large

  • 51Large — (as used in expressions) Atacama Large Millimeter Array Very Large Array Very Large Telescope …

    Enciclopedia Universal

  • 52large — lar·ge agg.inv., s.f.inv. ES ingl. {{wmetafile0}} agg.inv., di misura o capo d abbigliamento, abbondante, superiore alla media; anche s.m. o f.inv.: questa gonna è una large | s.f.inv., tale taglia: portare la large (abbr. L) {{line}} {{/line}}… …

    Dizionario italiano

  • 53large —   Nui, nunui.   Also: hālau, hālala, pūhalalū, halakau, nuka, nu anu a, kāhā, a alina, a alakai, aka ika i, polohuku, mākō, ho omākōmakō, polo, mākōmakō. Too large, kūpalaka, poholopū, wahalehe, uhalehe. Impressively large, ka apeha.    ♦ To go… …

    English-Hawaiian dictionary

  • 54large — adj. et nm. ; ample, grand ; généreux, libéral ; largeur, espace, aisance : LÂRZHO (Aillon Vieux, Aix, Albanais 001, Annecy, Arvillard 228, Cordon, St Pierre Albigny, Saxel, Thônes, Villards Thônes 028) / lârdzo (Aillon Jeune, Montagny Bozel,… …

    Dictionnaire Français-Savoyard

  • 55large — See: AT LARGE, BY AND LARGE …

    Dictionary of American idioms

  • 56large — See: AT LARGE, BY AND LARGE …

    Dictionary of American idioms

  • 57large — 1) a grade of dried and salted cod (Newfoundland). Large fish are dry, sound, smooth, well salted and over 18 inches while extra large are from 21 to 24 inches long 2) a size of commercial fish, e.g. cod, salmon …

    Dictionary of ichthyology

  • 58large — Synonyms and related words: Brobdingnagian, Gargantuan, adipose, altogether, ample, amplitudinous, as a whole, astronomical, at large, at liberty, awesome, beamy, beneficent, big, bighearted, boundless, bounteous, bountiful, brawny, broad, bulky …

    Moby Thesaurus

  • 59large — I [ Laaj] Jamaican Slang Glossary Very well respected. Dat large. (That’s popular). Also used as a slang term, “Large up!” (Similar to “Big up” a term of fond greeting and appreciation.) II Rasta Dictionary respected …

    English dialects glossary

  • 60large — [12] Latin largus, a word of unknown origin, meant ‘abundant’ and also ‘generous’. It retained the latter meaning when it came into English via Old French large (‘the poor King Reignier, whose large style agrees not with the leanness of his… …

    The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins