |  | 
|  start learning zaczyn, zaczyniać, zakwaszać  |  |  to add a substance to bread or another food made with flour to make it increase in size when it is cooked |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  a flat raised area, a flat area of stone or grass outside a house, where people sit and sometimes eat |  |  | 
|  start learning wzniosły, wniosłość, wspaniały (o widoku), najwyższy (o wiedzy), największy (o głupocie)  |  |   I have achieved the knowledge sublime. What he said back then was stupidity sublime. The sublime was the main characteristic of all his works |  |  | 
|   ganek, przedsionek, weranda   cool off-uspokoić się, ochłonąć, ostygnąć, ochłodzić sięstart learning |  |  a covered structure in front of the entrance to a building, a veranda   We sat out on the porch to cool off. |  |  | 
|  start learning hak spinaczkowy, wcisnąć się  |  |  He bought a new wedge for his climbing equipment,   The room is pretty crowded, so you'll have to wedge in. |  |  | 
|  start learning pluśnięcie, pluskać, chlapać, plusk  |  |  If a liquid splashes or if you splash a liquid, it falls on or hits something or someone. Water was splashing from a hole in the roof.   She heard a faint splash down below. The kids splashed some water around. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  existing at or since the beginning of the world or the universe, basic and connected with an early stage of development   The planet Jupiter contains large amounts of the primordial gas and dust out of which the solar system was formed. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  an opportunity to see something before it is officially available   The company is offering a sneak peek at the new software |  |  | 
|  start learning predestynowany, z góry przeznaczony  |  |   predestined, foreordinated   If an action or event is predestined, it is controlled by God or by fate:   It seems the expedition is predestined to fail because there have been so many problems. |  |  | 
|  start learning jęk, jęczeć, wydawać jęki, skrzypieć  |  |  a deep, long sound showing great pain or unhappiness   We could hear the groans of the wounded soldiers. a complaining noise or phrase: He looked at the piles of dirty dishes and gave a groan of dismay. |  |  | 
|  start learning umocować, zakorzenić, dać oparcie, oparcie, ostoja, spiker, prezenter  |  |   He was an anchor for his family in those difficult moments. He quickly looked around for something to anchor her to. His views are anchored in a leftish vision of society. |  |  | 
|  start learning podstępny, przebiegły, chytry  |  |  clever, especially in a dishonest or secret way:   I have some crafty ideas for getting around the regulations. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  to crush something into a flat shape:   She squashed the can flat and threw it to the bin. He accidentally sat on her hat and squashed it. |  |  | 
|  start learning przedsięwzięcie, interes, wyprawa, zagłębiać się, zapuszczać się (w jakiś teren, dużo przy tym ryzykując), podjąć się czegoś nowego lub ryzykownego  |  |  a new activity, usually in business, that involves risk or uncertainty, to risk going somewhere or doing something that might be dangerous or unpleasant, or to risk saying something that might be criticized:   Opening a company is a venture but I will support you. It will not be a trip but a venture. Those who venture into the forest do so at their own risk. I could hardly venture a question now. |  |  | 
|  tajgastart learning |  |  relating to the region of the earth just south of the Arctic, especially its plants and animals: |  |  | 
|   ponury, smętny, niewesoły, marny (np. widok na przyszłość)   Wyraz jego twarzy pozostał smętny.)start learning |  |  If a place is bleak, it is empty, and not welcoming or attractive   His expression remained bleak. |  |  | 
|  start learning przejrzystość, przezroczystość  |  |   translucency, translucence   the quality of being translucent (= almost transparent, in an attractive way):   Her skin had the papery-thin translucence of great age. translucent plastic/glass |  |  | 
|  start learning pojąć, zrozumieć, gruntować, sondować, zgłębiać  |  |  to understand someone or why someone acts as they do: to discover the meaning of something   I can't fathom her at all. For years people have been trying to fathom (out) the mysteries of the whale's song. If I have the gift of prophecy and can fathom all mysteries and all knowledge |  |  | 
|  start learning zastrzeżenie, zastrzegać, określać (coś w umowie), przewidywać (w kontrakcie)  |  |  to say exactly how something must be or must be done   She agreed to buy the car, but stipulated racing tyres and a turbo-powered engine. We have signed a contract which stipulates when the project must be completed. Is there any stipulation concerning the number of people attending the conference? |  |  | 
|  start learning rdzenny, rodzimy, tubylczy  |  |  naturally existing in a place or country rather than arriving from another place   The colonisers killed the indigenous peoples of this island. Are there any species of frog indigenous to the area? |  |  | 
