Phraseologisms with "hand. Phraseologisms with "the hand of Uralkali" went from hand to hand

Phraseologism is what makes the language special, mysterious and difficult for foreigners. Even if its main component is a banal part of the body (for example, a hand).

Lexical meaning

Without a noun, of course, you can't get anywhere.

  1. First of all, it is a part of the body, or rather a limb, of a person or primate from the shoulder to the fingertips.
  2. Part of an object or object that is somewhat reminiscent of a human hand.
  3. The manner of writing, the style of work, is different from others.
  4. Influential, strong, wealthy patron.

What is phraseology

Phraseologism (with the word "hand", for example) is a stable one that makes speech flowery, varied, interesting and colorful. To understand this unit of speech thoroughly and correctly capture all the nuances of the context is possible only for a person who has lived in this language environment all his life or for many years.

TOP 10 phraseological units with the word "hand"

During the day, without noticing it, we use hundreds of set expressions. Phraseologisms with the word "hand" occupy not the last place among them.

Here are the most used and popular ones:

  1. At hand - very close, in the zone of visibility.
  2. Third-hand - from a stranger, through an intermediary.
  3. To seize - to appropriate without asking with the help of cunning or deceit, to steal.
  4. washes - about people who have entered into an agreement or know something bad about each other and cover each other; also about mutually beneficial cooperation.
  5. A jack of all trades is a versatile craftsman who can do a lot, and do it with high quality.
  6. Raise your hand - hit, encroach, designate your right (in a negative sense).
  7. To lend a hand - to take part, to assist.
  8. The furry paw is an influential, all-powerful, or wealthy patron.
  9. In haste - quickly, without trying, tyap-blunder.
  10. Climb under the arm - interfere, be intrusive, distract.

50 phraseological units with the word "hand" and their approximate meaning

In fact, there are many more:

  1. Pull yourself together - cope with nerves, calm down.
  2. Out of hand - terribly bad, unsatisfactory.
  3. Have at hand - in close proximity, at a short distance.
  4. Wash your hands - remove yourself, renounce, relieve yourself of all responsibility.
  5. Carry on your hands - warmly and reverently take care, cherish.
  6. Like a hand removed - quickly passed, healed; effectively helped (about a medicine or folk remedy).
  7. Tirelessly - without fatigue, without rest, for wear and tear.
  8. To fall under a hot hand is to be punished for nothing, for nothing, just because someone had previously angered a person.
  9. The hand will not rise - will not dare, will not dare.
  10. Hand in hand, side by side.
  11. Hands do not reach - once, never enough time.
  12. Hands itch - I really want to.
  13. Hand in hand - close enough.
  14. To grasp with both hands - to really want, cherish, be afraid to lose.
  15. To rake in the heat with the wrong hands - to appropriate the result of someone else's work, to provoke someone into an action that is beneficial to you.
  16. Golden Hands is an excellent master.
  17. Long arms are great opportunities (in a negative sense).
  18. Both hands are left - clumsy.
  19. As without hands - it is necessary, something that cannot be done without.
  20. Wave your hand - despair, be disappointed, refuse.
  21. To fill a hand - to acquire a skill, gain experience, develop a skill.
  22. Lay hands on yourself - commit suicide.
  23. Give up - despair, be disappointed, give up what you have planned.
  24. Handwriting - writing with a pen, pencil or felt-tip pen.
  25. Give a hand - say hello, help (antonym - do not communicate, despise).
  26. Catch by the hand - catch red-handed, convict.
  27. A heavy hand is a good, strong, powerful blow.
  28. Shake hands - agree, make a deal.
  29. Clean hands - an honest person with a clean conscience.
  30. From hand to hand - personally, without intermediaries.
  31. Out of hand - uncomfortable.
  32. Hand on heart - sincerely, openly, without deceit.
  33. Throw up your hands - to be at a loss, to be surprised.
  34. With a light hand - on someone's successful initiative.
  35. Rub hands - gloat, rejoice (in a negative sense).
  36. Give hands - discourage any desire, push away.
  37. To be on hand is to be profitable.
  38. To be with both hands "for" - to warmly support, not to object at all.
  39. Sit back - be lazy, procrastinate, do nothing.
  40. To be dishonest is to be dishonest, to deceive, to steal.
  41. A dream in the hand is a prophetic, prophesying dream, warning of a bad future or promising happiness.
  42. Ask for hands - make a marriage proposal, woo.
  43. Fall out of hand - do not succeed.
  44. Get away with it - go unpunished.
  45. Dissolve hands - fight, beat, behave impudently, impudently.
  46. Get out of hand - do not obey, do what you want.
  47. The right hand is a deputy, an important person, an assistant.
  48. Better a tit in the hands than a crane in the sky - appreciate what you have, if you lose, you will cry.
  49. Hands grow out of the wrong place - no matter what a person does, he does everything badly, clumsily.
  50. Hook hands - about a person who cannot do anything properly; everything that can be spoiled or broken.

