Dicţionar englez-român

HUNTING

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Traducere în limba română

hunting I. s.

1. vânătoare.

2. pradă, captură, rezultatul unei vânători.

3. (fig.) urmărire, căutare, cercetare.

hunting II. adjectiv

de vânătoare.

 Exemple de propoziții și/sau fraze: 

On the third day the king had ridden out hunting, and the boy went once more and said: “I cannot open the door even if I wished, for I have not the key.”

(Fairy Tales, de The Brothers Grimm)

So next day the hunting began.

(The Sea-Wolf, de Jack London)

Also, if you have in thy country bad hunting, or bad water, you must make payment. It is just. It is the law.

(Love of Life and Other Stories, de Jack London)

His hunting had been good, and for a week he had eaten his fill.

(White Fang, de Jack London)

Guided by that instinct which came from the old hunting days of the primordial world, Buck proceeded to cut the bull out from the herd.

(The Call of the Wild, de Jack London)

The study covered many parts of the brain already known to be associated with feeding, and the results suggested some areas are associated with both hunting and feeding and others only with just one behavior.

(Geneticists produce laser-activated killer mice, Wikinews)

I don't know anything about them, thought Beth, and forgetting the boy's misfortune in her flurry, she said, hoping to make him talk, "I never saw any hunting, but I suppose you know all about it."

(Little Women, de Louisa May Alcott)

They had been hunting together, and were in the midst of a good run, and at some distance from Mansfield, when his horse being found to have flung a shoe, Henry Crawford had been obliged to give up, and make the best of his way back.

(Mansfield Park, de Jane Austen)

As the hunting man-animals went out and came back, so she would come back to the village some time.

(White Fang, de Jack London)

The wind had fallen to a whisper, the ocean was growing calmer and calmer, and this, coupled with the presence of the great herd, made a perfect hunting day—one of the two or three days to be encountered in the whole of a lucky season.

(The Sea-Wolf, de Jack London)




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