Определение hat'et в Английский Язык Английский Язык словарь
- hard hat
- A helmet, usually made from rigid plastic, used on construction sites to protect the head from falling objects
- hat
- A particular role or capacity that a person might fill
My mother was wearing several hats in the early fifties: hostess, scout, wife, and mother.
- hat
- A covering for the head, often in the approximate form of a cone or a cylinder closed at its top end, and sometimes having a brim and other decoration
- hat
- Any receptacle from which numbers/names are pulled out in a lottery
- hat
- The lottery or draw itself
We're both in the hat, let's hope we come up against each other.
- hat hair
- An accidental hairdo resulting from the wearing of a hat
- hat in hand
- With humility; in an apologetic or self-effacing fashion
He came back the next day, hat in hand, to correct the problem he left behind.
- hat over the windmill
- Alternative form of cap over the windmill
- hat parade
- A parade in which people all wear hats, especially comical ones
- hat rack
- A piece of furniture used to store hats and clothing on, consisting of a pole with pegs on a moderately broad base; a hatstand
- hat racks
- plural form of hat rack
- hat stand
- Alternative spelling of hatstand
- hat tournament
- A tournament format for any team sport or game in which the teams are determined by randomly dividing up the participants into appropriately sized groups
- hat tree
- A hat rack; hatstand
- hat trees
- plural form of hat tree
- hat trick
- Striking out three times in one game
Jones got a hat trick yesterday. Let's see if he can do something today.
- hat trick
- Three achievements in a single game, or similar, such as three consecutive wins
The car salesman came home with front-row seats after turning a hat trick at work.
- hat trick
- Three wickets taken by a bowler in three consecutive balls
- hat trick
- Three goals scored by one player in a game, usually followed by a shower of hats onto the ice
After Jones' hat trick, the attendents had to pick up about 75 hats from the ice.
- hat tricks
- plural form of hat trick
- hat-rack
- Alternative spelling of hat rack
- hat-stand
- Alternative spelling of hatstand
- hat-trick
- Alternative spelling of hat trick
- hat
- A hat is a head covering, often with a brim round it, which is usually worn out of doors to give protection from the weather
- hat
- {n} a part of dress, a cover for the head
- Hat Act
- (1732) British law that restricted colonial manufacture and export of hats in competition with English hat makers, limiting the number of apprentices and forbidding the use of blacks in the trade. Part of the mercantile policy that restricted trade by the colonies and subordinated them economically, it enabled English hatters to dominate markets formerly supplied by New England and New York manufacturers
- hard hat
- protective hat that is made out of plastic or metal and is worn by construction workers (i.e. to protect their heads from hard falling objects)
- hard hat
- a lightweight protective helmet (plastic or metal) worn by construction workers
- hard hat
- a worker skilled in building offices or dwellings etc
- hard hat
- A hard hat is a hat made from a hard material, which people wear to protect their heads on building sites or in factories, or when riding a horse
- hat
- If you say that something or someone is old hat, you mean that they have existed or been known for a long time, and they have become uninteresting and boring. The younger generation tell me that religion is `old hat' and science has proved this
- hat
- Scientology slang term for a particular job, taken from the fact that in many professions, such as railroading, the type of hat worn is the badge of the job The term hat is also used to describe the write-ups, checksheets and packs that outline the purposes, know-how and duties of a job in a Scientology organization
- hat
- an informal term for a person's role; "he took off his politician's hat and talked frankly"
- hat
- A particular role, especially one which includes a head-covering
- hat
- — calligraphy
- hat
- to knock something into a cocked hat: see cocked hat. Head covering of any of various styles, used for warmth, fashion, or religious or ceremonial purposes, when it often symbolizes the office or rank of the wearer. In the West, through the Middle Ages, men wore hats in the form of caps or hoods, and women wore veils, hoods, or head draperies. The silk top hat originated in Florence 1760. The derby (bowler) was introduced in 1850. The cloth cap with visor was for decades the international standard for workingmen and boys. Women's hats went through periods of astonishing ostentation, the last being the years preceding World War I. Since 1960 the wearing of hats by both men and women has greatly declined in the West. With 15th-century origins, the broad-brimmed sombrero is still popular in Mexico and parts of Latin America. The people of East Asia have devised head coverings as simple as the Chinese coolie hat, a one-piece flattened cone, and as elaborate and decorative as the Japanese cap-shaped kammuri of black lacquered silk decorated with an upright streamer and imperial chrysanthemum crest. In India the Gandhi cap, fez, and turban are in general use. In regions where the Ottoman Empire ruled (including the Balkans and North Africa), the traditional headgear of the fez and tarboosh remained popular for men until the 20th century. Farther east, from Iran to South Asia (as well as in parts of coastal Arabia), various types of turbans have been worn by men. In the Arabian interior, the Levant, and parts of Syria and Iraq, the kaffiyeh (sometimes called a ghurah), a wide cloth held in place by a camel-hair cord (iql), remains customary, even for men sporting Western attire. In Israel the yarmulke is common, particularly among observant Jews