GIVE BY HAND to whom. GIVE HANDS to whom. Razg. Express. Resolutely suppress any evil actions, deeds, intentions. - Work in MTS is difficult, there is always something to cling to! There is always something to discredit people! I advise you to give her hands before she sits on our heads.(G. Nikolaeva. The story of the director of the MTS and the chief agronomist).

  • - Hands down! Clap hands. Wed "Give a hand." Wed "Well, so on hand! let's go!" They clapped their hands. "Let's eat!" Gogol. Dead souls. 2, 3...

    Michelson Explanatory Phraseological Dictionary (original orph.)

  • - GIVE FREE HANDS. GET OUT OF YOUR HANDS. Prost. 1. Fight. rushed with raised fists at Zakhar ... He deftly, however, wriggled away, jumped a few steps ... and became defensive ...
  • - Razg. Express. Completely agree, agreed, decided. OK then! - said Koryakin, - it will be your way, every day a decanter of vodka and ten rubles rewards. - OK! deal! Yegor shouted, holding out his hand...

    Phraseological dictionary of the Russian literary language

  • - Razg. Fight, beat someone. DP, 172; BTS, 240; Jig. 1969, 229; POS 8, 106; Sergeeva 2004, 223...
  • - out of hand predicate...

    Explanatory Dictionary of Efremova

  • - on the hands of the predicate ...

    Explanatory Dictionary of Efremova

  • - as a sign of agreement Cf. "Give a hand." Wed "Well, deal with it! Let's go!" They clapped their hands. "Let's go!" Gogol. Dead Souls. 2, 3. Cf. "Give me a paw!" - Here she is! - And new friends, well, hugging, Well, kissing. Krylov. Dog friendship...

    Explanatory-phraseological dictionary of Michelson

  • - Concluding an agreement, a deal. - I look and see that Bakshey Otuchev and Chepkun Yemgurcheev both seemed to be quiet ... and both rushed to each other, ran up and beat on the hands ...

    Phraseological dictionary of the Russian literary language

  • - see Hit on...

    IN AND. Dal. Proverbs of the Russian people

  • - Sib., Yaroslavl. The same as hitting hands 1. FSS, 12; SBO-D1, 32; SPS, 25; SRNG 35, 240; YOS 1, 61...

    Big dictionary of Russian sayings

  • - who. Novg. Approval About a skilled person. NOSE 9, 155...

    Big dictionary of Russian sayings

  • - Razg. Resolutely suppress any actions to prevent unwanted consequences. FSRYA, 124...

    Big dictionary of Russian sayings

  • - Razg. Expression of consent: decided, agreed. FSRYA, 397; Versh. 6, 128...

    Big dictionary of Russian sayings

  • - adj., number of synonyms: 12 negotiating reaching an agreement reaching an agreement concluding an agreement concluding a deal concluding an agreement stabbing ...

    Synonym dictionary

  • - to negotiate, to negotiate, to negotiate, to negotiate, to reach an agreement, to shake hands, to conclude an agreement, to reach an agreement, to conclude an agreement, to come to an agreement, handle, ...

    Synonym dictionary

  • - please, there is such a thing, agreed, it’s on, good, seized, let it be so, well, excellent, so be it, let it be so, okay, okay, stabbed, swept up, agree, good, ...

    Synonym dictionary

"Give hands" in books

Dummy dilemma: to give or not to give?

From the book What does your baby want? author Blau Melinda

Dummy dilemma: to give or not to give? Soothers have been around for centuries. And no wonder. The only part of a newborn's body that he can control is his mouth. He sucks to get the much-needed oral stimulation. In the past

So that wealth goes to the hands

From the book Conspiracies of the Siberian healer. Release 02 author Stepanova Natalya Ivanovna

For wealth to come into your hands For a young month, knead the dough, read a special plot over it and bake bread out of it. The conspiracy is this: How will you, dough, grow, Rise and increase, So I will grow, In a position to rise, Above people in my glory

So that wealth goes to the hands

From the book of 7000 conspiracies of a Siberian healer author Stepanova Natalya Ivanovna

So that wealth goes into their hands For the young month they bake bread, slandering the dough before baking. As you will, dough, grow, rise and increase, so I will grow, in a position to rise, above people in my glory and in money . Amen.