|  start learning stronnik, zwolennik, przywierający, przylegający, członek (osoba należąca do jakieś organizacji, partii politycznej  |  |  sticky, a person who strongly supports a particular person, principle, or set of ideas   an adherent surface, She has long been an adherent of the Communist Party. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  someone involved in a skilled job or activity:   Elizabeth Quan is a London-based practitioner of traditional Chinese medicine. |  |  | 
|  start learning rozejm, zawieszenie broni  |  |  a short interruption in a war or argument, or an agreement to stop fighting or arguing for a period of time   After years of rivalry the two companies have agreed (US agreed to) a truce. |  |  | 
|  start learning rozejm, zawieszenie broni  |  |  a short interruption in a war or argument, or an agreement to stop fighting or arguing for a period of time   After years of rivalry the two companies have agreed (US agreed to) a truce. I was negotiating a truce between the two armies. |  |  | 
|  start learning inauguracja, wprowadzać uroczyście na stanowisko, uroczyście otwierać, rozpoczynać  |  |  the act of officially putting someone into an important position, or the ceremony at which this is done, the act of something officially starting to be used. the beginning of a new period, style, or activity:   He watched the inauguration of his country's new president. In 1900 Paris saw the inauguration of the Metro. It was the inauguration of a new era in American life. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  If something someone says or writes rings true, it seems to be true:   Something about his explanation didn't quite ring true. |  |  | 
|   nawiedzać, niepokoić (o duchach), dręczyć (np. o złych wspomnieniach, często odwiedzać   niedająca spokoju tajwmnicastart learning |  |  to cause repeated suffering or anxiety, (of a ghost) to appear in a place repeatedly, a place often visited   haunting mystery, This bar used to be one of your old haunts, didn't it, Jake? A ghostly lady is said to haunt the stairway looking for her children. Fighting in Vietnam was an experience that would haunt him for the rest of his life. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  covered with healthy green plants or grass   Much of the region's verdant countryside has been destroyed in the hurricane. verdant beauty |  |  | 
|  start learning miniatura, krótka firma literacka  |  |  a short piece of writing, music, acting, etc. that clearly expresses the typical characteristics of something or someone   She wrote several vignettes of small-town life. |  |  | 
|  start learning oprawa, ustawienie, regulacja, osadzenie, układ, otoczenie  |  |  |  |  | 
|  start learning ziemia, temat, obszar wiedzy, nie zezwolić na lot, dać szlaban na wyjścia, uziemić, mielony(np. kawa)  |  |   Do you prefer ground or instant coffee? You are grounded, young lady! Our plane was grounded, we need to wait at the airport for the next one. Could you make a speech on that? We know it is your ground |  |  | 
|  start learning wielkości kęsa, bardzo mały, bardzo prosty  |  |  small or short enough to be easy to understand, remember, or deal with at one time:   It's sometimes easier to explain what you're trying to do when you break it up into bite-sized chunks. |  |  | 
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|  start learning rozpiętość, trwałość (uwagi, koncentracji), długość (życia) zakres (np. pamięci), zasięg (np. kontroli), okres, przedział, OBEJMOWAĆ  |  |  the period of time that something exists or happens: the length of something from one end to the other: the area of a bridge, etc. between two supports. to exist or continue for a particular length of time:   We distinguish long term and short term memory span. Her research spanned much of the continent. Her acting career spanned almost six decades. |  |  | 
|  start learning rodzaj, gatunek, typ, odmiana, pochodnia, miecz, napiętnować, dać nazwę  |  |   They carried lighted brands during the festival. He killed his brother with a silver brand. I like his brand of humour |  |  | 
|   odpłacić się, zemścić, wynagradzać, odwdzięczać   nieodwzajemniona miłośćstart learning |  |  to give or do something in return for something given to you or done for you   unrequited love. Requited love is not enough to sustain a long-term relationship. She could wait awhile longer to requite her torment. She would requite them in similar coin. |  |  | 
|  start learning ruminacje, obsesyjne rozmyślanie nad jakością wykonanych czynności  |  |  the act of thinking carefully and for a long period about something   Hot to stop ruminating: 10 tips to stop repetitive thoughts. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |   first-hand report/account  |  |  | 
|  start learning przemierzać labirynt zaświatów  |  |   soar through the labyrinth of the netherworlds  |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  a story about a crime and the attempt to discover who committed it:   It's one of those whodunits where you don't find out who the murderer is till the very end. |  |  | 
|  start learning zagłębiać (się w coś), dociekać, badać, grzebać (np. w kieszeni), kopać (w poszukiwaniu czegoś  |  |  to search, especially as if by digging, in order to find a thing or information:   The book delves into political issues. He delved into his pockets and found two coins |  |  | 