- hat
- In British English, if you pass the hat around, you collect money from a group of people, for example in order to give someone a present. In American English, you just say pass the hat. Professors are passing the hat to help staff in their department
- hat
- A covering for the head; esp
- hat
- Hot
- hat
- headdress that protects the head from bad weather; has shaped crown and usually a brim
- hat
- If you say that you are ready to do something at the drop of a hat, you mean that you are willing to do it immediately, without hesitating. India is one part of the world I would go to at the drop of a hat
- hat
- put on or wear a hat; "He was unsuitably hatted"
- hat
- Originally, "help authoring tool"; but since HTML also begins with an "H", the acronym is still useful S&C issued an article several years ago that argued for defining your project first and then choosing the major HAT (Doc-To-Help, ForeHelp, RoboHELP, or HDK) that was appropriate to your project The advice is still valid, but for HTML authoring tools, the criteria are somewhat different
- hat
- To pull something out of the hat means to do something unexpected which helps you to succeed, often when you are failing. Southampton had somehow managed to pull another Cup victory out of the hat
- hat
- On a train, a locomotive engineer and a conductor each wears a different kind of hat You will notice that various jobs in the society are designated by different hats From this we get the word hat as a slang term meaning one's specialized duties This is one's hat
- hat
- The headwear of the bando All instruments except for Sousaphones and Drumline wear the hat in the above picture Sousaphones wear berets
- hat
- The enzyme responsible for the acetylation of lysine residues on histone tails
- hat
- If you say that someone is wearing a particular hat, you mean that they are performing a particular role at that time. If you say that they wear several hats, you mean that they have several roles or jobs. putting on my nationalistic hat. various problems, including too many people wearing too many hats
- hat
- If you tell someone to keep a piece of information under their hat, you are asking them not to tell anyone else about it. Look, if I tell you something, will you promise to keep it under your hat?
- hat
- Standing in the doorway
- hat
- Slang: High hat cymbals Submitted by Karl Kuenning RFL from Roadie Net
- hat
- n topi
- hat
- In competitions, if you say that the winners will be drawn or picked out of the hat, you mean that they will be chosen randomly, so everyone has an equal chance of winning. The first 10 correct entries drawn out of the hat will win a pair of tickets, worth £20 each
- hat
- Job, the duties of a post
- hat
- approval If you say that you take your hat off to someone, you mean that you admire them for something that they have done. I take my hat off to Mr Clarke for taking this action
- hat
- pres
- hat
- of Hote to be called
- hat
- Same as Caret
- hat
- an informal term for a person's role; "he took off his politician's hat and talked frankly" headdress that protects the head from bad weather; has shaped crown and usually a brim put on or wear a hat; "He was unsuitably hatted" furnish with a hat
- hat
- height above touchdown
- hat
- A cap or hat worn by officers or enlisted men when full-dress uniform, or dress uniform, is not worn
- hat
- {i} headcovering shaped from fabric or other material; person's role or position
- hat
- headdress that protects the head from bad weather; has shaped crown and usually a brim put on or wear a hat; "He was unsuitably hatted"
- hat
- sing
- hat
- {f} put on a hat; cover with a hat; provide with a hat
- hat
- furnish with a hat
- hat
- one with a crown and brim, made of various materials, and worn by men or women for protecting the head from the sun or weather, or for ornament
- hat
- The portion of a detachable brake disc that comes in contact with the wheel hub
- hat
- Cf
- hat
- As it pertains to the Headline puzzle, one of the two words necessary to create the mixed alphabet (the other being the key) The hat is used to create a sequence of numbers which is then used to number the columns of a matrix containing the letters of the alphabet The columns are transposed according to their assigned numbers from the sequence The resulting alphabet consisting of the transposed columns is called the mixed alphabet
- hat box
- a special box used for carrying a hat in
- hat in hand
- while surrendering
- hat stand
- a tall pole with hooks at the top used to hang coats and hats on
- hat trick
- Getting three batters "out" in three successive pitches so called because in the 17th century, a pitcher/bowler who accomplished the feat was rewarded by an immediate bonus, collected by passing a hat among gathered spectators
- hat trick
- Three goals scored by the same player in a single match Originated in cricket where a player was awarded a new hat for taking three wickets with three balls
- hat trick
- The scoring of three or more goals by a player in one game
- hat trick
- Three goals by a single player in one game