Palmistry (the art of divination by hand)

From the book The Big Book of Secret Knowledge. Numerology. Graphology. Palmistry. Astrology. divination the author Schwartz Theodore

Palmistry (the art of divination by hand) Palmistry in a narrower sense means the science that uses data obtained from the study of hills and especially lines of the palm to predict the future or analyze the past of a person. Palmistry includes

To give or not to give charity?

From the book Rituals of Money Magic author Zolotukhina Zoya

To give or not to give charity? Do not climb on a pedestal by giving to the beggar, but be grateful to him that he exists, and you can help yourself by giving to him. Blessed is not the taker, but the giver! Swami Vivekananda To give or not to give? That's what

Money sticks to hands

From the book Fundamentals of Corrective Palmistry. How to change fate along the lines of the hand author Kibardin Gennady Mikhailovich

Money sticks to your hands If you carefully examine the fingertips of your hands and identify concentric capillary patterns in the form of curls (Figure 11) on all fingertips, you can begin to genuinely rejoice. Now let's find out why. The presence of curls on all (ten)

Appliance to the hands of the French colonies

From the book The Great Civil War 1939-1945 author Burovsky Andrey Mikhailovich

Appliance to the hands of the French colonies After the creation of the "Fighting France" in the French colonies, battles took place between the Vichy and de Gaulle troops. The De Gaulles performed alongside the British and could only grit their teeth as they watched Britain take over

And the pipe went from hand to hand

From the book Mobile Phone: Love or a Dangerous Relationship? The truth that will not be told in mobile phone shops author Indzhiev Artur Alexandrovich

And the pipe went from hand to hand After carefully analyzing the secondary market, we identified two main groups of its consumers: people looking for just a very cheap handset, and those who want to get the maximum of functions at the lowest price. The first to make a purchase in view of

Deal!

From the book A rare profession the author Zuev Evgeny

Deal! One of the classics has a funny joke (I can’t vouch for the accuracy of the quote, but the meaning is conveyed correctly): “System programmers do not quite understand why they are paid a large salary: after all, they would do their job for free. True, they have enough mind not talking about

LET'S GO TO THE HANDS

From the book Wellness in Rublev the author Chomsky Oksana

LET'S GO TO THE HANDS

From the book Diagnosis of diseases in the face author Olshevskaya Natalya

Diagnosis of diseases by hand One of the methods of ancient oriental diagnostics is to determine the state of health by hand. Not only in the imperial palaces, but also in every eastern harem, there was a qualified physician. He never saw any of his patients and

Diagnosis of diseases by hand

From the book Hand and Foot: Energy Point Treatment. Secrets of beauty and health. Su jock author Olshevskaya Natalya

Diagnosis of diseases by hand One of the methods of ancient oriental diagnostics is to determine the state of health by hand. Not only in the imperial palaces, but also in every eastern harem, there was a qualified physician. He never saw any of his patients, and

Ode to hands

From the book All the World author La Guma Alex

Ode to hands Be blessed, my palms, my tenacious fingers, of which one was pinched by the car door, photographed by X-rays - the palm in the picture looked like a dislocated wing - a small bone outlined by its own separate contour.

SERVE BY HAND

From the book Winged words author Maksimov Sergey Vasilievich

SERVED BY HAND Brother to brother with his head in payment. Proverb. - Get your hands on it! - one will say in the sense of good advice and consolation to a person who has suffered some kind of failure, is in trouble, or especially has experienced grief. - What to do: it was necessary to conform

Uralkali went from hand to hand

From the book Expert No. 47 (2013) author Expert Magazine

Uralkali went from hand to hand Ivan Rubanov Suleiman Kerimov, the controlling owner of the world's largest producer of potash fertilizers, was squeezed out of the company. Mikhail Prokhorov, who buys out his share, is unlikely to come for a long time. It will provide Uralkali with a breather, but

to whom. GIVE HANDS to whom. Razg. Express. Resolutely suppress any evil actions, deeds, intentions. - Work in MTS is difficult, there is always something to cling to! There is always something to discredit people! I advise you to give her hands before she sits on our heads.(G. Nikolaeva. The story of the director of the MTS and the chief agronomist).

