0 to move or climb quickly but with difficulty, often using your hands -- przedzierać się/wdrapywać się
We scrambled up the hill.
1 to compete with other people for something which there is very little of -- bić się
[ + to do sth ] New teachers scramble to get jobs in the best schools.
The acquisition of scrambling and cliticization, pp. 207 + 236.
The notion of dynamical relaxation by non-linear scrambling leads to the introduction of eddy relaxation times and the direct-interaction approximation.
There was no evidence of an association between flakiness and stem twiners or scrambling climbers.
As uncertainty mounted about the stability of key currencies, central banks liquidated their foreign-exchange balances and scrambled to replace them with gold reserves.
Then we will prove that a tame system has no scrambled pair.
A 2 x 2 x 2 mixed-design was used with bilingualism and text structure (normal or scrambled) as betweensubjects factors with 24 participants per condition.
Where scrambling begins: triggering object scrambling in early language acquisition.
They make the point that scrambling moves specific nouns more easily than non-specific ones.
中文繁体
快速移動, (急速而艱難地)移動, 爬…
More中文简体
快速移动, (急速而艰难地)移动, 爬…
MoreEspañol
trepar, subir corriendo, gatear…
MorePortuguês
trepar, ir correndo…
More日本語
はい進む, よじ登る…
MoreTürk dili
çabalamak, az olan bir şeyi kapmak için yarışmak…
MoreFrançais
avancer en s’aidant des pieds et des mains, se démener, grimper à quatre pattes…
MoreCatalan
enfilar-se, grimpar…
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