chalk up - определение. Что такое chalk up
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  • как употребляется слово
  • частота употребления
  • используется оно чаще в устной или письменной речи
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  • этимология

Что (кто) такое chalk up - определение

SOFT, WHITE, POROUS SEDIMENTARY ROCK
Chalk pit; Tailor's chalk; Black chalk; Chalkstone; Pavement chalk; Chalk rock; Chalk (rock); Chalk stick
  • Former underground [[chalk mine]] in [[Meudon]], France
  • Child drawing with [[sidewalk chalk]]
  • Chalk from the White Cliffs of Dover, England
  • Chalk in different colors
  • "Nitzana Chalk curves" situated at Western [[Negev]], [[Israel]], are chalk deposits formed in the [[Mesozoic]] era's [[Tethys Ocean]]
  • Open chalk pit, Seale, Surrey, UK
Найдено результатов: 3389
chalk up      
v.
1) (d; tr.) to chalk up against (to chalk up ten victories against two defeats)
2) (D; tr.) to chalk up for (to chalk up another victory for our team)
3) (d; tr.) to chalk up to (to chalk up smt. up to lack of experience)
chalk up      
To put a notch on your bed post, or to pull a girl
Lets go Chalk up some Chaifs
chalk up      
If you chalk up a success, a victory, or a number of points in a game, you achieve it.
Andy Wilkinson chalked up his first win of the season.
= notch up
PHRASAL VERB: V P n (not pron)
O. Roy Chalk         
AMERICAN BUSINESSMAN
Roy chalk
Oscar Roy Chalk (June 7, 1907 – December 1, 1995) was a New York entrepreneur who owned real estate, airlines, bus companies, newspapers and a rail line that hauled bananas in Central America. His diverse holdings included DC Transit, Trans Caribbean Airways, the Houdon bust of Thomas Jefferson now at Monticello, the Chalk Emerald, and the New York Spanish-language newspapers El Diario de Nueva York and La Prensa, merging them into El Diario La Prensa.
chalk         
(chalks, chalking, chalked)
1.
Chalk is a type of soft white rock. You can use small pieces of it for writing or drawing with.
...the highest chalk cliffs in Britain...
Her skin was chalk white and dry-looking.
N-UNCOUNT: oft N n
2.
Chalk is small sticks of chalk, or a substance similar to chalk, used for writing or drawing with.
...somebody writing with a piece of chalk.
...drawing a small picture with coloured chalks.
N-UNCOUNT: also N in pl
3.
If you chalk something, you draw or write it using a piece of chalk.
He chalked the message on the blackboard...
There was a blackboard with seven names chalked on it.
VERB: V n, V-ed
4.
If you say that two people or things are like chalk and cheese, you are emphasizing that they are completely different from each other. (BRIT)
The two places, he insists, are as different as chalk and cheese...
We are very aware of our differences, we accept that we are chalk and cheese.
PHRASE [emphasis]
chalk         
n.
1) to write with chalk (on a blackboard)
2) a piece of chalk
Chalkstone         
·noun A mass of chalk.
II. Chalkstone ·noun A chalklike concretion, consisting mainly of urate of sodium, found in and about the small joints, in the external ear, and in other situations, in those affected with gout; a tophus.
Chalk         
Chalk is a soft, white, porous, sedimentary carbonate rock. It is a form of limestone composed of the mineral calcite and originally formed deep under the sea by the compression of microscopic plankton that had settled to the sea floor.
chalk         
¦ noun a white soft earthy limestone (calcium carbonate) formed from the skeletal remains of sea creatures.
?a similar substance (calcium sulphate), made into sticks and used for drawing or writing.
¦ verb
1. draw or write with chalk.
rub the tip of (a snooker cue) with chalk.
2. Brit. charge (drinks bought in a pub or bar) to a person's account.
3. (chalk something up) achieve something noteworthy.
Phrases
as different as chalk and cheese Brit. fundamentally different or incompatible.
by a long chalk Brit. by far.
chalk and talk Brit. teaching by traditional methods focusing on the blackboard.
not by a long chalk Brit. not at all. [with ref. to the chalk used for marking up scores in competitive games.]
Derivatives
chalkiness noun
chalky adjective
Origin
OE cealc, from L. calx (see calx).
Chalk         
·vt To rub or mark with chalk.
II. Chalk ·vt To manure with chalk, as land.
III. Chalk ·vt To make white, as with chalk; to make pale; to Bleach.
IV. Chalk ·noun A soft, earthy substance, of a white, grayish, or yellowish white color, consisting of calcium carbonate, and having the same composition as common limestone.
V. Chalk ·noun Finely prepared chalk, used as a drawing implement; also, by extension, a compound, as of clay and black lead, or the like, used in the same manner. ·see Crayon.

Википедия

Chalk

Chalk is a soft, white, porous, sedimentary carbonate rock. It is a form of limestone composed of the mineral calcite and originally formed deep under the sea by the compression of microscopic plankton that had settled to the sea floor. Chalk is common throughout Western Europe, where deposits underlie parts of France, and steep cliffs are often seen where they meet the sea in places such as the Dover cliffs on the Kent coast of the English Channel.

Chalk is mined for use in industry, such as for quicklime, bricks and builder's putty, and in agriculture, for raising pH in soils with high acidity. It is also used for "blackboard chalk" for writing and drawing on various types of surfaces, although these can also be manufactured from other carbonate-based minerals, or gypsum.