Phraseological dictionary of the Russian literary language. - M.: Astrel, AST. A. I. Fedorov. 2008 .

See what "Give hands" is in other dictionaries:

    give free rein to the hands- knock down, beat, fight, pour in, do not spare fists, face off, fight, grapple, grapple, beat each other, dissolve hands, beat each other, give free rein to fists, wave, use fists, tear Dictionary ... ... Synonym dictionary

    give a hand- shush, shorten, pour cold water over, pour cold water over, knock down arrogance, pull up, call for order, besiege, bring to order, put in place, knock down ambition, indicate the place, knock down the force, put in its place, shorten the tail ... ... Synonym dictionary

    GIVE FREE HANDS. GET OUT OF YOUR HANDS. Prost. 1. Fight. [Gleb] rushed with raised fists at Zakhar... He deftly, however, twisted away, jumped back a few steps... and became defensive. Hey, listen, do not let your hands free! he said,… … Phraseological dictionary of the Russian literary language

    give free rein to hands, fists- Fight, beat someone l ... Dictionary of many expressions

    Give / give free rein to the hands (fists)- Razg. Fight, beat someone. DP, 172; BTS, 240; Jig. 1969, 229; POS 8, 106; Sergeeva 2004, 223 ...

    give / hand over- Razg. Resolutely suppress what l. actions to prevent unwanted consequences. FSRYA, 124 ... Big dictionary of Russian sayings

    give- ladies, give, give; give, give, give; gave, gave, gave and gave, gave (with a negative: didn’t give and didn’t give, didn’t give, didn’t give and didn’t give, didn’t give and didn’t give); give, give; the; given, given, given (with a negative: not given and not given, not given, not given and not given, not given and ... ... encyclopedic Dictionary

    give- ladies, give, give; dadi/m, dadi/te, dadu/t; gave, gave /, yes / lo and gave /, yes / whether, see also. give, give with a negative: not yes / l and not / gave, did not give /, not yes / lo and did not / gave, not ... Dictionary of many expressions

    give- ladies, give, give, give, give, give; past gave, gave, gave and gave, gave (with negation: didn’t give, didn’t give, didn’t give, didn’t give); led. give; incl. suffering past given, given, given, given; owl., transl. (unsov. to give). 1. Pass from hand to hand, hand over ... Small Academic Dictionary

    give- Give, transfer, hand over, hand over, entrust, donate, bestow, deliver, provide, assign, endow, clothe, make friends, impose, supply. Please hand! Show the letter (let's read it). He forced (given) me an unusable gun. Not … Synonym dictionary

Lay on hands. To convey some sublime state, to initiate into something sublime. As a way of transferring supernatural properties, it was common among many peoples of the ancient world. In Christianity, it began to denote a sacred act that conveys divine grace to the three elevation of a certain person to a certain step in the church hierarchy.

throw up your hands as a sign of surprise. By analogy with the sound of a splash of water, throwing up hands with a slight touch of each other.

Finger suction. Think, compose. From the habit of biting nails in a nervous situation or when thinking. There are correspondences in other Slavic languages.

How it was removed by hand anything. Completely gone. Probably tracing paper from fr. oter le mal comme avec la main. During the treatment, healers applied their hands to the sick, supposedly curing him with miraculous power.

The left hand doesn't know what the right hand is doing. About lack of coordination and inconsistency of actions. Phraseologism goes back to the gospel text: "And when you give alms, let the left hand not know what the right hand is doing."

wave your hand on someone or something. Stop doing anything or anyone because of the futility of their efforts. From the movement of the hand, demonstrating repulsion, abduction from oneself.

On the thumb. Great, good. The gesture is also known in Western Europe. It is believed that it goes back to the custom of the Romans, who are present at the fight of gladiators, to raise their thumbs up, wanting to leave the loser alive, or to put their finger down, demanding his death.

Warm up your hands on anything. It is not fair to profit from any business. Now the expression "weld" is used in the same meaning. Presumably from the thieves' slang of the XVIII century.

Lay hands on yourself. Commit suicide. Unlike all other phraseological units, the only phrase that has a formal relation only to the subject of the action itself (“on oneself”).

Carry on your hands anyone. Show the highest degree of love and care. From the ancient custom on the wedding day to carry the bride in her arms through the threshold of the groom's house, which thus had to protect her from the spirits living under the threshold of his house.

