beat en xx
51beat — {{/stl 13}}{{stl 7}}[wym. bit] {{/stl 7}}{{stl 8}}rz. mnż I, D. u, Mc. beacie, blm, {{/stl 8}}{{stl 7}}to samo co bigbit. <ang.>{{/stl 7}}{{stl 17}}ZOB. {{/stl 17}}{{stl 7}}big beat {{/stl 7}} …
52beat — Beat, Beat pere, Beatus …
53beat it — ► beat it informal leave. Main Entry: ↑beat …
54beat up — ► beat up attack (someone) and hit them repeatedly. Main Entry: ↑beat …
55beat-'em-up — beatˈ em up noun (informal) A type of computer game in which an unarmed character has to fight against several enemies • • • Main Entry: ↑beat …
56beat|en — «BEE tuhn», adjective, verb. –adj. 1. struck repeatedly; whipped: »The beaten dog crawled to his master s feet. 2. a) much walked on or traveled: »The children wore a beaten path across the grass. b) Figurative. »... subjects out of the beaten… …
57beat-up — eat up adj. same as {beaten up}. Syn: battered, beaten up, bedraggled, broken down, dilapidated, ramshackle, tumble down, unsound. [WordNet 1.5] …
58beat — I (defeat) verb be superior, be supreme, be victorious over, bring to terms, checkmate, claim a victory, conquer, crush, dash, discomfit, excel, get the best of, get the better of, have the advantage, hold the advantage, lay waste, obtain a… …
59Beat — m Swiss German: name borne in honour of the apostle of Switzerland, a hermit of uncertain date who established himself at the place now called Beatenberg, above the lake of Thun. His name derives from Late Latin Beātus ‘blessed’; cf. BEATA (SEE… …
60beat — (ingl.; pronunc. [bit]; pl. «beats») 1 adj. y n. m. Se aplica a un estilo de música pop surgido en Inglaterra en los años sesenta, cuyos representantes más famosos fueron los Beatles. 2 *Beatnik …