- hat trick
- Scoring three goals in one game by a single player Fans typically throw hats on the ice in appreciation A Natural Hat Trick is scoring three goals in a row without intervening goals by any other player
- hat trick
- (sports) three consecutive scores by one player or three scores in one game (as in cricket or ice hockey etc
- hat trick
- Three goals scored by the same player in a single match
- hat trick
- The feat of scoring three or more goals in a game
- hat trick
- three goals in a single game by a single player; if a player scores three consecutive goals in a game it is called a natural hat trick
- hat trick
- 3 goals by a single player in a game
- hat trick
- (sports) three consecutive scores by one player or three scores in one game (as in cricket or ice hockey etc )
- hat trick
- When a player scores three goals in a game
- hat trick
- Three goals scored by one player in a single game
- hat trick
- (Sports) series of three successive wins; three goals scored by the same player in one game (Soccer; Ice hockey); three wickets taken by a one player in three successive balls (Cricket)
- hat trick
- The scoring of three or more goals by a player in one game A natural hat trick is when the same player scores three consecutive goals
- hat trick
- scored by a player in one game
- hat trick
- a series of three successes, especially in sports such as football when the same person scores three times
- hat trick
- Three goals scored by a player in a game
- hat trick
- Three deals written on the same day
- hat trick
- Slang for hitting three bulls in one turn
- hat trick
- a three in a row success
- hat trick
- 3 or more goals scored in a game by a single player
- hat-trick
- A hat-trick is a series of three achievements, especially in a sports event, for example three goals scored by the same person in a football game
- Davey Crockett hat
- Alternative spelling of Davy Crockett hat
- Gordie Howe hat tricks
- plural form of Gordie Howe hat trick
- Medicine Hat
- a town in Alberta, Canada
- Santa hat
- A red and white hat associated with Santa Claus, with a white bobble on top
- black hat
- A Haredi Jew; a member of an ultra-Orthodox Jewish community
- black hat
- A villain or bad guy in a story, especially in a Western (a film or other work of the Western genre)
- bowler hat
- A hard round black felt hat with a narrow brim; no longer commonly worn
- bucket hat
- A casual hat often worn at the beach, with a wide brim
- cocked hat
- A hat with the brim turned up to form two or three points; a bicorn or tricorn
- cocktail hat
- A type of small, extravagant women's hat, such as a fascinator, suitable as evening wear or for cocktail parties
- coon-skin hat
- Alternative form of coonskin cap
- coonskin hat
- Alternative form of coonskin cap
- deerstalker hat
- A type of men's headwear, made of cloth with a plaid pattern, having two projecting brims (one at the front and one at the back) and earflaps which can be folded up and tied at the top
Two famous fictional characters who wore deerstalker hats were Sherlock Holmes and Holden Caulfield in J. D. Salinger's Catcher in the Rye.
- eat one's hat
- Used in a result clause to express disbelief in the conditional clause proposition
He said he would eat his hat if more than ten people came. He'd better fetch a knife and fork!.
- grey hat
- Alternative spelling of gray hat
- old hat
- Something uninteresting, hackneyed, or passé due to overuse or long-standing familiarity
Based on the size of the crowd, perhaps the queen is old hat.
- old hat
- Something widely or long practiced, known, or accepted; something conventional
It is old hat for a sex scandal to bring down a politician.
- old hat
- Something with which one is very familiar, or in which one is experienced or skilled
Coward is such an old hand at this kind of thing that he makes it seem old hat.
- pass the hat
- To ask for money, especially from a group of people; to solicit donations or contributions
The institutions are opening development offices, hiring professional fund raisers, investing in slick billion-dollar campaigns, and trotting out their presidents to pass the hat.
- slouch hat
- A broad brimmed felt hat worn by soldiers, often with a clasp on the left side to allow a rifle to be carried over the shoulder
- stovepipe hat
- A type of top hat worn mainly in the 19th century, made of silk or other materials and having a very tall, cylindrical, flat-topped crown
One long, lanky man, with long hair and a big white fur stovepipe hat on the back of his head, and a crooked-handled cane, marked out the places.
- straw hat
- A stiff hat, with a flat crown and a brim, made from woven straw
- take one's hat off to
- To remove one's hat as a sign of respect to
- throw one's hat over the windmill
- Alternative form of throw one's cap over the windmill
- tin-foil hat
- A piece of headgear made from one or more sheets of tin foil, aluminium foil, or other similar material, the hats worn in the belief that they act to shield the brain from such influences as electromagnetic fields, or against mind control and/or mind reading
- tip of the hat
- A gesture of acknowledgement; often, an expression of gratitude
- tip one's hat
- To briefly remove or tap one's hat as a gesture of greeting, deference, or respect
- tri-corn hat
- A type of tricorn, or three cornered hat, as worn by the guardia civil in Spain
- white hat hacker
- A hacker who is ethically opposed to the abuse of computer systems