Catch up on sleepcatch up with
Мой Словарь
catch up with
Определение

Определение catch up with - Английский словарь Reverso

Глагол

1.
productivity UScompensate for lost time or workUS
  • He stayed late to catch up with his assignments.
2.
social meet or reconnect with someone after a while
  • Let's catch up with old friends this weekend.
3.
progress reach someone who is ahead
  • I had to run to catch up with her on the trail.

Примеры catch up with в предложении

  • She worked weekends to catch up with her backlog.
  • After the break, he needed to catch up with his studies.
  • Let's catch up with old friends this weekend.
  • I need to catch up with my cousin soon.
  • We should catch up with our neighbors.
  • I had to run to catch up with her on the trail.
  • He sprinted to catch up with the group.
  • They slowed down so I could catch up with them.

Перевод catch up with на другие языки

Нажмите на любой язык ниже, чтобы увидеть переводы рядом с каждым значением!
  1. Арабский:

    عوض
  2. Бенгальский:

    ক্ষতিপূরণ করা
  3. Вьетнамский:

    hoàn thành
  4. Голландский:

    inhalen
  5. Греческий:

    αναπληρώνω
  6. Датский:

    indhente
  7. Иврит:

    לְהַשְׁלִים
  8. Испанский:

    ponerse al día
  9. Итальянский:

    recuperare
  10. Каталанский:

    recuperar la feina
  11. Китайский:

    赶上
  12. Корейский:

    따라잡다
  13. Немецкий:

    nachholen
  14. Персидский:

    جبران کرد
  15. Польский:

    nadrobić
  16. Португальский:

    recuperar
  17. Португальский (Бр.):

    colocar em dia
  18. Румынский:

    recupera
  19. Русский:

    наверстать
  20. Тайский:

    ชดเชย
  21. Турецкий:

    yetiştirmek
  22. Украинский:

    наздоганяти
  23. Французский:

    rattraper
  24. Хинди:

    भरपाई करना
  25. Шведский:

    komma ikapp
  26. Японский:

    追いつく

Результаты для catch up with из Collins Dictionary

Результаты из словаря
catch    (catches  plural & 3rd person present)  (catching  present participle)  (caught  past tense & past participle  )
1    verb  If you catch a person or animal, you capture them after chasing them, or by using a trap, net, or other device.   (=capture)  
Police say they are confident of catching the gunman...    V n  
Where did you catch the fish?...    V n  
I wondered if it was an animal caught in a trap.    V-ed  
2    verb  If you catch an object that is moving through the air, you seize it with your hands.  
I jumped up to catch a ball and fell over.    V n  
    Catch is also a noun., n-count  
He missed the catch and the match was lost.    
3    verb  If you catch a part of someone's body, you take or seize it with your hand, often in order to stop them going somewhere.   (=seize)  
Liz caught his arm...    V n  
He knelt beside her and caught her hand in both of his...    V n prep  
Garrido caught her by the wrist.    V n prep  
4    verb  If one thing catches another, it hits it accidentally or manages to hit it.  
The stinging slap almost caught his face...    V n  
I may have caught him with my elbow but it was just an accident...    V n with n  
He caught her on the side of her head with his other fist.    V n on n  
5    verb  If something catcheson or in an object or if an object catches something, it accidentally becomes attached to the object or stuck in it.  
Her ankle caught on a root, and she almost lost her balance...    V prep  
A man caught his foot in the lawnmower.    V n prep  
6    verb  When you catch a bus, train, or plane, you get on it in order to travel somewhere.   (=get)  
We were in plenty of time for Anthony to catch the ferry...    V n  
He caught a taxi to Harrods.    V n prep  
7    verb  If you catch someone doing something wrong, you see or find them doing it.  
He caught a youth breaking into a car...    V n -ing  
Three years ago my wife and I divorced. I caught her with her boss.    V n prep  
8    verb  If you catchyourself doing something, especially something surprising, you suddenly become aware that you are doing it.   (=find)  
I caught myself feeling almost sorry for poor Mr Laurence.    V pron-refl -ing  
9    verb  If you catch something or catch a glimpse of it, you notice it or manage to see it briefly.  
As she turned back she caught the puzzled look on her mother's face...    V n  
He caught a glimpse of the man's face in a shop window.    V n  
10    verb  If you catch something that someone has said, you manage to hear it.  
I do not believe I caught your name...    V n  
The men out in the corridor were trying to catch what they said.    V wh  
11    verb  If you catch a TV or radio programme or an event, you manage to see or listen to it.  
Bill turns on the radio to catch the local news...    V n  
12    verb  If you catch someone, you manage to contact or meet them to talk to them, especially when they are just about to go somewhere else.  
I dialled Elizabeth's number thinking I might catch her before she left for work...    V n  
Hello, Dolph. Glad I caught you.    V n  
13    verb  If something or someone catches you by surprise or at a bad time, you were not expecting them or do not feel able to deal with them.  
She looked as if the photographer had caught her by surprise...    V n prep  
I'm sorry but I just cannot say anything. You've caught me at a bad time...    V n prep  
The sheer number of spectators has caught everyone unprepared.    V n adj  
14    verb  If something catches your attention or your eye, you notice it or become interested in it.  
My shoes caught his attention...    V n  
A quick movement across the aisle caught his eye.    V n  
15    v-passive  If you are caught in a storm or other unpleasant situation, it happens when you cannot avoid its effects.  
When he was fishing off the island he was caught in a storm and almost drowned...    be/get V-ed prep  
Visitors to the area were caught between police and the rioters.    be/get V-ed prep  
16    v-passive  If you are caught between two alternatives or two people, you do not know which one to choose or follow.  
The Jordanian leader is caught between both sides in the dispute...    be V-ed between pl-n  
She was caught between envy and admiration.    be V-ed between pl-n  
17    verb  If you catch a cold or a disease, you become ill with it.  
The more stress you are under, the more likely you are to catch a cold.    V n  
18    verb  To catch liquids or small pieces that fall from somewhere means to collect them in a container.   (=collect)  
...a specially designed breadboard with a tray to catch the crumbs.    V n  
19    verb  If something catches the light or if the light catches it, it reflects the light and looks bright or shiny.  
They saw the ship's guns, catching the light of the moon...    V n  
Often a fox goes across the road in front of me and I just catch it in the headlights.    V n in n  
20    n-count  A catch on a window, door, or container is a device that fastens it.  
She fiddled with the catch of her bag...    
21    n-count  A catch is a hidden problem or difficulty in a plan or an offer that seems surprisingly good.  
usu sing   (=snag)  
The catch is that you work for your supper, and the food and accommodation can be very basic...    
22    n-count  When people have been fishing, their catch is the total number of fish that they have caught.  
The catch included one fish over 18 pounds.    
23    n-uncount  Catch is a game in which children throw a ball to each other.  
24    n-uncount  Catch is a game in which one child chases other children and tries to touch or catch one of them.   (=tag)  
25  
    catching  
26  You can say things such as `You wouldn't catch me doing that' to emphasize that you would never do a particular thing.  
INFORMAL  
you wouldn't/won't catch me    phrase  PHR -ing, PHR prep/adv    (emphasis)   You wouldn't catch me in there, I can tell you.    
27  
    to catch your breath  
    breath  
    to catch fire  
    fire  
    to catch hold of something  
    hold  
    to be caught short  
    short  
    to catch sight of something  
    sight  catch on  
1    phrasal verb  If you catch onto something, you understand it, or realize that it is happening.  
He got what he could out of me before I caught on to the kind of person he'd turned into...    V P to n  
Wait a minute! I'm beginning to catch on.    V P  
2    phrasal verb  If something catches on, it becomes popular.  
The idea has been around for ages without catching on.    V P  catch out    phrasal verb  To catch someone out means to cause them to make a mistake that reveals that they are lying about something, do not know something, or cannot do something.  
  (mainly BRIT)  
Detectives followed him for months hoping to catch him out in some deception...    V n P prep  
The government has been caught out by the speed of events.    V n P prep, Also V n P, V P n (not pron)  catch up  
1    phrasal verb  If you catch upwith someone who is in front of you, you reach them by walking faster than they are walking.  
I stopped and waited for her to catch up...    V P  
We caught up with the nuns.    V P with n  
2    phrasal verb  To catch upwith someone means to reach the same standard, stage, or level that they have reached.  
Most late developers will catch up with their friends...    V P with n  
John began the season better than me but I have fought to catch up...    V P  
During the evenings, the school is used by kids who want to catch up on English and mathematics.    V P on/in n  
3    phrasal verb  If you catch upon an activity that you have not had much time to do recently, you spend time doing it.  
I was catching up on a bit of reading.    V P on/with n  
4    phrasal verb  If you catch up on friends who you have not seen for some time or on their lives, you talk to them and find out what has happened in their lives since you last talked together.  
The ladies spent some time catching up on each other's health and families...    V P on n  
She plans to return to Dublin to catch up with the relatives she has not seen since she married.    V P with n  
5    phrasal verb  If you are caught upin something, you are involved in it, usually unwillingly.  
The people themselves weren't part of the conflict; they were just caught up in it...    be V-ed P in n  catch up with  
1    phrasal verb  When people catch up with someone who has done something wrong, they succeed in finding them in order to arrest or punish them.  
The law caught up with him yesterday.    V P P n  
2    phrasal verb  If something catches up with you, you are forced to deal with something unpleasant that happened or that you did in the past, which you have been able to avoid until now.  
Although he subsequently became a successful businessman, his criminal past caught up with him.    V P P n  


Catch-22  , Catch 22  If you describe a situation as a Catch-22, you mean it is an impossible situation because you cannot do one thing until you do another thing, but you cannot do the second thing until you do the first thing.    n-sing  oft N n  
It's a Catch 22 situation here. Nobody wants to support you until you're successful, but without the support how can you ever be successful?    
catch-all      (catch-alls  plural  )
in AM, also use catchall    A catch-all is a term or category which includes many different things.    n-count  
Globalisation is a catch-all to describe increased international trade..., Indigestion is a catch-all term for any kind of stomach distress.    
catch-phrase      (catch-phrases  plural  ), catch phrase  A catch-phrase is a sentence or phrase which becomes popular or well-known, often because it is frequently used by a famous person.    n-count  
safety catch      (safety catches  plural  )The safety catch on a gun is a device that stops you firing the gun accidentally.    n-count  
Eddie slipped the safety catch on his automatic back into place.    
catch up

Глагол

1.
productivity complete overdue tasks
  • He stayed late at work to catch up on emails.
2.
productivity compensate for a delay or deficiency
  • He worked extra hours to catch up on his tasks.
3.
update become updated with the latest information
  • I need to catch up on the news.
4.
progress reach someone or something that is ahead
  • She ran fast to catch up with her friend.