|  start learning żart, wkręcać, nakręcany, wkręcany  |  |  |  |  | 
|  start learning dawka, dawkować, dozować, zaaplikować leki  |  |  a measured amount of something such as medicine   He might have tried to dose himself with something and had too much. I usually have to dose up to two times more medicine a day. Do not take more than 6 doses in a day |  |  | 
|  start learning zaprzyjaźnić się z, okazywać przyjaźń  |  |  to be friendly towards someone:   He was befriended by an old lady. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  having escaped or run away from somewhere, out of control someone who has escaped or run away from somewhere   a safe house for young runaways, A runaway bus/horse caused chaos on the streets. |  |  | 
|  start learning odtwarzać, bawić się i relaksować, przywrócić(nastrój), rekonstruować, przywracać pierwotny sens  |  |  to make something exist or happen again   They plan to recreate a typical English village in Japan |  |  | 
|  start learning entuzjazm(świeża energia twórcza)  |  |  the quality of feeling energetic, or the behaviour of someone who feels this way. liveliness, briskness   He maintained a youthful exuberance. What I tried to create was a little of that energy and exuberance. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |   draw criticism of her latest writing as a deeply anti-christian work that promoted eco-terrorism |  |  | 
|  start learning oklaskiwać, przyjmować brawami przyjmować (z zadowoleniem), darzyć uznaniem, publicznie chwalić, okrzykiwać (królem), uznanie, aplauz  |  |  public approval and praise, to give public approval and praise:   Despite the critical acclaim, the novel did not sell well. She is being acclaimed (= publicly recognized) as the greatest dancer of her generation. |  |  | 
|  prospect-possibilitystart learning |  |  worry or anxiety   Growing unease at the prospect of an election is causing fierce arguments within the party. |  |  | 
|  start learning straszliwy, potworny (np. zbrodnia) horrendalny, ogromny  |  |  extremely unpleasant or bad:   a horrendous accident/tragedy/crime, The firm made horrendous (= very big) losses last year |  |  | 
|  start learning zderzać się (np. w wypadku samochodowym) zetrzeć, kolidować z sobą (np. w kwestii poglądów)  |  |  (especially of moving objects) to hit something violently:   The two vans collided at the crossroads. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |   She has always been very vocal, she will surely tell us what she thinks. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  courage over a long period   I thought she showed remarkable fortitude during that period. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  a young male horse under the age of four   our colt was born on the night of the new moon. You played the game like a colt. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  great skill or style   It was a disappointing performance that lacked finesse. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  the fact of sharing interests, experiences, or other characteristics with someone or something:   There are some commonalities between the different stories. |  |  | 
|  start learning tłusty, natłuszczony, przetłuszczony, śliski  |  |  covered with or full of fat or oil:   greasy food/dishes/skin/hair |  |  | 
|  start learning bryzg, chłonięcie, obryzgiwać, ochlapywać  |  |  (especially of a thick liquid) to hit and cover a surface with small drops, or to cause this to happen   The bike was splattered with mud. |  |  | 
|  start learning marny, prowadzony z dnia na dzień (z braku pieniędzy  |  |   This is a hand-to-mouth restaurant, let's not eat here. hand-to-mouth existence |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  a pair of straps that hold up a pair of pants, which are attached to the waist of the pants and stretch over the shoulders |  |  | 
|   pasek (np. od zegarka, torebki), ramiączko (np. sukienki, (dziwka, szmata*), wiązać, mocować   bandagestart learning |  |  a narrow piece of leather or other strong material used for fastening something or giving support:   The strap of my bag is too short. She was wearing a top with white straps. You should strap your keys to your belt. Can you help me strap my elbow? She's a strap, she sleeps with everyone. |  |  | 
|  start learning szansa, możliwość, nadzieja, perspektywa, wizja, przeszukiwać(teren)  |  |  the possibility that something good might happen in the futurethe idea of something that will or might happen in the future, a person who might be chosen, for example as an employee:   Is there any prospect of the situation improving? There is no prospect of peace in this region. After 10 years of prospecting he still had no major success. I have no family prospects for the future because I don't even have a girlfriend. |  |  | 
|  start learning wstrzemięźliwość, abstynencja  |  |  control of your own behaviour, such as not drinking or eating too much, strong self-discipline and strong mind   moderateness, moderation, temperateness. The minister preached about temperance. |  |  | 
|  old-fashionedstart learning |  |  especially of a man) gay; criminalize-uznac za niezgodne z prawdą   queer lodging, We were criminalized just for being queer. What a queer thing to say! |  |  | 
