- swallow\ hook,\ line\ and\ sinker
- See: hook, line and sinker
Словарь американских идиом. — СПб., Изд-во "Лань". Оригинал: A.Маккей, М.Т.Боткер, Дж.И.Гейтс. 1997.
Словарь американских идиом. — СПб., Изд-во "Лань". Оригинал: A.Маккей, М.Т.Боткер, Дж.И.Гейтс. 1997.
swallow hook, line, and sinker — See: HOOK, LINE, AND SINKER … Dictionary of American idioms
swallow hook, line, and sinker — See: HOOK, LINE, AND SINKER … Dictionary of American idioms
hook, line, and sinker — completely. The public isn t swallowing the administration s policies hook, line, and sinker. They made up such a good story that we fell for it hook, line, and sinker. Usage notes: often used in the forms fall for something hook, line, and… … New idioms dictionary
hook line and sinker — to swallow a fantastic story. See also swallow a gudgeon … Dictionary of ichthyology
swallow the hook line and sinker — believe everything one hears … English contemporary dictionary
swallow — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) v. t. ingest, gulp, devour, consume; absorb, engulf, assimilate, envelop; retract; bear, endure, submit to; believe, accept. See food, credulity, receiving. II (Roget s IV) n. Swallows include: bank,… … English dictionary for students
swallow — v 1. gulp, guzzle, digest, engorge; eat, sup, down, Archaic. manducate; pop, drop; bolt, snap up, wolf down, dispatch, put down or away; drink, imbibe, quaff, belt, swill, swig; tipple, tope, toss off, throw back, knock back, Sl. chug a lug;… … A Note on the Style of the synonym finder
swallow — verb 1) she couldn t swallow anything Syn: eat, gulp down, consume, devour, put away; ingest, assimilate; drink, guzzle, quaff, imbibe, sup, slug; informal polish off, swig, chug, swill, down … Thesaurus of popular words
swallow — Synonyms and related words: abide, abjure, ablate, absorb, accede, accept, accept for gospel, accept implicitly, acquiesce, allow, and sinker, antelope, arrow, assent, assimilate, back down, back out, backwater, be a sucker, be agreeable, be… … Moby Thesaurus
credulity — (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) Willingness to believe Nouns 1. credulity, credulousness, gullibility, ingenuousness, naiveté; self delusion, self deception; superstition; one s blind side; blind faith. See belief. 2. superstition, old… … English dictionary for students