Примеры catch up в предложении

  • She worked through the weekend to catch up on her assignments.
  • I need to catch up on my reading before the exam.
  • He worked extra hours to catch up on his tasks.
  • She stayed late to catch up on emails.
  • They need to catch up on the project timeline.
  • I need to catch up on the news.
  • She decided to catch up with her emails.
  • Let's catch up on the latest research findings.
  • She ran fast to catch up with her friend.
  • He studied hard to catch up with the rest of the class.
  • They worked overtime to catch up on the project deadline.

Перевод catch up на другие языки

Нажмите на любой язык ниже, чтобы увидеть переводы рядом с каждым значением!
  1. Арабский:

    أكمل
  2. Бенгальский:

    সম্পূর্ণ করা
  3. Вьетнамский:

    hoàn thành công việc
  4. Голландский:

    inhalen
  5. Греческий:

    ολοκληρώνω
  6. Датский:

    indhente
  7. Иврит:

    לְהַשְׁלִים
  8. Испанский:

    ponerse al día
  9. Итальянский:

    recuperare
  10. Каталанский:

    posar-se al dia
  11. Китайский:

    完成
  12. Корейский:

    따라잡다
  13. Немецкий:

    nachholen
  14. Персидский:

    جبران کردن
  15. Польский:

    nadrobić
  16. Португальский:

    pôr em dia
  17. Португальский (Бр.):

    pôr em dia
  18. Румынский:

    finaliza
  19. Русский:

    закончить
  20. Тайский:

    ตามงานให้ทัน
  21. Турецкий:

    işleri tamamlamak
  22. Украинский:

    наздогнати
  23. Французский:

    rattraper
  24. Хинди:

    काम पूरा करना
  25. Шведский:

    komma ikapp
  26. Японский:

    追いつく

Результаты для catch up из Collins Dictionary

Результаты из словаря
catch    (catches  plural & 3rd person present)  (catching  present participle)  (caught  past tense & past participle  )
1    verb  If you catch a person or animal, you capture them after chasing them, or by using a trap, net, or other device.   (=capture)  
Police say they are confident of catching the gunman...    V n  
Where did you catch the fish?...    V n  
I wondered if it was an animal caught in a trap.    V-ed  
2    verb  If you catch an object that is moving through the air, you seize it with your hands.  
I jumped up to catch a ball and fell over.    V n  
    Catch is also a noun., n-count  
He missed the catch and the match was lost.    
3    verb  If you catch a part of someone's body, you take or seize it with your hand, often in order to stop them going somewhere.   (=seize)  
Liz caught his arm...    V n  
He knelt beside her and caught her hand in both of his...    V n prep  
Garrido caught her by the wrist.    V n prep  
4    verb  If one thing catches another, it hits it accidentally or manages to hit it.  
The stinging slap almost caught his face...    V n  
I may have caught him with my elbow but it was just an accident...    V n with n  
He caught her on the side of her head with his other fist.    V n on n  
5    verb  If something catcheson or in an object or if an object catches something, it accidentally becomes attached to the object or stuck in it.  
Her ankle caught on a root, and she almost lost her balance...    V prep  
A man caught his foot in the lawnmower.    V n prep  
6    verb  When you catch a bus, train, or plane, you get on it in order to travel somewhere.   (=get)  
We were in plenty of time for Anthony to catch the ferry...    V n  
He caught a taxi to Harrods.    V n prep  
7    verb  If you catch someone doing something wrong, you see or find them doing it.  
He caught a youth breaking into a car...    V n -ing  
Three years ago my wife and I divorced. I caught her with her boss.    V n prep  
8    verb  If you catchyourself doing something, especially something surprising, you suddenly become aware that you are doing it.   (=find)  
I caught myself feeling almost sorry for poor Mr Laurence.    V pron-refl -ing  
9    verb  If you catch something or catch a glimpse of it, you notice it or manage to see it briefly.  
As she turned back she caught the puzzled look on her mother's face...    V n  
He caught a glimpse of the man's face in a shop window.    V n  
10    verb  If you catch something that someone has said, you manage to hear it.  
I do not believe I caught your name...    V n  
The men out in the corridor were trying to catch what they said.    V wh  
11    verb  If you catch a TV or radio programme or an event, you manage to see or listen to it.  
Bill turns on the radio to catch the local news...    V n  
12    verb  If you catch someone, you manage to contact or meet them to talk to them, especially when they are just about to go somewhere else.  
I dialled Elizabeth's number thinking I might catch her before she left for work...    V n  
Hello, Dolph. Glad I caught you.    V n  
13    verb  If something or someone catches you by surprise or at a bad time, you were not expecting them or do not feel able to deal with them.  
She looked as if the photographer had caught her by surprise...    V n prep  
I'm sorry but I just cannot say anything. You've caught me at a bad time...    V n prep  
The sheer number of spectators has caught everyone unprepared.    V n adj  
14    verb  If something catches your attention or your eye, you notice it or become interested in it.  
My shoes caught his attention...    V n  
A quick movement across the aisle caught his eye.    V n  
15    v-passive  If you are caught in a storm or other unpleasant situation, it happens when you cannot avoid its effects.  
When he was fishing off the island he was caught in a storm and almost drowned...    be/get V-ed prep  
Visitors to the area were caught between police and the rioters.    be/get V-ed prep  
16    v-passive  If you are caught between two alternatives or two people, you do not know which one to choose or follow.  
The Jordanian leader is caught between both sides in the dispute...    be V-ed between pl-n  
She was caught between envy and admiration.    be V-ed between pl-n  
17    verb  If you catch a cold or a disease, you become ill with it.  
The more stress you are under, the more likely you are to catch a cold.    V n  
18    verb  To catch liquids or small pieces that fall from somewhere means to collect them in a container.   (=collect)  
...a specially designed breadboard with a tray to catch the crumbs.    V n  
19    verb  If something catches the light or if the light catches it, it reflects the light and looks bright or shiny.  
They saw the ship's guns, catching the light of the moon...    V n  
Often a fox goes across the road in front of me and I just catch it in the headlights.    V n in n  
20    n-count  A catch on a window, door, or container is a device that fastens it.  
She fiddled with the catch of her bag...    
21    n-count  A catch is a hidden problem or difficulty in a plan or an offer that seems surprisingly good.  
usu sing   (=snag)  
The catch is that you work for your supper, and the food and accommodation can be very basic...    
22    n-count  When people have been fishing, their catch is the total number of fish that they have caught.  
The catch included one fish over 18 pounds.    
23    n-uncount  Catch is a game in which children throw a ball to each other.  
24    n-uncount  Catch is a game in which one child chases other children and tries to touch or catch one of them.   (=tag)  
25  
    catching  
26  You can say things such as `You wouldn't catch me doing that' to emphasize that you would never do a particular thing.  
INFORMAL  
you wouldn't/won't catch me    phrase  PHR -ing, PHR prep/adv    (emphasis)   You wouldn't catch me in there, I can tell you.    
27  
    to catch your breath  
    breath  
    to catch fire  
    fire  
    to catch hold of something  
    hold  
    to be caught short  
    short  
    to catch sight of something  
    sight  catch on  
1    phrasal verb  If you catch onto something, you understand it, or realize that it is happening.  
He got what he could out of me before I caught on to the kind of person he'd turned into...    V P to n  
Wait a minute! I'm beginning to catch on.    V P  
2    phrasal verb  If something catches on, it becomes popular.  
The idea has been around for ages without catching on.    V P  catch out    phrasal verb  To catch someone out means to cause them to make a mistake that reveals that they are lying about something, do not know something, or cannot do something.  
  (mainly BRIT)  
Detectives followed him for months hoping to catch him out in some deception...    V n P prep  
The government has been caught out by the speed of events.    V n P prep, Also V n P, V P n (not pron)  catch up  
1    phrasal verb  If you catch upwith someone who is in front of you, you reach them by walking faster than they are walking.  
I stopped and waited for her to catch up...    V P  
We caught up with the nuns.    V P with n  
2    phrasal verb  To catch upwith someone means to reach the same standard, stage, or level that they have reached.  
Most late developers will catch up with their friends...    V P with n  
John began the season better than me but I have fought to catch up...    V P  
During the evenings, the school is used by kids who want to catch up on English and mathematics.    V P on/in n  
3    phrasal verb  If you catch upon an activity that you have not had much time to do recently, you spend time doing it.  
I was catching up on a bit of reading.    V P on/with n  
4    phrasal verb  If you catch up on friends who you have not seen for some time or on their lives, you talk to them and find out what has happened in their lives since you last talked together.  
The ladies spent some time catching up on each other's health and families...    V P on n  
She plans to return to Dublin to catch up with the relatives she has not seen since she married.    V P with n  
5    phrasal verb  If you are caught upin something, you are involved in it, usually unwillingly.  
The people themselves weren't part of the conflict; they were just caught up in it...    be V-ed P in n  catch up with  
1    phrasal verb  When people catch up with someone who has done something wrong, they succeed in finding them in order to arrest or punish them.  
The law caught up with him yesterday.    V P P n  
2    phrasal verb  If something catches up with you, you are forced to deal with something unpleasant that happened or that you did in the past, which you have been able to avoid until now.  
Although he subsequently became a successful businessman, his criminal past caught up with him.    V P P n  


Catch-22  , Catch 22  If you describe a situation as a Catch-22, you mean it is an impossible situation because you cannot do one thing until you do another thing, but you cannot do the second thing until you do the first thing.    n-sing  oft N n  
It's a Catch 22 situation here. Nobody wants to support you until you're successful, but without the support how can you ever be successful?    
catch-all      (catch-alls  plural  )
in AM, also use catchall    A catch-all is a term or category which includes many different things.    n-count  
Globalisation is a catch-all to describe increased international trade..., Indigestion is a catch-all term for any kind of stomach distress.    
catch-phrase      (catch-phrases  plural  ), catch phrase  A catch-phrase is a sentence or phrase which becomes popular or well-known, often because it is frequently used by a famous person.    n-count  
safety catch      (safety catches  plural  )The safety catch on a gun is a device that stops you firing the gun accidentally.    n-count  
Eddie slipped the safety catch on his automatic back into place.    
up on

