0 to hit or move something or someone with your foot -- ударять ногой, пинать
1 to move your feet and legs forwards or backwards quickly and with force -- лягаться, брыкаться
2 to be very annoyed with yourself for doing something stupid or wrong -- рвать на себе волосы
I could have kicked myself for saying that.
3 the action of kicking something with your foot -- пинок, удар ногой
He gave her a kick in the shins.
4 a special feeling of excitement and energy -- удовольствие, наслаждение
She gets a kick out of performing live.
When sampled with a kick net, the only organisms found in significant abundance at this marine foraging site were amphipods.
Neither trading conglomerate held the monopoly in the region, and profits from trade, kick-backs, and tariffs could flow in viceroyal coffers from either side.
He wanted a continuity so that, as one scene ended, the next one kicked in.
After each kicking, the robot modifies its trajectory to goal position by obtaining the information of the kicking position of the other two robots.
People cannot kick with their hands or eyes or anything else in the normal sense.
Interactive agricultural mechanisation has not been given much of a kick-start.
It hardly seems sensible to count the words separately, for kick has nothing to do with moving the foot, nor is bucket a container.
The first few sections deal with a diverse suite of analytical approaches: lithosphericscale issues kick the volume off.
中文繁体
踢,踹, (槍、炮)反衝,後坐, 打擊…
More中文简体
踢,踹, (枪、炮)反冲,后坐, 打击…
MoreEspañol
dar una patada/patadas a, dar patadas, patada…
MorePortuguês
chutar, chute, curtição…
More日本語
~をける, ~が足をばたつかせる, けること…
MoreTürk dili
tekmelemek, tekme atmak, tepmek…
MoreFrançais
donner un coup de pied, gigoter, arrêter…
MoreCatalan
donar una puntada de peu/puntades de peu a, espeternegar, puntada de peu…
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