|  start learning kwatera, czasowe zakwaterowanie  |  |  a temporary place to stay:   The price includes board and lodging (= meals and a room to sleep in). |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  the thin, dried skin of some animals that was used in the past for writing on, or a high-quality paper made to look like this   I write with ink and parchment, ancient parchment |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  If you are in thrall to someone or something, or in the thrall of someone or something, he, she, or it has a lot of power to control you   Her love for him was like a madness, and she was completely in its thrall. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  a plant with large, green leaves and a long, white root that has a strong sharp taste   roast beef and horseradish sauce |  |  | 
|  start learning pieczołowicie przechowywać, cenić sobie  |  |   She treasured her jewellery for years, I will always treasure those eight years we had worked together. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  a silver coin from the ancient Roman empire   The annual cost of a Roman legion was 1.25 million denarii. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  a tax of a fixed amount that must be paid by each adult |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  most important or main   The chief problem we have in the area now is the spread of disease. chief virtues. One of the chief causes of crime today is drugs |  |  | 
|  start learning zaliczka, kaucja, nanosić (np. warstwę błota), wpłacać  |  |   Should I leave a deposit? deposit fee, Do you want to make a deposit to your savings account? He deposited mud to the clean carpet |  |  | 
|   doprowadzić kogoś do czegoś   drive-napęd, determinacja, zapał, popęd (seksualny)start learning |  |   drive somebody to something    My dogs always drive me to get up early and go for a walk with them. Ambition can be a virtue when it drives us to excel. I think that drive may have triggered your abuse in the first place |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  good at finding ways of dealing with problems, resourcefulness   We need resourceful people in our company. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |   I run for/compete for/bid    Henry is going to run for president. Four companies are bidding on this contract right now. |  |  | 
|  start learning sprostać, spełniać oczekiwania  |  |   The movie didn't live up to my expectations |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  a person injured or killed in a serious accident or war   There were many casualties of the bombing. Your child is the biggest casualty of your divorce. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  express feeling of sadness   We should not lament the fates of these inferior creatures. Is it a lament to the gods? |  |  | 
|  start learning (Zachodzi pewna rozbieżność między ustaleniami naukowymi a działaniami politycznymi. |  |  a difference between two things that should be the same   There is something of a discrepancy between scientific findings and political action |  |  | 
| start learning |  |   sth doltish, such as your gormless, unimaginative behavior |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  |  |  | 
|  start learning gderliwy, zrzędliwy, marudny(AM), stuknięty, zbzikowany(UK)  |  |  easily annoyed or up   He's been cranky all day, She's a member of a group that promotes cranky ideas about food and exercise. |  |  | 
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| start learning |  |  serious and without any humour, solemnity   Everyone looked very solemn. |  |  | 
|  start learning wdzieranie się, wyrzynanie się, naruszenie granic |  |  the act of gradually taking away someone else's rights, or taking control of someone's time, work, etc.:   The new censorship laws are serious encroachments on freedom of expression.[C ] Human encroachment threatens the birds’ nesting sites. |  |  | 
|  start learning kuleć, powoli dopłynąć (o uszkodzonym statku), słaby, wiotki, bezwładny, chromy, utykanie  |  |  to walk slowly and with difficulty because of having an injured or painful leg or foot   He limps because one of his legs is shorter. Her skin looks limp. My limp leg sometimes hurts me. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  to break something apart   The last few bubbles rose from the sundered ship. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  a horn with parts like branches that grows on the head of a deer:   He used a deer antler as a coat hanger. |  |  | 
|  start learning niełamliwy, nienaruszalny, nie do złamania  |  |  |  |  | 
|  start learning chylący się ku upadkowi, nieudolny, rozpadający się, zniedołężniały  |  |  in very bad condition because of being old, or not having been cared for, or having been used a lot:   Most of the buildings were old and decrepit. A decrepit old man sat on a park bench. |  |  | 
|  start learning opóźniać, wstrzymywać, debil, przygłup, opóźnienie  |  |  to make something slower   A rise in interest rates would severely retard economic growth. She asked him to stall the guests, as the party wasn't ready yet. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  suffering from mange(świerzb) |  |  | 