Cheat anyone. Outsmart, deceive. Probably in connection with the swindle of market magicians. The magician took an object from the audience and circled it several times around his finger, fixing their attention on this. And at this very time, his accomplices were cleaning the pockets of onlookers.

Explain with fingers. Explaining something to someone is simple and accessible.

Don't put your finger in your mouth. About someone who will not miss the chance to take advantage of the gullibility or oversight of another. Initially, this was said about a skittish horse, which, when put into its mouth, could bite the bit.

Don't move your finger. Do nothing. Tracing paper with fr. ne pas houger le petit doigt. It goes back to the gospel text about the Pharisees: "They bind burdens that are heavy and unbearable and lay them on the shoulders of people, but they themselves do not want to move them with a finger."

Raise your hand(for something or someone). About violence.

To point with a finger on anyone. To laugh at someone, mockingly condemn. Probably, in connection with superstitions, it was believed that a pointing gesture could somehow harm a person. Hence, “pointing the finger at someone” has become an expression of disrespect and rudeness, often simply bad manners.

Put your hand on your heart. To do something cordially, sincerely, frankly. Probably calque. There are correspondences in other languages: cf. German Hand aufs Herz, fr. la main sur son coeur. To confirm the sincerity of their words and intentions, they often put their hand on their heart. In the United States and some other countries, the performance of the national anthem is supposed to be listened to with a hand on the heart.

Have a finger in the pie to anything. Take part in something. In the past, when most people were illiterate, instead of a signature, a thumbprint or forefinger, pre-coated with a dye, served as confirmation of their participation in any business.

Throw up your hands(or spread your arms). Expression of surprise or impossibility to do something in a hopeless situation. Apparently, tracing paper from fr. ecarter les bras. There are correspondences in other languages.

The hand does not rise do something. Do not dare, fear, do not dare to do anything. In a figurative sense, the expression was originally used to describe a military or robber attack. The image is associated with the opposition of physical strength and moral strength. In English, there is a similar figurative expression - to can "t lift a hand against smb.

The hand washes the hand. About indulging each other dishonest, dishonorable people. Tracing paper from lat. manus nianurn levat. Attributed to the ancient Greek writer Epicharmus.

Hands to the sides. Express pride, arrogance, arrogance, etc. (leaning on the sides with the hands).

Hands go down. Lack of desire to do anything due to the hopelessness of efforts. Presumably from the speech of peasants or artisans.

Hands off from someone (or something). The demand for non-intervention. Tracing paper from English. Hands off! For the first time, the expression was used by the English minister William Gladstone (1809-1898) at the address of Austria, which occupied Bosnia and Herzegovina in the fall of 1878.

Give a hand. Very close.

Look through your fingers. To condone something that is not very approved. Kalka with him. durch die Finger sehen.

Wash your hands. Do not take the blame for any actions, avoid participating in such actions. From the Bible, where the legendary procurator (viceroy) of Judea, Pontius Pilate, said that he was "washing his hands", not wanting to share responsibility for the fate of Jesus Christ with the Sanhedrin.

Elbow feeling. Feeling of comradely support and participation.

Prepared a selection phraseological units with the word hand .

It contains order 100 phraseological units.

Phraseological units are distributed by 19 thematic groups , including a selection of phraseological units of writers and poets about hands. The meanings of phraseological units are given.

Phraseological units about different hands

  • Happy hand (someone is always lucky, someone is lucky in their endeavors) - by the way, phraseological units about happiness
  • Male hand (male strength, hardness, etc.)
  • Heavy hand (about someone who hits hard, strikes hard)
  • Easy hand (someone is lucky in their affairs, undertakings)
  • Long arms (about an influential person with power)
  • Generous / wide hand (not sparing, not sparing (give, give, treat, etc.))