Прилагательное

1.
knowledgeable informed about or familiar with
  • She's really up on the latest technology trends.
2.
up-to-date current with the latest information or standards
  • He is up on the new company policies.
Предложить другое определение для “up on”

Устойчивые выражения с up on

v.
buy a lot of something for future use
v.
gather information by reading
v.
take further action to ensure completion
v.
notice or become aware of something
v.
notice or understand something not obvious
v.
approach someone quietly without being noticed
v.
approach with the intention of seducing someone
v.
review information thoroughly
v.
gain an advantage over someone

Примеры up on в предложении

  • He's up on all the current events.
  • I'm not up on the latest fashion trends.
  • He is up on the new company policies.
  • She's up on the latest fashion trends.
  • They are up on the current market demands.

Перевод up on на другие языки

Нажмите на любой язык ниже, чтобы увидеть переводы рядом с каждым значением!
  1. Арабский:

    مطلع
  2. Бенгальский:

    জানাশোনা
  3. Вьетнамский:

    thông thạo
  4. Голландский:

    op de hoogte
  5. Греческий:

    ενημερωμένος
  6. Датский:

    opdateret
  7. Иврит:

    בַּעַל יְדִיעָה
  8. Испанский:

    familiarizado con
  9. Итальянский:

    aggiornato su
  10. Каталанский:

    al corrent
  11. Китайский:

    熟悉
  12. Корейский:

    잘 알고 있는
  13. Немецкий:

    auf dem Laufenden
  14. Персидский:

    مطلع
  15. Польский:

    zorientowany
  16. Португальский:

    informada sobre
  17. Португальский (Бр.):

    informada sobre
  18. Румынский:

    la curent
  19. Русский:

    в курсе
  20. Тайский:

    รู้เรื่อง
  21. Турецкий:

    bilgili
  22. Украинский:

    обізнана
  23. Французский:

    au courant
  24. Хинди:

    अवगत
  25. Шведский:

    insatt i
  26. Японский:

    詳しい

Результаты для up on из Collins Dictionary

Результаты из словаря
catch    (catches  plural & 3rd person present)  (catching  present participle)  (caught  past tense & past participle  )
1    verb  If you catch a person or animal, you capture them after chasing them, or by using a trap, net, or other device.   (=capture)  
Police say they are confident of catching the gunman...    V n  
Where did you catch the fish?...    V n  
I wondered if it was an animal caught in a trap.    V-ed  
2    verb  If you catch an object that is moving through the air, you seize it with your hands.  
I jumped up to catch a ball and fell over.    V n  
    Catch is also a noun., n-count  
He missed the catch and the match was lost.    
3    verb  If you catch a part of someone's body, you take or seize it with your hand, often in order to stop them going somewhere.   (=seize)  
Liz caught his arm...    V n  
He knelt beside her and caught her hand in both of his...    V n prep  
Garrido caught her by the wrist.    V n prep  
4    verb  If one thing catches another, it hits it accidentally or manages to hit it.  
The stinging slap almost caught his face...    V n  
I may have caught him with my elbow but it was just an accident...    V n with n  
He caught her on the side of her head with his other fist.    V n on n  
5    verb  If something catcheson or in an object or if an object catches something, it accidentally becomes attached to the object or stuck in it.  
Her ankle caught on a root, and she almost lost her balance...    V prep  
A man caught his foot in the lawnmower.    V n prep  
6    verb  When you catch a bus, train, or plane, you get on it in order to travel somewhere.   (=get)  
We were in plenty of time for Anthony to catch the ferry...    V n  
He caught a taxi to Harrods.    V n prep  
7    verb  If you catch someone doing something wrong, you see or find them doing it.  
He caught a youth breaking into a car...    V n -ing  
Three years ago my wife and I divorced. I caught her with her boss.    V n prep  
8    verb  If you catchyourself doing something, especially something surprising, you suddenly become aware that you are doing it.   (=find)  
I caught myself feeling almost sorry for poor Mr Laurence.    V pron-refl -ing  
9    verb  If you catch something or catch a glimpse of it, you notice it or manage to see it briefly.  
As she turned back she caught the puzzled look on her mother's face...    V n  
He caught a glimpse of the man's face in a shop window.    V n  
10    verb  If you catch something that someone has said, you manage to hear it.  
I do not believe I caught your name...    V n  
The men out in the corridor were trying to catch what they said.    V wh  
11    verb  If you catch a TV or radio programme or an event, you manage to see or listen to it.  
Bill turns on the radio to catch the local news...    V n  
12    verb  If you catch someone, you manage to contact or meet them to talk to them, especially when they are just about to go somewhere else.  
I dialled Elizabeth's number thinking I might catch her before she left for work...    V n  
Hello, Dolph. Glad I caught you.    V n  
13    verb  If something or someone catches you by surprise or at a bad time, you were not expecting them or do not feel able to deal with them.  
She looked as if the photographer had caught her by surprise...    V n prep  
I'm sorry but I just cannot say anything. You've caught me at a bad time...    V n prep  
The sheer number of spectators has caught everyone unprepared.    V n adj  
14    verb  If something catches your attention or your eye, you notice it or become interested in it.  
My shoes caught his attention...    V n  
A quick movement across the aisle caught his eye.    V n  
15    v-passive  If you are caught in a storm or other unpleasant situation, it happens when you cannot avoid its effects.  
When he was fishing off the island he was caught in a storm and almost drowned...    be/get V-ed prep  
Visitors to the area were caught between police and the rioters.    be/get V-ed prep  
16    v-passive  If you are caught between two alternatives or two people, you do not know which one to choose or follow.  
The Jordanian leader is caught between both sides in the dispute...    be V-ed between pl-n  
She was caught between envy and admiration.    be V-ed between pl-n  
17    verb  If you catch a cold or a disease, you become ill with it.  
The more stress you are under, the more likely you are to catch a cold.    V n  
18    verb  To catch liquids or small pieces that fall from somewhere means to collect them in a container.   (=collect)  
...a specially designed breadboard with a tray to catch the crumbs.    V n  
19    verb  If something catches the light or if the light catches it, it reflects the light and looks bright or shiny.  
They saw the ship's guns, catching the light of the moon...    V n  
Often a fox goes across the road in front of me and I just catch it in the headlights.    V n in n  
20    n-count  A catch on a window, door, or container is a device that fastens it.  
She fiddled with the catch of her bag...    
21    n-count  A catch is a hidden problem or difficulty in a plan or an offer that seems surprisingly good.  
usu sing   (=snag)  
The catch is that you work for your supper, and the food and accommodation can be very basic...    
22    n-count  When people have been fishing, their catch is the total number of fish that they have caught.  
The catch included one fish over 18 pounds.    
23    n-uncount  Catch is a game in which children throw a ball to each other.  
24    n-uncount  Catch is a game in which one child chases other children and tries to touch or catch one of them.   (=tag)  
25  
    catching  
26  You can say things such as `You wouldn't catch me doing that' to emphasize that you would never do a particular thing.  
INFORMAL  
you wouldn't/won't catch me    phrase  PHR -ing, PHR prep/adv    (emphasis)   You wouldn't catch me in there, I can tell you.    
27  
    to catch your breath  
    breath  
    to catch fire  
    fire  
    to catch hold of something  
    hold  
    to be caught short  
    short  
    to catch sight of something  
    sight  catch on  
1    phrasal verb  If you catch onto something, you understand it, or realize that it is happening.  
He got what he could out of me before I caught on to the kind of person he'd turned into...    V P to n  
Wait a minute! I'm beginning to catch on.    V P  
2    phrasal verb  If something catches on, it becomes popular.  
The idea has been around for ages without catching on.    V P  catch out    phrasal verb  To catch someone out means to cause them to make a mistake that reveals that they are lying about something, do not know something, or cannot do something.  
  (mainly BRIT)  
Detectives followed him for months hoping to catch him out in some deception...    V n P prep  
The government has been caught out by the speed of events.    V n P prep, Also V n P, V P n (not pron)  catch up  
1    phrasal verb  If you catch upwith someone who is in front of you, you reach them by walking faster than they are walking.  
I stopped and waited for her to catch up...    V P  
We caught up with the nuns.    V P with n  
2    phrasal verb  To catch upwith someone means to reach the same standard, stage, or level that they have reached.  
Most late developers will catch up with their friends...    V P with n  
John began the season better than me but I have fought to catch up...    V P  
During the evenings, the school is used by kids who want to catch up on English and mathematics.    V P on/in n  
3    phrasal verb  If you catch upon an activity that you have not had much time to do recently, you spend time doing it.  
I was catching up on a bit of reading.    V P on/with n  
4    phrasal verb  If you catch up on friends who you have not seen for some time or on their lives, you talk to them and find out what has happened in their lives since you last talked together.  
The ladies spent some time catching up on each other's health and families...    V P on n  
She plans to return to Dublin to catch up with the relatives she has not seen since she married.    V P with n  
5    phrasal verb  If you are caught upin something, you are involved in it, usually unwillingly.  
The people themselves weren't part of the conflict; they were just caught up in it...    be V-ed P in n  catch up with  
1    phrasal verb  When people catch up with someone who has done something wrong, they succeed in finding them in order to arrest or punish them.  
The law caught up with him yesterday.    V P P n  
2    phrasal verb  If something catches up with you, you are forced to deal with something unpleasant that happened or that you did in the past, which you have been able to avoid until now.  
Although he subsequently became a successful businessman, his criminal past caught up with him.    V P P n  


Catch-22  , Catch 22  If you describe a situation as a Catch-22, you mean it is an impossible situation because you cannot do one thing until you do another thing, but you cannot do the second thing until you do the first thing.    n-sing  oft N n  
It's a Catch 22 situation here. Nobody wants to support you until you're successful, but without the support how can you ever be successful?    
catch-all      (catch-alls  plural  )
in AM, also use catchall    A catch-all is a term or category which includes many different things.    n-count  
Globalisation is a catch-all to describe increased international trade..., Indigestion is a catch-all term for any kind of stomach distress.    
catch-phrase      (catch-phrases  plural  ), catch phrase  A catch-phrase is a sentence or phrase which becomes popular or well-known, often because it is frequently used by a famous person.    n-count  
safety catch      (safety catches  plural  )The safety catch on a gun is a device that stops you firing the gun accidentally.    n-count  
Eddie slipped the safety catch on his automatic back into place.    
on sleep

Наречие

resting in a state of rest during sleep
  • The baby is on sleep and won't wake up easily.

