not with it - tradução para holandês
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  • etimologia

not with it - tradução para holandês

WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Deal with it; Deal With It; Deal with It (disambiguation)

not with it      
er niet bij zijn (verstrooid, in shock, niets van de zaken afweten)
believe it or not         
  • A Ripley's Believe It or Not! designed [[Paddington Bear]] statue in London, one of fifty auctioned for the [[NSPCC]]
  • Ripley's Believe It Or Not museum at Innovative Film City in Bangalore, India
  • Ripley's Believe It or Not! in Ocean City, Maryland
  • Ripley's BION Niagara Falls
  • thumb
je kunt het wel of niet geloven, geloof het of niet
forget-me-not         
  • Hover fly ([[Sphaerophoria scripta]]) feeding on Myosotis flower
  • ''[[Myosotis sylvatica]]''
vergeet me nietje {bloem}

Definição

with
We say 'a relationship/a connection/contact with someone/something:
- Do you have a good relationship with your parents? - Police want to question a man in connection with the robbery.
But: a relationship/a connection/contact/a 'between' two things.
- Police have said that there is no connection between the two murders.
We say 'to be angry / annoyed / furious with someone for doing something':
- They were furious with me for not inviting them to the party.
We say 'to be delighted / pleased / satisfied / disappointed with something':
- I was delighted/pleased with the present you gave me.
We say 'to get bored/fed up with something':
- You get bored/fed up with doing the same thing every day.
We say 'to be impressed with/by someone/something':
- I wasn't very impressed with/by the film.
We say 'to crowded with (people etc.)':
- The city center was crowded with tourists.
We say 'to collide with someone/something':
- There was an accident this morning. A bus collided with a car.
We say 'to charge someone with (an offence/a crime)':
- Three men have been arrested and charged with robbery.
We say 'to provide someone with something':
- The school provides all its students with books.

Wikipédia

Deal with It

Deal with It may refer to:

  • "Deal with It" (song), a Corbin Bleu song written by Jay Sean
  • "Deal With It", a song by Ashnikko from her 2021 mixtape, Demidevil
  • Deal With It (album), the original title for Jay Sean's album My Own Way
  • Deal with It (TV series)
  • Deal With It!, a 1999 book written by Esther Drill, Heather McDonald, and Rebecca Odes
  • Dealing with It!, a 1985 album by Dirty Rotten Imbeciles
  • A catchphrase of professional wrestler Dave Bautista
Exemplos do corpo de texto para not with it
1. It was just the way she was not with it." Mattie‘s boyfriend Nick took her to see Dr Jestyn Harries at the Cathedral View Medical Centre‘s drop–in clinic the next morning.
2. I was so shocked and I could not believe that what had just happened just did." After the incident on June 25 last year, she said she felt "a bit depressed", "a little bit not with it" and "quite withdrawn", adding: "I‘ve never felt like that before." Have your Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday delivered to your door.
3. The difficulties arise from the type of alcohol chosen (too much beer, not enough wine although that is changing), the distribution of alcohol intake (too little Sunday to Wednesday, too much Thursday to Saturday) and the context of alcohol imbibing (a section of the country appears to think that drink is an alternative to a meal, not a complement to it, or that curry is best eaten after beer and not with it). For these reasons, we undoubtedly have too much alcohol–related crime despite having imposed what will remain, in practice, some of the most restrictive laws in Europe on the time that alcohol can be drunk.
4. Like Danny Kaye." In 1'88 to poet Robert Conquest: "The sight and sound of one of the most horrible females ever seen on TV, one Margot Adler (U.S. of course) . . . leads me to conclude that the great Jewish vice is glibness, fluency." And 1''2 to the novelist Brian Aldiss: "It‘s rather like being a Jew, no matter what you do or don‘t do, you can‘t help being one." Despite these jibes, he did write one letter, in 1'62 when he was teaching at Cambridge, in which he declared: "It may be tedious and not with–it to say so, but anti–Semitism in any form, including the fashionable one of anti–anti–anti–Semitism, must be combated." Unlike the other letters, which were written privately to friends, this one was to the editor of The Spectator and was for publication.