|  start learning niewyszukany, naturalny, prostolinijny, nieskomplikowany  |  |  not complicated, or not showing a good understanding of culture and fashion; not sophisticated |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  the female of animals such as the deer or rabbit |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  providing support or help   ancillary staff/workers, Campaigning to change government policy is ancillary to the charity's direct relief work. |  |  | 
|  start learning kawałek, kloc, dzielić na kawałki, znaczna część  |  |  a roughly cut piece: a part of something, especially a large part.   a chunk of cheese/meat, a substantial chunk of our profits, Three hours is quite a chunk out of my working day. |  |  | 
|  start learning niepewny, ryzykowny, podejrzany, krętacki  |  |  dishonest, likely to break or cause pain, likely to fail or cause problems:   It's not my fault you own this dodgy stock. The weather might be a bit dodgy at this time of year. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  a very short time:   I'll be with you in a jiffy. I've just got to fetch some books from upstairs - I won't be a jiffy (= I'll be very quick). |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  either of the two round male sex organs that produce sperm and are contained in the scrotum (= bag of skin) below and behind the penis |  |  | 
|  start learning scheda, dziedzictwo, pamiątka rodowa  |  |  a valuable object that has been given by older members of a family to younger members of the same family over many years:   This ring is a family heirloom. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  deep respect and often praise shown for a person or god:   On this occasion we pay homage to him for his achievements. |  |  | 
|  start learning słaby, chwiejny, krzywy, kujonśki  |  |  weak, unsatisfactory, or not firm, not straight or level, (of fruit or vegetables) not of a regular shape, or different in shape to what is usual, knowing, or showing that you know, a lot of details about something, especially politics or science:   One of the legs on this chair is a bit wonky. He gave a wonky speech about climate change. wonky teeth. The rules have been changed on the sale of wonky vegetables. |  |  | 
|  start learning wygasać, wyzionąć ducha, wydychać, umrzeć  |  |  If something that lasts for a fixed length of time expires, it comes to an end or stops being in use, to die   My passport expires next month. In 1936 the last Tasmanian tiger breathed its final breath and expired in a zoo in Hobart. He ceased to breathe, gently expiring without any struggle at the age of 90. people expire around 78% of nitrogen |  |  | 
|  start learning wygaśnięcie, zgon, wydech  |  |  the situation in which something that lasts for a fixed length of time comes to an end or stops being in use   What is the expiration date of your credit card? Breath intake and expiration were mostly active only in the upper half of her chest. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  surprising, and teaching you new facts about life, people   Viewing the battle scene up close is an eye-opening experience. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  causing worry or anxiety   One of the documentary's many unsettling images is of a child playing with her father's gun. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  a place for training soldiers, a place that is similar to a place where soldiers are trained, where young criminals or people with behaviour problems can spend time:   He was drafted and had to report to boot camp three weeks later |  |  | 
|  start learning pewne podejrzenia, domysły  |  |  a feeling that something is true or likely to happen, although you are not certain   He must have had some inkling of what was happening. I didn't have the slightest inkling that she was unhappy. |  |  | 
|  start learning brzęczenie, brzęczeć, bzyczeć, bzyczenie, wrzeć, huczeć (z podekscytowania), kręcić się  |  |   The audience was buzzing with excitement before the concert. The doorbell is buzzing, can you open it? A wasp is buzzing in my room. Stop buzzing around the house and sit down! |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  a break in the skin, or on the surface of an organ inside the body, that does not heal naturally:   He had a stomach ulcer when he was 23 years old |  |  | 
|  start learning zakończyć pracę, na dziś koniec  |  |  to stop doing something because it's time or because you don't want to continue   well done guys. let's call it a day and have a drink |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  a container or bottle in particular |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  with the intention of preventing something undesirable; to avoid the risk   he spent his whole days in his room, headphones on lest he distrub anyone. They were afraid to complain about the noise lest they annoyed the neighbours. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  a smooth oily preparation that is rubbed on the skin for medical purposes or as a cosmetic |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  a strong piece of tissue in the body connecting a muscle to a bone |  |  | 
