EUdict



Croatian

EUdict :: English-English dictionary

Results for: wild roseTranslations 1 - 30 of 254
 English English
wild rosedog rose
wild rosewild brier
(French) fierce, wild; unpolished; shy, lacking social skills, menacingfarouche
(in Dominoes) bank of dominoes that remains after each player has taken a turn; cemetery; place where bones of wild animals are collected; place where old vehicles are stored and used for scrap metal (cars, planes, etc.), place for discarded objectsboneyard
(Slang) complain; criticize, grumble, reddish brown game bird, wild chicken; criticism (Slang)grouse
accustomed to housework, not wild, raised for humans, tamed, housebroken, trained; accustomed to life with mankinddomesticated
act of committing violent and aggressive crimes against innocent bystanders (such as rape, physical assault, etc.), fruit, uncultivated, wild animal, wild apple tree; wild apple; wild plant; wild animal, wild plant or tree, growing wild, wildlingwilding
act of raving, enthusiastic appraisal, extremely positive review or critique, enthusiastic praise, enthusiastic; of trend; of crazy or wild talk, give high praise, large-scale party, speak deliriously, talk frantically; rage, blow or crash violently (a...rave
act violently or riotously, riotousness, wild or frenzied behavior, run rampant, behave wildly, move about furiously, violent behaviorrampage
activity resembling game, animals for hunting, animals killed in a hunt; meat from wild animals (used as food), aspect of game, brave, competition, competitive activity with rules, equipment, event with many sporting contests, fun activity; amusement, ...game
African wild animal, gnuwildebeest
African wild catserval
aggressive, cruel, ferocious; powerful, strong; wild; enraged; extremely bad, very severe (Slang), profound, violent or intensefierce
American tree, N. American tree, wild olivedevilwood
American wild catmargay
American wild catpampas cat
American wild horse, breed of small horses of Spanish origin, first breed of horse used by American Indians; naval officer who was commissioned while he was enlisted (US Navy Slang)mustang
anatomical hollow, cavity or depression in a bone (Anatomy), wild animal resembling catfossa
ancient war machine, type of donkey in southeastern Asia; ancient fighting weapon used to throw stones, wild Asian assonager
angry, full of wrath; wild, raging, infuriated, very energeticfurious
animal having long protruding teeth (elephant, wild boar, etc.), animal with tuskstusker
annual wild plantfluellin; fluellen
any of a number of leguminous plants which bear tall clusters of flowers in a variety of colors (also lupin), plant with tall flower spikes, ravenous, relating to a wolf, wild, rapacious; wolf-likelupine
any of a number of plants belonging to the genus Malva having hairy stems and pink or white flowers, flowering plant, marshmallow, plant related to mallow, see also:rose mallowmallow
any of a number of shrubs which belong to the rose family and bear clusters of white or pink flowers (also spirea)spiraea
any of a number of shrubs which belong to the rose family and bear clusters of white or pink flowers, flowering shrub, spiraeaspirea
any of several species of tropical trees which produce a dark reddish or purplish wood; variety of dark-colored wood which sometimes emits a light rose-like scent, dark wood of tropical trees, rosewood treerosewood
any of several wild oxen, bison, baffle somebody, confuse, buffalo fish, intimidate somebody, N American bison, see also:bison, type of horned cattlebuffalo
any of various plants of the rose family, hemp agrimony, plant with spiny fruitsagrimony
any of various undomesticated black-striped felines; aggressive person; experimental drilling; daring business venture; locomotive without cars (Slang), drill exploratory well, financially unsound business, medium-sized wild feline, not financially saf...wildcat
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About EUdict

EUdict is a collection of online dictionaries for the languages spoken mostly in the European Community. These dictionaries are the result of the work of many authors who worked very hard and finally offered their product free of charge on the internet thus making it easier to all of us to communicate with each other. For more information about the authors see Credits.

Some of the dictionaries have only a few thousand words, others have more than 250,000. There are 400 language pairs and over 10.6 million translations in total. Some of the words may be incorrectly translated or mistyped. Look at the list of available language pairs. EUdict is online since May 9, 2005 and English<>Croatian dictionary on tkuzmic.com since June 16, 2003.

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