Идиомы и фразеологизмы английского со словом air. Страница шесть

Словосочетания со словом air. Страница шесть

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have hair
To possess courage, fortitude, guts, sex-appeal.
I like him, he's got a lot of hair.
hide or hair
hide nor hair
either hide or hair
neither hide nor hair
A sign or trace of someone that is gone or lost; any sign at all of something missing. Usually used in negative or interrogative sentence.
Tommy left the house this morning and I haven't seen hide or hair of him since.
A button fell off my coat and I could find neither hide nor hair of it.
hot air
Nonsense, exaggerated talk, wasted words characterized by emotion rather than intellectual content.
That was just a lot of hot air what Joe said.
in midair
Not settled; uncertain; undecided.
The result of the game was left hanging in midair because it rained before the finish.
in one's hair
get in one's hair
have in one's hair
Bothering you again and again; always annoying.
Беспокоить снова и снова; постоянно раздражать.
Johnny got in Father's hair when he was trying to read the paper by running and shouting.
The grown-ups sent the children out to play so that the children wouldn't be in their hair while they were talking.
He gets into my hair every time we meet.
Он меня раздражает каждый раз, когда мы встречаемся.
in the air
In everyone's thoughts.
Christmas was in the air for weeks before.
The war filled people's thoughts every day; it was in the air.
Meeting the bodily senses; surrounding you so as to be smelled or felt.
Spring is in the air.
Rain is in the air.
into thin air
Without anything left; completely.
When Bob returned to the room, he was surprised to find that his books had vanished into thin air.
leave hanging
leave hanging in the air
To leave undecided or unsettled.
Because the committee could not decide on a time and place, the matter of the spring dance was left hanging.
Ted's mother didn't know what to do about the broken window, so his punishment was left hanging in the air until his father came home.