Phraseologisms about loss

  • Push off your hands (get rid of worries, care for someone)
  • Sell ​​offhand (1. sell stale goods; 2. get rid of something unnecessary, get rid of someone)
  • To swim away / get out of hand (quickly and imperceptibly spent, spent, disappear)
  • Let go (lose someone or something due to inattention, failure, weakness, etc.)
  • Lose out of hands (to lose someone or something due to an oversight, hindsight)
  • Empty-handed (having received nothing, without getting; having nothing with him)

Phraseologisms about the acquisition

  • It floats in your hands (no need to make an effort to get something)
  • Grab with both hands (with great willingness to take advantage of any offer) - by the way, phraseological units with the numeral 2
  • With arms and legs (1. completely, all over; 2. with great pleasure, willingly)
  • Tear off with hands (sell out with great pleasure, snapped up; willingly take, accept)
  • To rake in heat with someone else's hands (to use the results of someone else's labor for one's own selfish purposes) - by the way, phraseological units for the word heat
  • Out of hand (from an unknown or stranger)

Phraseologisms about skillful work

  • Tirelessly (without ceasing, tirelessly, diligently)
  • Golden hands (1. master, skillful in his business; 2. master, skillful in his business; 3. skill, the ability to do something impeccably) - by the way, phraseological units with golden
  • Jack of all trades (a person who knows how to do everything, capable of doing anything) - by the way, phraseological units about the master
  • It burns in the hands (easily and quickly, deftly doing something, arguing) - by the way, phraseological units with burn
  • Working hands (workers; labor force)
  • Get a hand (acquire dexterity, skill, experience in any business)
  • Get out of hand (manufactured by someone)

Phraseologisms about ignoring work

  • to sit back (to do nothing, to be idle, to be idle)
  • Fall out of hand (poorly successful; not going well due to lack of desire, due to bad mood)
  • Hands won't fall off (It won't be too hard for someone to do something; nothing will happen to someone if they do something)
  • The case falls out of hand (it fails, nothing comes out)
  • Do not hold in your hands (not be able to use something; do not pick up anything) - by the way, phraseological units about work

Phraseologisms about problems

  • Give up (get discouraged)
  • Wash your hands (remove from participation in any responsible business)
  • Waving your hand
  • Out of hand bad (very bad) - by the way, phraseological units with the word bad
  • Get away with (go unpunished)
  • Get away with (leave something unpunished, do not exact strictly from someone for something)
  • Like no hands (completely helpless, stranded)
  • Not out of hand (1. uncomfortable; no point (to do something, do something); 2. not suitable, not good)
  • (Take) feet in hands (without delay, without delay, quickly go somewhere)
  • Go with outstretched hand (beg, beg) - by the way, phraseological units with the word walk
  • Hands are short (there is not enough strength, power, influence; weak in anything)
  • Hands do not reach (there is no time, conditions, opportunities to do something, do something)
  • Twisting one's arms (forcing someone to do something)
  • Under a drunken hand (in a state of intoxication; drunk)
  • Get out of hand (stop obeying someone, behave independently, defiantly)
  • A toy in the hands of others (about complete dependence on someone)
  • Go hand in hand (1. be in use with one or the other; 2. engage in promiscuous intimate relationships with different men)
  • lay hands on oneself (commit suicide)

Phraseologisms about capture

  • Surrender to (surrender, obey, be at the mercy of someone)
  • Take over (subjugate, force to obey in actions, deeds; rein in)
  • Take / take with bare hands (grab, master without significant effort, without much difficulty)
  • You can’t take it with your bare hands (anyone can stand up for himself; cunning, dexterous, has defenders)
  • To grab with bare hands (to master something; to subdue someone without much effort)
  • Fight back with hands and feet (resist something with all your might, decisively; flatly refuse something)
  • Knit hand and foot (to constrain, deprive someone of freedom)
  • To slip out of hands (to escape from someone or something at the last moment, being almost captured, overtaken)
  • Do not fall into the hands (1. do not submit, do not succumb to the influence, power of someone; 2. defend yourself to the end, do not give up)
  • Hands off (categorical, resolute demand for non-interference in the affairs of someone, something)
  • Give hands (resolutely suppress any evil actions, deeds, intentions) - by the way, phraseological units with the word give
  • Hold on with your hands and feet (very steadfastly, persistently defend something)

Phraseologisms about assault and fight

  • Dissolve hands (1. fight; use physical force against someone; 2. pester someone with hugs)
  • Under a hot hand (in a state of anger, anger, irritation)
  • Hot-tempered (a quick-tempered, unrestrained person who is capable of hitting someone in a state of anger)
  • Raise a hand (1. swing at someone, try to hit; beat someone; 2. encroach on someone) - by the way, phraseological units with raise
  • The hand will not falter (someone is determined, bold, ready for some business)
  • Dirty hands (1. mess with someone unworthy of respect; 2. be involved in something low, reprehensible)
  • The hand does not rise (not enough courage, determination (to do something))