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|  start learning powtórzyć, powtarzać, powtórzenie  |  |  a repeat of something or part of something, especially a piece of music, to repeat a song, performance, or set of actions   I was to play the doctor, reprising a role I’d done years earlier. |  |  | 
|  start learning zawrzeć, zawierać, ujmować zwięźle, streszczać, być usobieniem  |  |  to express or show the most important facts about something   She encapsulates the stereotyped image that the British have of Americans. It was very difficult to encapsulate the story of the revolution in a single one-hour documentary. |  |  | 
|  start learning maleńki, tyci, siusiać, siusiu  |  |  small, little (teeny, weeny, bitty), urine, to urinate(pee) |  |  | 
| start learning |  |   a Y-shaped stick or piece of metal with a piece of elastic (= material that stretches) attached to the top parts, used especially by children for shooting small stones |  |  | 
|  start learning zmniejszać, umniejszać, maleć  |  |  to reduce or be reduced in size or importance   I don't want to diminish her achievements, but she did have a lot of help. We've seen our house diminish greatly/sharply/substantially in value over the last six months. |  |  | 
|  start learning demaskować, odkrywać, odsłaniać  |  |  to remove a covering like a curtain from a new structure at a formal ceremony in order to show the opening or finishing of a new building or work of art: If you unveil something new, you show it or make it known for the first time   The memorial to those who had died in the war was unveiled by the Queen. The company recently unveiled a test version of its new search engine. |  |  | 
|  start learning oszustwo, fałszerstwo, kawał, wygląd zewnętrzny (powierzchowność), zmanipulować(sfałszować), przymocować  |  |  to arrange dishonestly for the result of something, for example an election, to be changed. Previous elections in the country have been rigged by the ruling party. to fix a piece of equipment in place:   The vote was rigged. They've been planning a major rig. We rigged up a tent between two trees. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  stupid or showing no intelligence   In the book, Anna is forced to take care of her witless cousin. |  |  | 
|  start learning rzygać, wymiotować, sperma, wypluwać z siebie (słowa), bluzgać (przekleństwami)  |  |  If something spews liquid or gas, or liquid or gas spews from something, it flows out in large amounts:   The volcano spewed a giant cloud of ash, dust, and gases into the air. Paper came spewing from the computer printer. |  |  | 
|  start learning zaniedbany, źle ułożony, nieczesany, rozczochrany, zaniedbany  |  |   His unkempt beard is dirty and he looks like a beggar. We have to clean this unkempt house. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  a rough surface made of dried blood that forms over a cut or broken skin while it is healing |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  one of the back legs of an animal with four legs that is used for meat |  |  | 
|  start learning placówka, firma, personel  |  |   facility, company, staff, ESTABLISHMENT    Harry's is a remarkable establishment in Yorkshire where a queue stretches around the side whereas tables are laid with simple blue-checked table cloths on which saucers are placed |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  areas of hair grown down the sides of a man's face in front of the ears   sideburns are not appealing |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  more than is necessary   Keri is generous to a fault. |  |  | 
|  start learning rąbać, ciosać, trzymać się czegoś (zasad), dostosować się do  |  |  to cut a large piece out of rock, stone, or another hard material in a rough way. to obey or behave according to (rules, principles, or expectations):   The monument was hewn out of the side of a mountain. He never states his own opinion but hews to the party line. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  to make something secret known:   Journalists do not divulge their sources. The CEO refused to divulge how much she earned. |  |  | 
|  start learning podium, podest, podwyższenie  |  |  a raised surface at one end of a meeting room that someone can stand on when speaking to a group |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  to combine two different qualities   a design which marries fun with function |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  |  |  | 
|  start learning szorstki, zgryźliwy, opryskliwy, ścierny  |  |  rude and unfriendly, a substance used for rubbing away the surface of something, usually to clean it or make it shiny   He can sometimes be abrasive in meetings. You'll need a strong abrasive for cleaning this sink. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |   I got out of bed and put on my bathrobe. Why are you wearing my bathrobe? |  |  | 
| start learning |  |   well-deserved piece of chocolate |  |  | 
|  start learning urządzenie(sprzęt używany w domu typu pralka)  |  |  a device, machine, or piece of equipment, especially an electrical one that is used in the house, such as a cooker or washing machine   electric/domestic/household appliances |  |  | 