Примеры on sleep в предложении

  • She is on sleep and won't hear the noise.
  • The cat is on sleep, curled up on the couch.

Перевод on sleep на другие языки

Нажмите на любой язык ниже, чтобы увидеть переводы рядом с каждым значением!
  1. Арабский:

    في حالة نوم
  2. Бенгальский:

    ঘুমের মধ্যে
  3. Вьетнамский:

    ngủ
  4. Голландский:

    in slaap
  5. Греческий:

    κοιμισμένο
  6. Датский:

    i søvn
  7. Иврит:

    בְּשֵׁנָה
  8. Испанский:

    durmiendo
  9. Итальянский:

    a riposo
  10. Каталанский:

    dormint
  11. Китайский:

    在睡觉
  12. Корейский:

    잠을 자고
  13. Немецкий:

    im Schlaf
  14. Персидский:

    در خواب
  15. Польский:

    we śnie
  16. Португальский:

    a dormir
  17. Португальский (Бр.):

    dormindo
  18. Румынский:

    adormit
  19. Русский:

    спит
  20. Тайский:

    หลับ
  21. Турецкий:

    uyku halinde
  22. Украинский:

    спить
  23. Французский:

    en train de dormir
  24. Хинди:

    नींद में
  25. Шведский:

    i vila
  26. Японский:

