Werbung
 Übersetzung für 'at 300 a throw' von Englisch nach Deutsch
at €300 a throw {adv} [coll.]zu je 300 Euro
at a single throw {adv}mit einem einzigen Wurf
to throw a glance at sb./sth.einen Blick auf jdn./etw. werfen
5+ Wörter
at a stone's throw (from sth.{adv} [idiom] einen Steinwurf (von etw.Dat.) entfernt [veraltend] [Redewendung]
to throw a custard pie at sb. [e.g. a politician]jdn. torten [ugs.]
Teiltreffer
at the first throw {adv}beim ersten Wurf
to throw oneself at sb.sich an jdn. ranschmeißen [ugs.]
to throw sth. at sb.etw. nach jdm. werfen
to throw oneself at sb. sich an jdn. ranmachen [ugs.] [an ein Mädchen etc.]
idiom
to throw oneself at sb.
sich jdm. an den Hals werfen
to throw sth. at sb.jdm. etw.Akk. entgegenwerfen
idiom
to throw the book at sb.
jdn. aller einschlägigen Verbrechen bezichtigen
to throw money at sth. [idiom]für etw.Akk. Geld hinauswerfen [fig.]
to throw rotten tomatoes at sb.jdn. mit faulen Tomaten bewerfen
to throw the book at sb. [idiom]jdn. mit Beschuldigungen überhäufen
to throw sb. in at the deep end [coll.] [idiom] jdn. ins kalte Wasser schmeißen [ugs.] [Redewendung]
to throw mud at sb./sth. [to sling mud at ...] [coll.] [fig.]jdn./etw. in den Dreck ziehen [ugs.] [fig.]
300 times the ...das 300-Fache {n} [+ Gen.]
300 times the ...das Dreihundertfache {n} [+ Gen.]
300 times the ...das 300fache {n} [+ Gen.]
more than 300 deadmehr als 300 Tote {pl}
filmF
The 300 Spartans [Rudolph Maté]
Der Löwe von Sparta
to throw a fiteinen Wutanfall haben
to throw a tantrumeinen Anfall kriegen [ugs.]
sports
to throw a touchdown
einen Touchdown werfen
25 Übersetzungen
Neue Wörterbuch-Abfrage: Einfach jetzt tippen!

Übersetzung für 'at 300 a throw' von Englisch nach Deutsch

at €300 a throw {adv} [coll.]
zu je 300 Euro
at a single throw {adv}
mit einem einzigen Wurf

Werbung
to throw a glance at sb./sth.
einen Blick auf jdn./etw. werfen

at a stone's throw (from sth.) {adv} [idiom]
einen Steinwurf (von etw.Dat.) entfernt [veraltend] [Redewendung]

to throw a custard pie at sb. [e.g. a politician]
jdn. torten [ugs.]

at the first throw {adv}
beim ersten Wurf
to throw oneself at sb.
sich an jdn. ranschmeißen [ugs.]

sich an jdn. ranmachen [ugs.] [an ein Mädchen etc.]

sich jdm. an den Hals werfenidiom
to throw sth. at sb.
etw. nach jdm. werfen

jdm. etw.Akk. entgegenwerfen
to throw the book at sb.
jdn. aller einschlägigen Verbrechen bezichtigenidiom
to throw money at sth. [idiom]
für etw.Akk. Geld hinauswerfen [fig.]
to throw rotten tomatoes at sb.
jdn. mit faulen Tomaten bewerfen
to throw the book at sb. [idiom]
jdn. mit Beschuldigungen überhäufen
to throw sb. in at the deep end [coll.] [idiom]
jdn. ins kalte Wasser schmeißen [ugs.] [Redewendung]
to throw mud at sb./sth. [to sling mud at ...] [coll.] [fig.]
jdn./etw. in den Dreck ziehen [ugs.] [fig.]
300 times the ...
das 300-Fache {n} [+ Gen.]

das Dreihundertfache {n} [+ Gen.]