Phraseologisms about fists

  • Unleash the fists (fight)
  • Keep fists on a leash (restrain yourself; do not give free rein to fists)
  • Wave your fists after a fight (it is useless to act, resent, lament after something happened)
  • Feed / feed with fists (beat, beat, beat someone)
  • to keep in a fist (subjugate someone)
  • Collect the will into a fist (concentrate all volitional efforts)
  • Wind snot on a fist (experience grief, need, adversity)

Phraseologisms about weapons

  • Get blood on your hands (to kill someone)
  • Take up arms (prepare for battles, battles; participate in battles, battles)
  • To snatch a weapon from one's hands (deprive someone of strength, advantage; make him weak, incapable of attack or defense)

Phraseologisms about theft

  • Sticks to hands (about what is illegally appropriated, stolen)
  • Dishonest in hand (rogue, thievish; prone to fraud, theft)
  • Grabbing hands (about a greedy, greedy person)
  • The hand washes the hand (one covers the other in any unseemly deeds, crimes)
  • To warm one's hands (to profit at the expense of someone or something)
  • To catch by the hand (to convict of something; to capture someone red-handed) - by the way, phraseological units to catch
  • Grab the hand (to stop someone who is engaged in any vicious activity in time)
  • Put your hand in your pocket (grab for your own use, appropriate something) - by the way, phraseological units about a pocket
  • Run a paw (steal something public, official)

Phraseological units about actions

  • Pull yourself together / pull yourself together (1. overcoming your feelings, moods, achieve self-control; 2. become collected, capable) - by the way, phraseological units with the pronoun yourself
  • Take / take into your own hands (take charge, control of something)
  • To lay hands on (to seriously, seriously engage in someone or something)
  • High five! (hold out your hand for a handshake) - by the way, phraseological units with the numeral 5
  • Shake hands (make a deal)
  • Keep your hands at your sides (1. unquestioningly obey, obey someone; 2. tremble in front of someone)
  • Untie your hands (get complete freedom to act independently)
  • From hand to hand (from one to another; directly, without intermediaries)
  • Keep your finger on the pulse (be aware of current events, current affairs, follow their development)
  • Carry on your hands (warn all the desires of someone, show great attention to someone) - by the way, phraseological units with wear
  • to give a helping hand (to help someone, to assist, support)

Phraseologisms about the game

  • Play into the hands (indirectly help, assist someone (usually the opposite side) in something) - by the way, phraseological units with play
  • (You and) the cards in hand (someone has every opportunity to succeed in any business)
  • Trumps in hand (someone has an advantage in something)

Phraseologisms about gestures and postures

  • Hands on hips (express pride, arrogance, arrogance)
  • Clap your hands (clap your hands, expressing joy, surprise, despair, etc.)
  • Throwing hands (not knowing how to act or say something out of surprise, extreme bewilderment in difficult circumstances)
  • Hands in trousers (to be idle; not to burden yourself with anything)
  • Hand on heart (totally sincerely, frankly)

Phraseologisms about marriage

  • Propose a hand and a heart (ask a girl, a woman to become his wife) - by the way, phraseological units about the heart
  • Search for hands (to seek the consent of the bride or her parents for marriage)
  • Refuse to hand (do not give consent to marriage with a daughter) - by the way, phraseological units about love and relationships

Phraseological units about the source of information

  • From faithful hands (from reliable sources (learn))
  • Second hand (through intermediaries, not directly (learn, receive, etc.))

Phraseological units about transmission

  • From hand to hand (directly, directly to someone (give, pass))
  • (Issue) in one hand (for each, per person, per nose)
  • (Transfer) into one hand (under the jurisdiction of one organization or one person) - by the way, phraseological units with the numeral 1

Phraseologisms about elbows

  • Bite your elbows (to be very sorry, lament about the irreparable, missed)
  • Sense of elbow (loyalty to the principles of friendship, camaraderie; mutual support)
  • Work with elbows (push people to get through in a crowded place)

Other phraseological units with "hand"

  • Hand in hand to speak (preventing someone from concentrating on something; out of place) - by the way, phraseological units with the word speak
  • To hold the steering wheel in your hands (to drive a car, an airplane)
  • Hand in hand / hand in hand (1. holding hands (walk, walk); 2. together, together)
  • Handiwork (something done, undertaken by someone or at the direction of someone)
  • In good hands (provided with good attention, real care)
  • A friend's hand (friend's help) - by the way,
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