cave
21cave in — {v.} 1. To fall or collapse inward. * /The mine caved in and crushed three miners./ * /Don t climb on that old roof. It might cave in./ 2. {informal} To weaken and be forced to give up. * /The children begged their father to take them to the… …
22cave in — {v.} 1. To fall or collapse inward. * /The mine caved in and crushed three miners./ * /Don t climb on that old roof. It might cave in./ 2. {informal} To weaken and be forced to give up. * /The children begged their father to take them to the… …
23Cave In — Allgemeine Information …
24Cave — [keɪv ], Nick (Nicholas), australischer Sänger, * Warracknabeal 22. 9. 1957; gründete 1977 die Gruppe »Boys Next Door«, die, 1979 in »Birthday Party« umbenannt, durch innovativen Punk und New Wave bekannt wurde. 1983 gründete er mit Blixa… …
25cave-in — noun count the sudden fall of the roof of a CAVE or mine …
26cave — (izg. kȁve) uzv. DEFINICIJA 1. čuvaj se!, pazi!, budi na oprezu! [cave canem [i] (izg. kȃve kȃnem)[/i] čuvaj se psa] 2. med. uz naziv lijeka, zabrana uzimanja lijeka ETIMOLOGIJA lat …
27cave — Cave, ou Cavette, f. penacut. Tantost se prend pour ce lieu cavé dans terre sous voute, auquel on met la vaisselle à vin, Cella vinaria, cauea vinaria. Il vient dudit mot Latin Cauea, qui signifie un lieu creusé en terre à vuyde. Et tantost est… …
28cave — ► NOUN ▪ a large natural underground chamber. ► VERB (cave in) 1) subside or collapse. 2) submit under pressure. DERIVATIVES caver noun. ORIGIN from Latin cavus hollow …
29Cave [1] — Cave (Geogr.), so v.w. Cava …
30Cave [2] — Cave (spr. Kehw), 1) William, geb. 1637 zu Picwel in der Grafschaft Leicester u. gest. 1713 als Canonicus in Windsor; er schr.: Primitive Christianity, Lond. 1673 u.ö. (französisch Amst. 1702, 2 Bde.); Hist. litteraria scriptorum ecclesiasticorum …