das 300fache {n} [+ Gen.]
more than 300 dead
mehr als 300 Tote {pl}
The 300 Spartans [Rudolph Maté]
Der Löwe von SpartafilmF
to throw a fit
einen Wutanfall haben
to throw a tantrum
einen Anfall kriegen [ugs.]
to throw a touchdown
einen Touchdown werfensports
Anwendungsbeispiele Englisch
  • Jehu proceeded to enter the premises of the palace at Jezreel. Jezebel watched him with contempt from the palace window and mockingly compared him to King Zimri. Jehu later commanded Jezebel's eunuchs to throw her out of the palace window. They obeyed his commands and Jezebel was instantly killed. Jehu trampled over her body, but when he decided later to arrange a proper burial due to her royal descent, only her skull, hands and feet remained. The rest of her body had been eaten by dogs.
  • Incidents of anti-Semitism Greenberg faced included having players stare at him and having racial slurs thrown at him by spectators and sometimes opposing players. Examples of these imprecations were: "Hey Mo!" (referring to the Jewish prophet Moses) and "Throw a pork chop—he can't hit that!" (a reference to Jewish kosher laws). In the 1935 World Series umpire George Moriarty warned some Chicago Cubs players to stop yelling anti-Semitic slurs at Greenberg and eventually cleared the players from the Cubs bench. Moriarty was disciplined for this action by then-commissioner Kenesaw Mountain Landis.
  • In September 1849, Flaubert completed the first version of a novel, "The Temptation of Saint Anthony." He read the novel aloud to Louis Bouilhet and Maxime Du Camp over the course of four days, not allowing them to interrupt or give any opinions. At the end of the reading, his friends told him to throw the manuscript in the fire, suggesting instead that he focus on day-to-day life rather than fantastic subjects.
  • The game of guts was invented by the Healy Brothers in the 1950s and developed at the International Frisbee Tournament (IFT) in Eagle Harbor, Michigan. Two teams of one to five team members stand in parallel lines facing each other across a court and throw flying discs at members of the opposing team.
  • A tackle is known as a quarterback sack when the quarterback is tackled at or behind the line of scrimmage while attempting to throw a pass. A tackle for loss is a tackle that causes a loss of yardage for the opposing running back or wide receiver. This happens when the quarterback is sacked, when either a rusher or a receiver is tackled behind the line of scrimmage, or when the ball is fumbled behind the line of scrimmage and was picked up by an offensive player who does not manage to move past the line before being tackled. When a player who does not have the ball is taken down, it is generally referred to as a block.

  • Play begins at the start of each half with one team place-kicking the ball from its own 35-yard line. Both teams then attempt to catch the ball. The player who recovers the ball may run while holding the ball, or lateral throw the ball to a teammate.
  • If a team does not have the hammer in an end, it will opt to try to clog up the four-foot zone in the house to deny the opposing team access to the button. This can be done by throwing "centre line" guards in front of the house on the centre line, which can be tapped into the house later or drawn around. If a team has the hammer, they will try to keep this four-foot zone free so that they have access to the button area at all times. A team with the hammer may throw a "corner guard" as their first stone of an end placed in front of the house but outside the four-foot zone to utilize the free guard zone. Corner guards are key for a team to score two points in an end, because they can either draw around it later or hit and roll behind it, making the opposing team's shot to remove it more difficult.
  • Boxing (also known as "Western boxing" or "pugilism") is a combat sport in which two people, usually wearing protective gloves and other protective equipment such as hand wraps and mouthguards, throw punches at each other for a predetermined amount of time in a boxing ring.
  • If a player is fouled while attempting a shot and the shot is successful, typically the player will be awarded one additional free throw for one point. In combination with a regular shot, this is called a "three-point play" or "four-point play" (or more colloquially, an "and one") because of the basket made at the time of the foul (2 or 3 points) and the additional free throw (1 point).
  • Nicaragua has had its share of MLB players, including shortstop Everth Cabrera and pitcher Vicente Padilla, but the most notable is Dennis Martínez, who was the first baseball player from Nicaragua to play in Major League Baseball. He became the first Latin-born pitcher to throw a perfect game, and the 13th in the major league history, when he played with the Montreal Expos against the Dodgers at Dodger Stadium in 1991.

  • In 1711, a French lawyer presented to the parliament of Dijon a 'war machine' made up of 10 carbine barrels capable of firing in vollies. It was said to be accurate at 400 to 500 paces and to strike with enough force to pierce 2 or 3 men at a time when close. It was also claimed to be able to shoot 5 or 6 times before infantry came within musket range or cavalry within pistol range and with no more space between each shot than the time needed to prime a pistol, cock it and release the hammer. An alternative and heavier version was said to be able to throw grenades and it was also proposed to equip the machine with a bellows for clearing smoke that built up during firing.
  • The US Navy made an incursion on the Gulf Coast, occupying Veracruz in April 1914. Although Mexico was engaged in a civil war at the time, the US intervention united Mexican forces in their opposition to the US. Foreign powers helped broker US withdrawal in the Niagara Falls peace conference. The US timed its pullout to throw its support to the Constitutionalist faction under Carranza.
  • In the summer of 1913, while he was a lifeguard on the beach at Cedar Point in Sandusky, Ohio, Rockne and his college teammate and roommate Gus Dorais worked on passing techniques. These were employed in games by the 1913 Notre Dame squad and subsequent Harper- and Rockne-coached teams and included many features common in modern passing, including having the passer throw the ball overhand and having the receiver run under a football and catch the ball in stride.
  • The Commodore 64 had an optional external 5-1/4" floppy drive. The Commodore 1541 contained a 6502 microprocessor which was used to run Commodore DOS and also to manage the drive mechanism. The drives stored data on 35 tracks (#0–34), and the stepper motor could be manually controlled through BASIC by PRINT#-ing "MEMORY-WRITE" commands to the drive (which correspond to the POKE command of BASIC, but write to the drive's internal memory and I/O registers, not those of the computer itself). If the drive was at either end of its range (track 0 or track 39) and it was commanded to continue moving, there was no software or firmware method to prevent drive damage. Continued "knocking" of the drive head against the stop would throw the mechanism out of alignment. The problem was exacerbated by copy protection techniques that used non-standard disk formats with unusual track counts. The Commodore 1571 had an optical head stop instead of a mechanical one.
  • Flying at [...] , the pilot located his target through a bombsight window in the cockpit floor. The pilot moved the dive lever to the rear, limiting the "throw" of the control column.

  • In more recent years, most steals of home involve a "delayed double steal", in which a runner on first attempts to steal second, while the runner on third breaks for home as soon as the catcher throws to second base. If it is important to prevent the run from scoring, the catcher may hold on to the ball (conceding the steal of second) or may throw to the pitcher; this may deceive the runner at third and the pitcher may throw back to the catcher for the out.
  • During Alexander III's reign, the monarchy's opponents quickly disappeared underground. A group of students had been planning to assassinate Alexander III on the sixth anniversary of his father's death at the Peter and Paul Cathedral in St. Petersburg. The plotters had stuffed hollowed-out books with dynamite, which they intended to throw at the Tsar when he arrived at the cathedral. However, the Russian secret police uncovered the plot before it could be carried out. Five students were hanged in 1887; amongst them was Aleksandr Ulyanov, older brother of Vladimir Lenin.
  • While a forward pass may only be thrown once per down by the team on offense from within or behind the neutral zone, there are no restrictions on the use of lateral passes; any player legally carrying the ball may throw a lateral pass from any position on the field at any time, any player may receive such a pass, and any number of lateral passes may be thrown on a single play. Additionally, a player receiving a lateral pass may throw a forward pass if he is still behind the neutral zone, subject to the forward pass rules. A lateral is the only type of pass that can be legally thrown following a change of possession during a play.
  • Handball is played on a court [...] , with a goal in the centre of each end. The goals are surrounded by a near-semicircular area, called the zone or the crease, defined by a line six metres from the goal. A dashed near-semicircular line nine metres from the goal marks the free-throw line. Each line on the court is part of the area it encompasses; the centre line belongs to both halves at the same time.
Werbung
© dict.cc English-German dictionary 2024
Enthält Übersetzungen von der TU Chemnitz sowie aus Mr Honey's Business Dictionary (nur Englisch/Deutsch).
Links auf das Wörterbuch oder auch auf einzelne Übersetzungen sind immer herzlich willkommen!