1 to lower one’s (moral) standards by doing something -- snížit se
Surely he wouldn’t stoop to cheating!
2 a stooping position of the body, shoulder etc -- ohnutá záda
In this garden sixty years ago a golden snake stooped at the water trough.
Seldom does he treat any writing in particular or the circumstances of its composition, nor does he stoop to close textual or rhetorical analysis.
It also asks them how often they have to lift heavy loads and stoop, kneel, or crouch at work.
She looked so little, like a ten-year-old - but slightly stooped and not at all lively except in her face.
Activities such as walking, stooping, kneeling or running may be ascribed culturally specific meanings, which in turn impact on their experience.
Why the apology, as though stooping to what has after all been the driving motive of much transformative critical work?
During recess, the stylobates transform into stoops.
He is an old man who stoops, who can't walk or can hardly walk, who is nearly completely deaf, who cannot communicate to me at all.
中文繁体
俯身,彎腰, 佝僂,弓背, 台階…
More中文简体
俯身,弯腰, 佝偻,弓背, 台阶…
MoreEspañol
agacharse, encorvarse, escaleras de entrada a una vivienda…
MorePortuguês
curvar-se, escadaria…
More日本語
(前に)かがむ, 玄関前の階段…
MoreTürk dili
kamburunu çıkarmak, kambur, eşik…
MoreFrançais
se baisser, s’abaisser à, dos rond…
MoreCatalan
ajupir-se, inclinar-se, escala d’entrada a un habitatge…
More