• (bɑndaet) (abstract noun ការបណ្ដែត) to allow something to float, to float something to float in the air, to flutter (figurative) to let oneself go...
be moved, stirred, shaken, staggered, fluttered, roused, agitated (mediopassive, intransitive) to bestir oneself, to bustle about active mediopassive Armenian:...
full and orbicular; and in that proportion the tendency of men and women, flutter as they might, would be helplessly and hopelessly to sink into the all-conquering...
razduvátʹ sčot rasxódov ― to pad an expense account to blow about, to flutter ве́тер раздува́ет знамёна ― véter razduvájet znamjóna ― the colours/colors/banners...
flatteren, flateren (“to flutter, float, fawn over”), probably a conflation of Old English floterian, flotorian (“to flutter, float, be disquieted”),...
(“lightbulb”) мр̏к (“dark”) + -уља → мр̀куља (“dark-haired cow”) па́хати (“to flutter”) + -уља → па̀хуља (“snowflake”) по̀бећи (“to run away”) + -уља → побѐгуља...
(literary) to sway; to flutter in the wind (literary) to relax; to loosen (literary) Alternative form of 躲 (duǒ, “to hide; to conceal oneself”) 嚲懶 / 亸懒 嚲鞚 / 亸鞚...
VII), London: A[braham] J[ohn] Valpy, […], published 1830–1831, →OCLC: To flutter and flounce will do nothing but batter and bruise us. 1717, Joseph Addison...
soldiers in their bronze armour; keen swords in their hands and proud plumes fluttering from their helmets. Standing out or raised; swollen. After it had healed...
oneself, to force oneself”) + -tı → sıkıntı (“boredom, distress, annoyance”) çırp- (“to clap, to beat, to whip”) + -ın- (“to struggle, to flutter”)...