| start learning |  |   I didn't learn a thing in that class. I snore real loud so I won't hear a thing |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  recognize   awfully beautiful, I could tell about a person by their shoes |  |  | 
|  start learning odłupywać, ubijać, wykruszyć, usuwać, odłamek  |  |  a small piece that has been broken off a larger object, or the mark left on an object such as a cup, plate, etc. where a small piece has been broken off it. to break a small piece off something by accident.   The forester chipped branches from the tree. She started to chip paint from the walls. A chip got into my finger and I had to go to a hospital. This mug's got a chip in it/out of it. I wish my nail polish wouldn't keep chipping. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  no way |  |  | 
| start learning |  |   I don't feel like going out today. I feel like pizza tonight |  |  | 
|  start learning Zbierz się do kupy, zebrać się w sobie  |  |   get one's act/stuff together    I'm going to take few days off work and try to get my act together |  |  | 
|  start learning zderzak, napełnić po brzegi, kieliszek wypełniony po brzegi, wyjątkowo duży, rekordowy (np. zbiory)  |  |  a horizontal bar along the lower front and lower back part of a motor vehicle to help protect it if there is an accident   bumper sticker, This car has got a crushed bumper. Farmers have reported a bumper crop this year. |  |  | 
|  start learning szczyt(okres pełnego rozkwitu), kwiat, pełnia(młodości)  |  |  the most successful or popular period of someone or something   In their heyday, they sold as many records as all the other groups in the country put together. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  very strange and unusual   bizarre behaviour, That party was too bizarre for me! |  |  | 
|  start learning naprawić, zszywać, ZDROWIEĆ, poprawka  |  |  to repair something that is broken or damaged. to repair cloth that is torn or something that is damaged   Could you mend this hole in my shirt? The plumber came to mend the burst pipe. The country's president is seeking to mend relations with the United States. The bones in my broken wrist took eight weeks to mend. |  |  | 
|  start learning wyglądać obiecująco, być na dobrej drodze  |  |  kwitnący, obiecujący, pomyślny, korzystny (o perspektywach, przyszłości) If a situation is described as rosy, it gives hope of success or happiness   My future career looks rosy. Your rosy cheeks always make you look so healthy. Our financial position is rosy |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  an oval, purple vegetable that is white inside and is usually eaten cooked |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  |  |  | 
|  start learning doprowadzać (rurami), trawiarz, palacz marihuany, śpiewać wysokim głosem  |  |  to speak or sing in a high voice, to transport something in a pipe:   Hot water is piped to all apartments from the central boiler room. Do they have to pipe smells of freshly baked bread around stores? Look at his eyes, he's a pipe! |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  the wholesale price-cena hurtowa, the activity of selling goods to the public, usually in shops   The wholesale price of food is sometimes even 50 per cent lower than retail. |  |  | 
|  start learning jednostka, odział, rozdział, sztuka, segment(mebli), liczba mniejsza niż dziesięć  |  |   I train my army unit. Centimeter is a unit of measure. The test will cover three units. I put together two units of furniture. Think of a unit and multiply it by 10. |  |  | 
|  start learning okazja, dobry interes, porozumienie, układ, targować się  |  |   It sounds like you get the better part of this bargain. That wasn't much of a bargain |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  the colour, style, and arrangement of the objects in a room   The decor is rather gloomy. |  |  | 
|  start learning określać, przewidywać, planować; wystawać, sterczeć; wyświetlać (za pomocą projektora; narzucać (np. wyobrażenie o czymś);  |  |  He projected a firecracker too close and lost his arm. to calculate an amount or number expected in the future from information already known. If you project a particular quality, that quality is what most people notice about you:   We project a 5 minute break. I'm not going to project here and freeze to death. A way of projecting image out of the store. I can't project the presentation, so you will have to make notes. Don't project your ideas on me! |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  a thin tube made of plastic or waterproof paper that is used to suck liquid into the mouth:   Why don't you drink your milk through a straw? |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  . a box on wheels that is pulled by a car and is used for taking things from one place to another:   pitch the haystacks into the trailer. I can't use my trailer to transport this furniture because it's too small |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  the place in a shop, especially a large food shop, where you pay for your goods:   Your fruit and vegetables will be weighed at the checkout. |  |  | 