    眠って

Результаты для on sleep из Collins Dictionary

Результаты из словаря
catch    (catches  plural & 3rd person present)  (catching  present participle)  (caught  past tense & past participle  )
1    verb  If you catch a person or animal, you capture them after chasing them, or by using a trap, net, or other device.   (=capture)  
Police say they are confident of catching the gunman...    V n  
Where did you catch the fish?...    V n  
I wondered if it was an animal caught in a trap.    V-ed  
2    verb  If you catch an object that is moving through the air, you seize it with your hands.  
I jumped up to catch a ball and fell over.    V n  
    Catch is also a noun., n-count  
He missed the catch and the match was lost.    
3    verb  If you catch a part of someone's body, you take or seize it with your hand, often in order to stop them going somewhere.   (=seize)  
Liz caught his arm...    V n  
He knelt beside her and caught her hand in both of his...    V n prep  
Garrido caught her by the wrist.    V n prep  
4    verb  If one thing catches another, it hits it accidentally or manages to hit it.  
The stinging slap almost caught his face...    V n  
I may have caught him with my elbow but it was just an accident...    V n with n  
He caught her on the side of her head with his other fist.    V n on n  
5    verb  If something catcheson or in an object or if an object catches something, it accidentally becomes attached to the object or stuck in it.  
Her ankle caught on a root, and she almost lost her balance...    V prep  
A man caught his foot in the lawnmower.    V n prep  
6    verb  When you catch a bus, train, or plane, you get on it in order to travel somewhere.   (=get)  
We were in plenty of time for Anthony to catch the ferry...    V n  
He caught a taxi to Harrods.    V n prep  
7    verb  If you catch someone doing something wrong, you see or find them doing it.  
He caught a youth breaking into a car...    V n -ing  
Three years ago my wife and I divorced. I caught her with her boss.    V n prep  
8    verb  If you catchyourself doing something, especially something surprising, you suddenly become aware that you are doing it.   (=find)  
I caught myself feeling almost sorry for poor Mr Laurence.    V pron-refl -ing  
9    verb  If you catch something or catch a glimpse of it, you notice it or manage to see it briefly.  
As she turned back she caught the puzzled look on her mother's face...    V n  
He caught a glimpse of the man's face in a shop window.    V n  
10    verb  If you catch something that someone has said, you manage to hear it.  
I do not believe I caught your name...    V n  
The men out in the corridor were trying to catch what they said.    V wh  
11    verb  If you catch a TV or radio programme or an event, you manage to see or listen to it.  
Bill turns on the radio to catch the local news...    V n  
12    verb  If you catch someone, you manage to contact or meet them to talk to them, especially when they are just about to go somewhere else.  
I dialled Elizabeth's number thinking I might catch her before she left for work...    V n  
Hello, Dolph. Glad I caught you.    V n  
13    verb  If something or someone catches you by surprise or at a bad time, you were not expecting them or do not feel able to deal with them.  
She looked as if the photographer had caught her by surprise...    V n prep  
I'm sorry but I just cannot say anything. You've caught me at a bad time...    V n prep  
The sheer number of spectators has caught everyone unprepared.    V n adj  
14    verb  If something catches your attention or your eye, you notice it or become interested in it.  
My shoes caught his attention...    V n  
A quick movement across the aisle caught his eye.    V n  
15    v-passive  If you are caught in a storm or other unpleasant situation, it happens when you cannot avoid its effects.  
When he was fishing off the island he was caught in a storm and almost drowned...    be/get V-ed prep  
Visitors to the area were caught between police and the rioters.    be/get V-ed prep  
16    v-passive  If you are caught between two alternatives or two people, you do not know which one to choose or follow.  
The Jordanian leader is caught between both sides in the dispute...    be V-ed between pl-n  
She was caught between envy and admiration.    be V-ed between pl-n  
17    verb  If you catch a cold or a disease, you become ill with it.  
The more stress you are under, the more likely you are to catch a cold.    V n  
18    verb  To catch liquids or small pieces that fall from somewhere means to collect them in a container.   (=collect)  
...a specially designed breadboard with a tray to catch the crumbs.    V n  
19    verb  If something catches the light or if the light catches it, it reflects the light and looks bright or shiny.  
They saw the ship's guns, catching the light of the moon...    V n  
Often a fox goes across the road in front of me and I just catch it in the headlights.    V n in n  
20    n-count  A catch on a window, door, or container is a device that fastens it.  
She fiddled with the catch of her bag...    
21    n-count  A catch is a hidden problem or difficulty in a plan or an offer that seems surprisingly good.  
usu sing   (=snag)  
The catch is that you work for your supper, and the food and accommodation can be very basic...    
22    n-count  When people have been fishing, their catch is the total number of fish that they have caught.  
The catch included one fish over 18 pounds.    
23    n-uncount  Catch is a game in which children throw a ball to each other.  
24    n-uncount  Catch is a game in which one child chases other children and tries to touch or catch one of them.   (=tag)  
25  
    catching  
26  You can say things such as `You wouldn't catch me doing that' to emphasize that you would never do a particular thing.  
INFORMAL  
you wouldn't/won't catch me    phrase  PHR -ing, PHR prep/adv    (emphasis)   You wouldn't catch me in there, I can tell you.    
27  
    to catch your breath  
    breath  
    to catch fire  
    fire  
    to catch hold of something  
    hold  
    to be caught short  
    short  
    to catch sight of something  
    sight  catch on  
1    phrasal verb  If you catch onto something, you understand it, or realize that it is happening.  
He got what he could out of me before I caught on to the kind of person he'd turned into...    V P to n  
Wait a minute! I'm beginning to catch on.    V P  
2    phrasal verb  If something catches on, it becomes popular.  
The idea has been around for ages without catching on.    V P  catch out    phrasal verb  To catch someone out means to cause them to make a mistake that reveals that they are lying about something, do not know something, or cannot do something.  
  (mainly BRIT)  
Detectives followed him for months hoping to catch him out in some deception...    V n P prep  
The government has been caught out by the speed of events.    V n P prep, Also V n P, V P n (not pron)  catch up  
1    phrasal verb  If you catch upwith someone who is in front of you, you reach them by walking faster than they are walking.  
I stopped and waited for her to catch up...    V P  
We caught up with the nuns.    V P with n  
2    phrasal verb  To catch upwith someone means to reach the same standard, stage, or level that they have reached.  
Most late developers will catch up with their friends...    V P with n  
John began the season better than me but I have fought to catch up...    V P  
During the evenings, the school is used by kids who want to catch up on English and mathematics.    V P on/in n  
3    phrasal verb  If you catch upon an activity that you have not had much time to do recently, you spend time doing it.  
I was catching up on a bit of reading.    V P on/with n  
4    phrasal verb  If you catch up on friends who you have not seen for some time or on their lives, you talk to them and find out what has happened in their lives since you last talked together.  
The ladies spent some time catching up on each other's health and families...    V P on n  
She plans to return to Dublin to catch up with the relatives she has not seen since she married.    V P with n  
5    phrasal verb  If you are caught upin something, you are involved in it, usually unwillingly.  
The people themselves weren't part of the conflict; they were just caught up in it...    be V-ed P in n  catch up with  
1    phrasal verb  When people catch up with someone who has done something wrong, they succeed in finding them in order to arrest or punish them.  
The law caught up with him yesterday.    V P P n  
2    phrasal verb  If something catches up with you, you are forced to deal with something unpleasant that happened or that you did in the past, which you have been able to avoid until now.  
Although he subsequently became a successful businessman, his criminal past caught up with him.    V P P n  


Catch-22  , Catch 22  If you describe a situation as a Catch-22, you mean it is an impossible situation because you cannot do one thing until you do another thing, but you cannot do the second thing until you do the first thing.    n-sing  oft N n  
It's a Catch 22 situation here. Nobody wants to support you until you're successful, but without the support how can you ever be successful?    
catch-all      (catch-alls  plural  )
in AM, also use catchall    A catch-all is a term or category which includes many different things.    n-count  
Globalisation is a catch-all to describe increased international trade..., Indigestion is a catch-all term for any kind of stomach distress.    
catch-phrase      (catch-phrases  plural  ), catch phrase  A catch-phrase is a sentence or phrase which becomes popular or well-known, often because it is frequently used by a famous person.    n-count  
safety catch      (safety catches  plural  )The safety catch on a gun is a device that stops you firing the gun accidentally.    n-count  
Eddie slipped the safety catch on his automatic back into place.    

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