Go out to take a leak

Go out to take a leak
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Difficulties of the English language (lexical reference) English-Russian dictionary. 2014.

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Смотреть что такое "Go out to take a leak" в других словарях:

  • take a leak — tv. to urinate. (Crude. Usually objectionable. Usually in reference to a male.) □ I gotta go take a leak. Back in a minute. □ He just went out to take a leak …   Dictionary of American slang and colloquial expressions

  • take a leak — very informal! to pass liquid waste out of the body. I ll be back in a moment I ve gotta take a leak …   New idioms dictionary

  • leak — [[t]lik[/t]] n. 1) an unintended hole, crack, or the like, through which liquid, gas, light, etc., enters or escapes: a leak in the roof[/ex] 2) an act or instance of leaking 3) any means of unintended entrance or escape 4) elm the loss of… …   From formal English to slang

  • leak — [lēk] vi. [ME leken < ON leka, to drip < IE base * leg , to drip, trickle, LACK, OIr legaim, (I) dissolve, Welsh llaith, damp] 1. to let a fluid substance out or in accidentally [the boats leaks] 2. to enter, or escape accidentally from, an …   English World dictionary

  • Take Care — For song by Funker Vogt, see Take Care (Funker Vogt song). Take Care …   Wikipedia

  • leak — leak1 [ lik ] verb * 1. ) intransitive or transitive if an object or container leaks or if it leaks something, liquid or gas comes out of it through a hole or crack: The roof is still leaking. If the boiler is broken, it may be leaking dangerous… …   Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • leak */ — I UK [liːk] / US [lɪk] verb Word forms leak : present tense I/you/we/they leak he/she/it leaks present participle leaking past tense leaked past participle leaked 1) a) [intransitive/transitive] if an object or container leaks, or if it leaks… …   English dictionary

  • leak — I. verb Etymology: Middle English leken, liken, from or akin to Middle Dutch leken; akin to Old English hlec leaky, Old High German zelehhan, Old Norse leka to leak and probably to Old English leccan to moisten, Middle Irish legaid it melts Date …   New Collegiate Dictionary

  • leak — leaker, n. leakless, adj. /leek/, n. 1. an unintended hole, crack, or the like, through which liquid, gas, light, etc., enters or escapes: a leak in the roof. 2. an act or instance of leaking. 3. any means of unintended entrance or escape. 4.… …   Universalium

  • leak — n. & v. n. 1 a a hole in a vessel, pipe, or container etc. caused by wear or damage, through which matter, esp. liquid or gas, passes accidentally in or out. b the matter passing in or out through this. c the act or an instance of leaking. 2 a a… …   Useful english dictionary

  • leak —    1. an act of urination    Of obvious derivation. Leaks maybe had, done, gone for, needed, sprung, taken, etc. by either sex in mildly vulgar use:     ... shuffling through the house in carpet slippers to take a leak. (Theroux, 1978)    To leak …   How not to say what you mean: A dictionary of euphemisms


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