|  start learning kropla przepełniająca czarę goryczy  |  |  the latest problem in a series of problems, that makes a situation impossible to accept:   be the last straw. The last straw was when the company fired most of the managers. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  a person who is learning and practising the skills of a particular job, intern   a trainee dentist/electrician |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  a long, sharp tooth   The dog growled and bared its fangs. |  |  | 
|  start learning sygnał, znak(dla aktora), kj bilardowy, dać sygnał "na zawołanie"  |  |  a word or action in a play or film that is used as a signal by a performer to begin saying or doing something, a signal for someone to do something, If something happens on cue, it happens just after someone has said or thought it would happen:   They started washing up, so that was our cue to leave the party. I was just wondering where Sarah was, when, right on cue, she came in. |  |  | 
|  start learning garb, wybrzuszenie, zly humor  |  |   Some camels have two humps, and some only have one. She's got the hump since you told her she looked fat. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  the dark part of the skin which sticks out from the breast of a mammal and through which milk is supplied to the young   She has a mole on her right breast, just below the nipple |  |  | 
|  start learning do przyjęcia, wiarygodny, prawdopodobny, pozornie słuszny, stwarzający pozory wiarygodności  |  |  seeming likely to be true, or able to be believed: A plausible person appears to be honest and telling the truth, even if they are not   a plausible explanation/excuse, I consider it plausible, a plausible salesman |  |  | 
|  start learning wywierać(nacisk, wpływ), wytężyć (siły), okazywać, używać (siły), wysilać się  |  |  to use something such as authority, power, influence, etc. in order to make something happen: to make a mental or physical effort:(exert yourself)   If you were to exert your influence theySome managers exert considerable pressure on their staff to work extra hours without being paid. I was too tired to exert myself. |  |  | 
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| start learning |  |   Everyone will benefit from the taxation of the trade routes. |  |  | 
|  start learning ozdobny, kwiecisty(o stylu mówienia)  |  |  having a lot of complicated decoration   a room with an ornate ceiling and gold mirrors |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  able to be exchanged with each other without making any difference or without being noticed:   The terms "drinking problem" and "alcohol abuse" are often interchangeable. |  |  | 
|  start learning chybotanie, chwiać się, chybotać się, kiwać się (np. o krześle), trząść się  |  |   This chair wobbles, repair it. She was so nervous that her knees wobbled. |  |  | 
|  start learning Ogłoszenie było misternie opracowane. |  |  to plan the combination of movements to be performed in a dance: to plan an event or course of action very carefully:   She continues to choreograph new dances for her company, although she rarely performs anymore. The carefully choreographed ceremony emphasized the governor's focus on education. The announcement was elaborately choreographed. |  |  | 
|   wózek, wóz, furmanka, przewozić, zataszczyć   trolley UKstart learning |  |  a vehicle with either two or four wheels, pulled by a horse and used for carrying goods:   Why will supermarket carts never move in the direction that you push them in? We were carted to the railway station |  |  | 
|   odwrócić, odwracać, wywrócić, wywracać (np. torbę na drugą stronę, porządek słów), homoseksualista   inwersjastart learning |  |  to turn something upside down or change the order of two things. turn over. flip   In some languages, the word order in questions is inverted (= the verb comes before the subject of the sentence). if you invert the coin, there's a picture of a buffalo on the back. the number 9 looks like an inverted 6 |  |  | 
|  start learning erodować, niszczyć w procesie erozji, podmywać, ograniczać, podkopywać, źle wpływać, przeżerać(metal)  |  |  to rub or be rubbed away gradually, to slowly reduce or destroy something   Wind and rain have eroded the statues into shapeless lumps of stone. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  a very small room or space for storing things |  |  | 
|  start learning basen, zlewisko, dorzecze, miednica, miska  |  |  an open, round container shaped like a bowl with sloping sides, used for holding food or liquid: the area of land from which streams run into a river, lake, or sea   The number one priority must be to protect the environment in the Danube basin. She put a basin under the leak in the roof. |  |  | 
|  start learning denerwować kogoś (poprzez wywieranie presji na tę osobę), zdenerwowanie  |  |  to make someone upset and confused, especially when they are trying to do something. to put into a state of agitated confusion   Don't fluster her, or she will never finish this project. The speaker was obviously flustered by the interruption. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  a large deer with brownish-red fur and large antlers (= horns like branches) that lives in the forests of North America |  |  | 
|  start learning pracochłonny, żmudny, powolny  |  |  needing a lot of time and effort   It was a slow and laborious process |  |  |